Beauty

Truth, Beauty, Goodness

Can one know what true beauty and goodness are? Is there an objectivity to these attributes, or are they merely what one perceives them? Let us focus on what God has created women and what society tells them to be. Does the truth lie in women being successful career women to the exclusion of their feminine nature, in being dependent on others’ admiration for their self-worth, or in their being mere physical objects of pleasure? Or are they called to find the truth of their dignity in the model of Mary, Virgin Mother of God, who reflects and participates in the Divine Truth, Beauty, and Goodness of which all creation is called to reflect and share?\

Do Savor

The question of truth, beauty, and goodness has intrigued men for centuries. The pagan philosophers seek to identify what is true, good, and beautiful. However, for Christians, there can be no other answer than that which affirms that the Triune God is the True, the Beautiful, and the Good. By His very essence, God is all three. Everything else is so only by participation. We can know this because God has chosen to reveal Himself to us. The Catechism of the Catholic Church #2500 tells us that “even before revealing Himself to a man in words of truth, God reveals Himself to (man) through the universal language of creation.” All creation reflects its Creator; therefore, we can see something of Beauty itself in creation. Truth, beauty, and goodness, walled “the transcendentals,” cannot be separated from one another because they are a unity as the Trinity is One. Truth is beautiful in itself. And goodness describes all that God has made. “God saw all He had made, and it was perfect” (Gen.1:31).

Man is the summit of the Creator’s work, as Scripture expresses by clearly distinguishing man’s creation from that of other creatures. “God created man in His image…” (Gen. 1:27). Thus, the man was not only created good and beautiful but he was also established in friendship with his Creator and harmony with himself and with the creation around him, in a state that would be surpassed only by the glory of the new creation in Christ. The inner harmony of the first man, the harmony between the first man and woman (Adam and Eve), and the harmony between the first couple and all creation is called “original justice.” The sin of our first parents lost this entire harmony of original justice. Created in a holy state, tan was destined to be fully “divinized” by God in glory. But he preferred himself to God and disobeyed God’s command.

Thus, Adam and Eve immediately lost the grace of original holiness, and their lived harmony was destroyed. They were separated from Beauty Itself. God, however, did not abandon humankind, all of whom share in the sin of Adam, since “by one man’s disobedience all were made sinners” (Rom. 5:12). In the fullness of time, God sent His Son to restore that which had been lost. The Son, “beautiful above the sons of men,” restored us to beauty.

Thus, we turn now to beauty. Von Balthasar once remarked that when one seeks to draw others to God, he should begin with beauty because beauty attracts. Beauty will then lead to truth and goodness. Hence, if one is going to start with beauty, one must know what beauty is. I will distinguish between two types of beauty, although only one is beauty in the truest sense of the definition. There is “seductive” beauty often reflected in our current culture. This would entail whatever allures us to our self-destruction (morally or spiritually). It takes us away from what we were created for, which is union with Beauty Himself. I will return to this type of beauty, but first, I want to establish a definition and proper understanding of what “true” beauty is. This is, first and foremost, whatever attracts us to our true fulfillment and happiness. In his book The Beauty of Holiness and the Holiness of Beauty, John Saward, drawing on St.Thomas Aquinas’s work, defines beauty as: “the gleaming of the substantial or actual form found in the proportioned parts of material things.” In other words, while one can find beauty in the outward appearance, one must go deeper into the nature of the thing’s essence

“Thus, in a material substance (such as man), there is beauty when the essence of a thing shines clearly through its outward appearance.” The beauty of one’s soul can be said to shine through a person’s countenance. For this to occur, three things are necessary -wholeness (integrity), due proportion (harmony), and radiance (clarity). It is important to note that understanding this definition is that beauty is a reality. It is not something we produce by looking at a work of art or something that attracts us. Rather, beauty radiates out of what we see. It radiates out because it participates in beauty itself. “Christian Tradition – from Augustine and Hilary to Peter Lombard, Albert, Thomas, and Bonaventure – holds that beauty can be appropriated especially the Second Person…”

