Posted on 11/30/2021 6:11:31 AM PST by Hebrews 11:6
TISSOT'S VISIONS OF CHRIST |
The Life of Our Lord Jesus Christ As Depicted by Jacques Tissot By SHANE JENKINS |
31
"The Youth of Jesus"
Luke 2
32
"Two or Three Gathered in My Name"
Matthew 18
33
"The Voice in the Desert"
Luke 3
34
"The Axe in the Trunk of the Tree"
Matthew 3
35
"He Who Winnows His Wheat"
Luke 3
36
"Saint John the Baptist and the Pharisees"
Luke 3
37
"Saint John the Baptist Sees Jesus from Afar"
John 1
38
"The Baptism of Jesus"
Matthew 3
39
"Jesus Transported by a Spirit onto a High Mountain"
Luke 4
40
"Jesus Tempted in the Wilderness"
Luke 4
41
"Jesus Carried Up to a Pinnacle of the Temple"
Luke 4
42
"Saint John the Evangelist"
43
"Jesus Ministered to by Angels"
Mark 1
44
"The Calling of Saint John and Saint Andrew"
John 1
45
"The Calling of Saint Peter and Saint Andrew"
Matthew 4
46
"Saint Andrew"
47
"The Calling of Saint James and Saint John"
Mark 1
48
"Nathaniel under the Fig Tree"
John 1
49
"Saint Bartholomew"
50
"The Betrothed of Cana"
John 2
51
"With Passover Approaching, Jesus Goes up to Jerusalem"
John 2
52
"Interview between Jesus and Nicodemus"
John 3
53
"Nicodemus"
54
"The Disciples of Jesus Baptize"
John 4
55
"The Man with an Infirmity of Thirty-Eight Years"
John 5
56
"The Pool of Bethesda"
John 5
57
"The Woman of Samaria at the Well"
John 4
58
"Saint Philip"
59
"Jesus Unrolls the Book in the Synagogue"
Luke 4
→ a n d... f i n a l l y ←
60
"The Broe of the Hill near Nazareth"
Luke 4
To be continued…
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Excellent. I have not seen the paintings of Tissot before.
Natural beauty with very realistic people in the paintings.
Plus, he visited the Holy Land to research how everything actually looks, so what we see is quite realistic.
These pictures are of high quality, high definition. You found a great site for them.
Question: What is a “broe” as in #60?
My apology: I had to type all the titles, and my proofreading was inept.
No problem....and I thought I was going to learn a new word....
Good Morning, Dan!
(((I do so love Tissot!)))


As legends go, this one is one of the greatest in my opinion. It combines Biblical truth with a fairy tale. Yet, only the One Who rode the donkey in his mothers womb to Bethlehem to his birth, and into Jerusalem to be crucified will know the true reason why He created the donkey to have a cross on it's back. This one, should give us all a pause to meditate on the importance of destiny in God's great plan. This fable has many versions, this is mine.
The Donkey's Cross
by Chuck NessOnce upon a time a man prepared his donkey with enough blankets to make his wife as comfortable as possible for a long trip from Nazareth to Bethlehem. She won't be able to ride the whole way, since the donkey must also carry the items they need for the long journey. While he prepares the donkey, His wife collects the food and cloths she put together and heads out the door to join her husband for the long trip.
A few days later they arrive in Bethlehem, just to learn there is no room at the Inn. The innkeeper points to stable and returns to his customers inside as Joseph leads the donkey with his wife towards a cave where shepherds keep their sheep. There are hayracks and mangers there. Sheep and cattle toward the back of the cave, with the strong smell of manure lingering in the air. Joseph thinks to himself, surely this cannot be where the baby will be born. Mary is trembling and is deep in pain now. Joseph helps her down from the burrow and carries her into the cave. He makes a bed of hay for her, and places the blanket from the donkey onto the straw.
About 33 years later, the boy is now a man, and He is about to complete His journey as He approaches Jerusalem. He sends a couple of disciples ahead to get a donkey awaiting a King. It was an old poor farmers donkey, but it could not do the work it was purchased for. The old man could not care for a useless donkey, so he decided to tie it to a post for anyone who wanted it.
As he began to walk away, two young men came for the donkey. The old man asked them, “What are you doing, untying the colt?” They told him, "The Lord has need of it", and he let them have it. His heart felt a tinge of joy instead of sadness for the poor useless donkey. "Someone has a use for it" he thought to himself.
The disciples brought the to Jesus, and he rode it into Jerusalem resembling a king riding to his people. Except this king, Jesus, was also the sacrifice who would soon suffer the punishment of death for the sins of the world. After Jesus finished riding the donkey, they let it go to where ever it wanted to wander to.
A few days later the donkey was grazing in a pasture as the man who rode him was lifted to the sky, like a snake in the Desert. The sun shined on Him, and a shadow was cast onto the donkey's back while it grazed. As the skies darkened and the ground trembled, the donkey scurried away to find a safer place to graze, while our Lord passed entered the next phase of His journey.
Mary-Lou! Nine more days on the way....
That’s nice, Chuck. Thanks for adding it.
Your post actually moved me to wrote my version of the donkeys cross
So thank you for the motivation
One never knows specifically what the Holy Spirit will prompt next, although we know well the general parameters and direction.
Probably next week or just before Christmas I’ll make FR post out of it
Well, I look forward to you next post
Kindly ping me to it, if you please....
That's quite an intro -- that first work nabbed my attention, not just for the color of the door or the hand on the wall over it.
:
I simply saw the board as the wood he had selected (it spoke to him, as one might say) for his business sign (materials can really pile up in a workshop until it's time to finally get a project off the ground), so I looked up the description:
The Youth of Jesus (Jeunesse de Jésus)
James Tissot
European ArtAlthough the Gospels are silent on the years between Christ's childhood and his ministry, providing no specific indication of his training or education, Tissot adheres to tradition and depicts Jesus as a faithful son to his earthly father, assisting Joseph with the work of the carpentry shop. In his commentary, Tissot spurned apocryphal legends of wondrous doings by the Christ Child, insisting that such deeds would have aroused attention, whether awe or suspicion, and would have been mentioned in the Gospel accounts.
Anticipating the Passion, in which he will carry the cross, the young Jesus shoulders a board for use in the shop, while his parents look on with foreboding.
His business sign indeed. This stuff is way more literal than people might ever suspect, lest such wondrous deeds arouse attention.
Last Chance for a Thousand Years - Turn It On, Turn It Up, Turn Me Loose:
I wondered what "old Buck Owens song" DDY might have had in mind for the line about his dancing while holding a stranger. It would have been a slow song relevant to his own lyrics. The first one that came to mind was "Together Again" so I pulled it up. Perfect on multiple levels.
The first comment at the top, from 7 years ago:
One could listen to country music for a thousand years and never hear anything as beautiful as this great song by Buck Owens and steel guitar master Tom Brumley.
Could be some snoopy internet algorithm showing me what it thinks I want to see. I'm on to that shifty business! :)
Last chance to build back better!
I will
On our part, we experience something which Joseph and Mary never did: we apprehend Jesus initially after His earthly adventure is complete, rather than in transit. It is we who do the growing.
I think the spiritual explanation is inescapable. Thanks so much!
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