Long-lost medieval painting found in old French woman’s kitchen

This is an amazing story. Via BBC.

Cimabue painting found in French kitchen sets auction record

A long-lost painting by a celebrated Italian artist that was found hanging in the kitchen of an elderly French woman has sold for €24m (£20m; $26.6m) at auction, setting a new record.

Christ Mocked, by the pre-Renaissance artist Cimabue, was discovered last month in northern France.

The painting was expected to fetch up to €6m at auction.

But the winning bid far exceeded expectations, with the painting fetching four times the estimate.

Acteon Auction House said the sum, paid by an anonymous buyer from northern France, was a new world record for a medieval painting sold at auction.

“When a unique work of a painter as rare as Cimabue comes to market, you have to be ready for surprises,” auctioneer Dominique Le Coent told Reuters news agency.

For years, the painting hung above a hotplate in a kitchen in the city of Compiègne. It was spotted by an auctioneer, who advised its owner to have it evaluated by experts.

The owner believed it to be an old religious icon with little value.

Tests were carried out on the artwork using infrared light to determine the similarities with works by the Italian painter Cimabue, also known as Cenni di Pepo.

Born in the city of Florence, he was active in the late 13th and early 14th Centuries – a transitional figure between the stylised art of the medieval period and the more naturalistic works of the Renaissance.

The artwork is tiny; measuring just 20 by 26cm (8in by 10in).

It is believed to be part of a polyptych – a larger work of painted scenes divided into several panels – dating from 1280, depicting Christ’s passion and crucifixion.

Two other scenes from the same Cimabue series can be seen at London’s National Gallery, and the Frick Collection in New York.

Cimabue’s work was largely influenced by Byzantine art, produced on poplar wood panels with backgrounds of gold paint.

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Can’t wait to get one of these!

Marco Tosatti posted at his place about the Synod and a well-known con-game called “three card monte”.

In the course, however, he included this.

Oh yeah… gotta get me one o’ these!   Maybe a full Pontifical set!

No doubt they will be sold in the vest best clerical places in Rome.

Keep those contributions coming!

Meanwhile, speaking of con-games, I understand that the wooden demon dolls they lugged into the close Mass of the Synod (“walking together”), were – I as questioned in the another – not the same wood demon dolls as got dumped into the drink the other day.

Recovered…. riiiiiiight.

And… yes… the chasuble is a joke.

Today.

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ROME DAY 25: Witnessing, Witnesses and Wonder

Sunset today was at 7:34 and Sunset over Rome will be at 18:14.  The Ave Maria rings – or should ring  -at … hmmm 17:30.  Interesting.

Of course we shifted here from “daylight savings” back.  Hence, an extra hour of sleep!

Before anything else, someone sent a photo of this mug.  Fun.

Yesterday we had the procession from San Lorenzo in Damaso to San Pietro in Vaticano.

This was fun.  When we passed under the terrace of the Congregation for Divine Worship, we got an audience, many of whom took photos.  It is hard to tell, but one of them has a red zucchetto.

As I was taking a couple of them taking photos of us, a few of them waved.

Inside all set up for the end of “walking together”.  Thanks be to God.

Meanwhile…

My view for awhile….

All in all, not a bad frontal.

On the way out I venerated the tomb of the Apostles Simon and Jude, whose feast is, as I write, tomorrow.

Later, supper with friends.  That black stuff is a magnificent salt.

Caponata.   I spoke with the kitchen and got their tips about how they make it.

Forgive me for not being chattier.  Lots of people have descended on town and on me.

Meanwhile, I’m getting lots of little notes about the closing of the Synod (“walking together”).

While they were doing whatever they were doing across the river, here is a single shot of what we were doing.

No wooden demon dolls.

Just pure praise of and present of Christ.

Posted in In The Wild, On the road, What Fr. Z is up to |
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The #AmazonSynod and what happened AFTER the Golden Calf Incident

Bp Athanasius Schneider recently penned a piece which likened the introduction and honoring of the demonic wooden idols, the amazonian Pachamama figures – whether they are part of a cobbled-up fake cult like Wicca or not is irrelevant – as being like the Golden Calf episode of Exodus 32.