St. Thomas says that all three marks of beauty are found in Jesus. Radiance is found in Him because He is the Word of the Father, and the Word eternally uttered by the Father completely and perfectly expresses Him. He is the brightness of the Father’s mind. Due proportion is found in the Son of God because He is the perfect image of the Father. As the ideal image, He is divine beauty. Jesus has wholeness because He has in Himself the whole nature of the Father. In begetting the Son, the Father communicates the whole of His divine essence. Thus, we have a Divine Person, God the Son, who has been made true man for us in the Virgin’s womb without ceasing to be true God. When one sees the Virgin and the Child, one sees a witness to the Trinity. Pope John Paul II explains that this picture of Mother and Child “constitutes a silent but firm statement of Mary’s virginal motherhood and, for that reason, of Son’s divinity.”

ISucha, a witness to the Trinity, follows Mary to a special place about the True, the Good, and the Beautiful. The Blessed Virgin, said the fifteenth-century poet John Lydgate, is the “Fairest Mother that ever was alive.” Many poets and artists have sought to express their praise and admiration for Her, who is closely united to Divinity. When Dante reaches Paradise, he finds the beauty of the Son of God most perfectly mirrored in Mary, of whom He was born. Thus, we will see how Mary is to be for all, but especially women, a model of true beauty, goodness, and truth, as she reflects a sharing in the life of the Trinity. “All the beauty for soul and body that the Son of God brought into the world, all the loveliness He wanted to lavish on mankind, is summed up in and mediated by the person of His ever-virgin Mother, a woman clothed with the sun, the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars’ (Rev. 12:1). If there is beauty, it is here.”

To understand Mary’s beauty, one must know of the gifts bestowed on her and her response to them, which put her in intimate contact with Beauty Itself. Scripture, God’s revealed Word, tells us that “an angel Gabriel was sent from God to a city of Galilee named Nazareth, to a virgin betrothed to a man named Joseph…and the Virgin’s name was Mary. And he (the angel) came to her and said, ‘Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with you! … Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. And behold, you will conceive in your womb, bear a Son, and yall Him Jesus. He will be great and called the Son of the Highest…And Mary said, ‘ How can this be since I have no husband?’ And the angel said to her, ‘The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Highest will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be called holy, the Son of God.’ …And Mary said, ‘Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord; let it be done to me according to your word.'” (Lk. 1:26-38).

Mary was given the necessary gifts to become the Savior’s mother and befit such a role. Mary was greeted as “full of grace,” as if that were her real name. A name expresses a person’s identity. “Full of grace” is Mary’s essence, identity, and life’s meaning. Mary is full of grace because the Lord is with her. The grace with which she is filled in the presence of Him, who is the source of all grace, and she is given over to Him who has come to dwell in her and whom she is about to give to the world. By a singular grace, she is free from any stain of sin because of her Son’s merits. She possesses the harmony that Adam lost. Thus, she has the first two qualities of beauty: due proportion (unity) and integrity (wholeness). By the merits of her Son and the fullness of grace she has been given, her nature is complete – unwounded and unstained by sin.

The Catholic Church’s Catechism proclaims, “Ary, the all-holy ever-virgin Mother of God, is the masterwork of the mission of the Son and the Spirit in the fullness of time…In her, the ‘wonders of God’ that the Spirit was to fulfill in Christ and the Church began to be manifested.” Through Mary, the Holy Spirit begins to bring men, “the objects of God’s merciful love, into communion with Christ.”

Grace has been described as “God’s better beauty, the splendor of the soul.” And Mary, who is full of grace, radiates that splendor, that spiritual beauty. Grace (sanctifying grace) gives us a share in the Divine Life; it conforms our souls to the likeness of Christ. In her abundance of grace, Mary is a reflected beauty of her Son. She possesses the “radiance,” the third of beauty’s qualities. The great St. Bernard of Clairvaux declares that “contemplating the countenance of the Mother is the best way of preparing to see the glorious face of the Son.” Saward endorses this idea by pointing out that the Holy Spirit conceives our Lord without seed. Thus, there is only one person He resembles in His humanity: His Virgin Mother.

