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To: marshmallow

Don’t forget, the Protestants of the Reformation often hated beautiful things.

No less an authority than the Protestant Ralph Adams Cram, a world renowned expert on art and architecture, once wrote:

“From the outbreak of the Protestant revolution, the old kinship between beauty and religion was deprecated and often forgotten. Not only was there, amongst the reformers and their adherents, a definite hatred of beauty and a determination to destroy it when found; there was also a conscientious elimination of everything of the sort from the formularies, services, and structures that applied to their new religion. This unprecedented break between religion and beauty had a good deal to do with that waning interest in religion itself. Protestantism, with its derivative materialistic rationalism, divested religion of its essential elements of mystery and wonder, and worship of its equally essential elements of beauty. Under this powerful combination of destructive influences, it is not to be wondered at that, of the once faithful, many have fallen away. Man is, by instinct, not only a lover of beauty, he is also by nature a ‘ritualist,’ that is to say, he does, when left alone, desire form and ceremony, if significant. If this instinctive craving for ceremonial is denied to man in religion, where it preeminently belongs, he takes it on for himself in secular fields; elaborates ritual in secret societies, in the fashion of his dress, in the details of social custom. He also, in desperation, invents new religions and curious sects working up for them strange rituals . . . extravagant and vulgar devices that are now the sardonic delight of the ungodly. ... If once more beauty can be restored to the offices of religion, many who are now self-excommunicated from their Church will thankfully find their way back to the House they have abandoned. The whole Catholic Faith is shot through and through with this vital and essential quality of beauty. It is this beauty implicit in the Christian revelation and its operative system that was explicit in the material and visible Churches and their art. We must contend against the strongest imaginable combination of prejudices and superstitions. These are of two sorts. There is first, the heritage of ignorance and fear from the dark ages of the sixteenth century. I am speaking of non-Catholic Christianity. Ignorance of authentic history, instigated by protagonists of propaganda; fear of beauty, because all that we now have in Christian art was engendered and formulated by and through Catholicism; fear that the acceptance of beauty means that awful thing—’surrender to superstition.’ It is fear that lies at the root of the matter, as it does in so many other fields of mental activity.” (Radio Replies, vol. 2: 1052)


3 posted on 10/08/2013 5:31:28 PM PDT by vladimir998
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To: vladimir998

“Don’t forget, the Protestants of the Reformation often hated beautiful things.”

Reactions to sin often swing to the other extreme. Doesn’t make either right.


4 posted on 10/08/2013 5:33:57 PM PDT by aMorePerfectUnion (I grew up in America. I now live in the United States..)
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To: vladimir998

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Nature is beautiful. Catholic art is oftentimes repulsive and causes a negative reaction, such as violence toward the repulsive object.

It is what it is. Sow the wind, reap the whirlwind and all of that.


90 posted on 10/08/2013 6:52:24 PM PDT by Truth2012
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To: vladimir998

Are you kidding me???

Vlad, you need to get out of the house more! lol


107 posted on 10/08/2013 7:06:44 PM PDT by jodyel
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