How does Mary’s beauty enable women of today to be an image of true beauty and truth and goodness? Mary, the Theotokos – the Mother of God, the Mother of Infinite Beauty, who is beautiful, will guide women to truth and good. She shows the falsehood of “seductive beauty,” which we have noted above as being whatever allures us to our self-destruction (morally or spiritually), by holding up her own “true” beauty in contrast. Before showing the essence of Mary’s beauty, which meets St. Thomas’s requirements for beauty: wholeness, due proportion, and radiance, we will look at society’s claim of womanly beauty. Women today are told by society that what is good and beautiful is that which is glamorous and seductive. Beauty is separated from God, Who is disregarded, and Whose goodness is exchanged for a “base mind and improper conduct” (Rom. 1:28), leading to spiritual and often physical dissolution. The “truth” that they are taught is one which “considers the human being (and hence, the woman) not as a person but as a thing, as an object of trade, at the service of selfish interest and mere pleasure… this falsehood produces such bitter fruits as contempt for men and women, slavery, oppression of the weak, pornography, prostitution…”

Thus, beauty is often seen as a mere physical quality. It lacks “due proportion” because only one aspect of the whole person is considered. Society emphasizes the physical to the exclusion of the spiritual. Flowing from this same mentality, we see that women are honored more for their work outside the home than for their work within the family. What is “seen” as attractive is a woman who can achieve the “good” of a successful career, which promises happiness and “equality with men.” To achieve this, women often either renounce their femininity or become a mere imitation of the male role. In a sense, they are trading in the quality of “integrity,” which is necessary for true beauty and society’s limited claim of beauty. This “seductive beauty” that promises so much “good” gives rise to a hedonism that distorts and falsifies human sexuality and the human person’s true dignity. This leads not only to a lack of respect for what womanhood is to be, since the truth about their dignity as one who was created and redeemed by God is unknown, but it also hinders women from achieving the “fullness of grace” for which they were created. It leads to women’s spiritual destruction because they are not living a life of grace. They are not living for God.

However, Mary, who lived a grace-filled life, is the model of a redeemed woman. God Himself “manifests the dignity of women in the highest form possible by assuming human flesh from the Virgin Mary, whom the Church honors as the Mother of God.” The highest elevation of human nature occurred in the masculine gender when Jesus, the Son of God, became man and male. The highest elevation of the human person happened in the feminine gender, in the Virgin Mary. Her divine maternity gives her exalted dignity. She is “blessed among women.” Therefore, all womanhood shares in her blessing and is made radiant by her. “When the Virgin Mary is humbly honored for the sake of her Son, women will be honored…for she has revealed the true beauty of womanhood.”

Looking at what we have already said about Mary, we know that “full of grace” reveals her essence, her identity. It is also the key to her reflection of the True, the Good, and the Beautiful. It is the key to women discovering the truth of their dignity and obtaining the divine life offered to them through a life of grace. This is a life that will bestow on them true goodness and beauty, which participates in the beauty of the Creator.

Because Mary is “full of grace,” she possesses the wholeness Adam lost. Because of grace, she is “radiant as the sun,” showing in her very being the clarity of a life united with God. Such a union shines forth in a person’s actions, which reflect God’s goodness. “The practice of goodness is accompanied by spontaneous spiritual joy and moral beauty” (CCC 2500). These actions, called virtues, “are acquired by education, by deliberate acts and by a perseverance ever-renewed in repeated efforts are purified and elevated by divine grace” (CCC1810). Grace affects every dimension of a person’s life. It is a gift of God that leads us closer to God. The closer we are to God, the more we reflect on Him, who is Truth, Beauty, and Goodness.

Mary is held up for us as the model of the life of virtue. She is a guide in living a life of faithfulness and grace. Due to space limitations, I will only briefly examine three of Mary’s virtues and call us to imitate. They are faith, obedience, and charity. The Church hails Mary as an “excellent exemplar in faith and charity” (Lumen Gentium 53). We see her faith when she entrusts herself freely to God at the Annunciation, believing and trusting the angel’s message to her that the Son to be born to her would be the Son of the Highest, certain that “with God nothing is impossible” (Lk. 1:30). Her faith journey continues in her responses to that which occurs in her life of union with Jesus. She flees to Egypt when Joseph is directed to go there (Mt. 2:13-15); she returns in the same manner (Mt. 2:19-23); and she faithfully perseveres in her union with her Son unto the cross (cf. LG#58, Jn.19:25-27), all the while believing and trusting in the wisdom of God’s divine plan. She felt that her Son, though crucified and buried, would rise from the dead. She waited in prayer (Acts 1:14). We, too, are called to be women of faith, believing what God has revealed concerning His plan for us and our salvation.

Flowing from Mary’s deep faith, she shows her loving obedience. Hers was not servile obedience. Rather, it was an obedience that flowed from humility. She knew the wisdom and greatness of God and, therefore, sought to live in conformity with it. Being obedient to God meant responding in trust to His all-wise plan. Again, at the Annunciation, she obeys the angel, “Let it be done to me as you say” (Lk. 1:36). She obediently follows the directions that the angel gives Joseph, trusting in God. Mary remained obedient to her role as a mother, even to the cross, where she obediently offered the full permission of her intellect and will to Him, whose ways are mysterious. As we seek to imitate Mary’s obedience, we will find that it frees us from the slavery of sin. Obedience makes us beautiful because it opens us up to God’s grace, to His life and love within us.

Mary’s faith and obedience allow her great charity to shine through. Mary, the Mother of Fairest Love, possesses a self-humbling love, innocent of all narcissism. “It is for Christ and to the glory of the Father, by the grace of the Holy Spirit, that our Lady is ‘all fair.'” She devotes herself “as a handmaid of the Lord to the person and work of her Son… she does this freely” (LG # 56). Accepting her role as “Mother of the Son of God ” is guided by married love, consecrating a human being to God. Under this love, Mary wished always to be and in all things given to God.” This love that remains faithful to her Son throughout His life, even to His cruel death on Calvary, extends to ter Sons’s brethren, those souls still journeying on earth (cf. LG #62-63). There is nothing more beautiful than charity, which we are all called to practice, which inspires and animates all the other virtues (cf. CCC 1827). Charity, the form of all virtues, “binds everything together in perfect harmony” (Col. 3:14), one aspect of beauty.

These virtues and the life of grace are possible for all women who seek to know the truth and avail themselves of the grace that comes from the merits of Jesus Christ, who came to restore humankind to the beauty of adopted children and “partakers in the divine nature” (1 Pt. 1:3). St. Francis de Sales notes that because of grace, we are so like Christ that we resemble God perfectly because, in His becoming man, Jesus has taken our likeness and given us His. Thus, we must do what we can to preserve this beauty and divine resemblance that He has restored to us.

Mary helps women to do this. Her beauty attracts us, and because it draws us, she leads us to Jesus, who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life (Jn.14:6). Mary is loved and honored because she reflects the truth, beauty, and goodness of her Son by her actions, by her life of virtue. Her role is to lead others to Him and the truth he teaches and is. This is seen by looking once again at how creation reflects the beauty of God. All that God creates is good; it is beautiful. Jesus, who is the fullness of revelation, has raised creation to an even higher dignity by restoring all things “according to the plan God was pleased to restore in Christ. A plan to be carried out in Christ, in the fullness of time, to bring all things into one in Him, in the heavens, and on earth” (Eph. 1:9-10). Thus, harmony is restored, all is made whole, and His glory is known. Because the “Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth; we have beheld his glory, glory as of the only Son of the Father” (Jn. 1:14)

The man was created in the image and likeness of God; Jesus renewed humanity in His immortal image. He restored us to the likeness of God. Mary reflects the beauty of her Son in her very essence. Mary is the one who will, in cooperation with her Divine Son, help women to discover the truth of their feminine nature, to reflect the beauty of a child of God, and by God’s grace to live that goodness that comes from God alone. Women, to attain this ideal, must turn to Mary as a model, who has been chosen by God from all eternity to be the Mother of His Son and to be a guide for us on our journey to the True, the Good, and the Beautiful, our true fulfillment and happiness. Women should entrust themselves to Mary’s guidance because she is already what they are called to be: full of grace. As the Church prays in the Divine Liturgy: Lord, as we honor the glorious memory of the Virgin Mary, we ask that by the help of Her prayers, we too may come to share the fullness of Your grace,” so that by that grace we too may reflect that which is True, Beautiful, and Good.

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