You have to ask hard questions about this Pachamama thing.  People get that this is a turning point of some kind, just as are the proposals that came – ostensibly from the Synod (“walking together”) – in the Relatio Finalis to Francis.  I don’t think many people doubt that the document was written some time ago, so these were the desired objectives all along.   A combination of German money and influence with thoroughly unprepared South American input, as well as a glaringly weak slate of participants at the “walking together” guaranteed their predetermined outcome.

What was truly weird was this Pachamama phenomenon.   No one ever gave an adequate explanation of what it is or why it received so much attention.    So we ask the questions.   Were these figurines really important?   They got a lot of attention and insiders ran around with their hair ablaze after they were boosted from the church.   They bowed down to them in the gardens and lugged them around in processions.   If they are important what the heck are they?   And, if they are really not all that important (read: No, they are not demonic idols of a false religion.), then effectively they are grown ups playing with dolls on the edge of a Synod of Bishops.   Weird, doesn’t cover this.

The Golden Calf image has come to a lot of people’s minds lately, and rightly so.   Bp. Schneider isn’t the only one to make the connection.

What I’ve been thinking about is the aftermath of the Golden Calf Incident.

First, when Moses came down the mountain, straight from God’s expressions of wrath, he heard a “noise of war” which was the revelry of the people.   There are indications in the texts, euphemisms.  There was a wild orgy going on.

Moses destroyed the idol, ground it and made the people drink the water.

The Aaron gave the lamest excuse ever given in Scripture: “Hey, they gave me gold and I put it in the fire and, well, this calf came out!”

Moses saw that the people had “broken loose”.

Remember that, before, they had come to the mountain to form a covenant with God and all the men still exercised the Adamic priesthood.   Not any more.  This is when the priesthood was stripped by God from all men and settled on the Levites, descendants of Levi.

The first thing the new priests did was to take swords and go through the camp and slay those who had “broken loose”, who fell into idolatry.   The ordination of the Levitical priesthood was a baptism in blood of idolaters.

And then God sent a plague.

The point: Glorious and horrible things result from idol worship and the overthrowing of false religion.

I will repeat what I have written before.

God chose us from before the creation of the cosmos to live in THESE days.   It is an honor to be witnessing the crazy stuff going on.  But it is incumbent on all of us now to buckle on the spiritual armor God offers and take places in the lines of the Militant Church of which we are members.

Review your state in life.  Make corrections if you have to.

Use the sacraments well.

Increase your mortifications and acts of reparation.

Review your Faith and be ready to explain what you believe.

Be inviting and be joyful and be confident.

If something truly dreadful results in the Church from what we are seeing, know that Christ the King and Mary, Queen of Heaven, will triumph.  Be on the winning side of that, even though it costs dearly.

Let us close our ranks as never before in the face of the internal and external challenges to come.

Viva Cristo Rey!

Posted in Pò sì jiù, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged ,
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ROME DAY 24: Talk, walk and balk

Sunrise in Rome – 7:33 and Sunset – 18:15. The Ave Maria is still pinned to 18:30.

I’ve been terrifically busy the last couple of days.   Hence, brief and less posting.

Lots of great people have descended on Rome for the Paix Liturgique conference and Summorum Pontificum pilgrimage.   Today, procession to San Pietro and Pontifical Mass.  Yesterday, the conference at my old school, the Augustinianum.

I gave one of the talks.  As people were filtering in!

After my talk, from the back.

A nice view of the Via Giulia.

The businesses have great signs.  Here’s one that is counter-intuitive to the environment.

At one of the confraternity churches on the way, they haven’t changed their papal stemma since…. who can tell us which Pope this is!

Last night there was a great Mass at the Pantheon, which is dedicated as a Basilica to Mary of the Martyrs.   Hungarians!   Norbertines and a choir from Budapest.  They were really good.

Raphael’s tomb.

This particular crucifix has always moved me.   I’d like to build a church around it.

My good friend Augustine, from Tokyo, of Una Voce Japan.

At Sant’Agostino a “light show was about to begin.  I didn’t stay for the abominable horrow show it was sure to be.

Just for nice.

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to |
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Will the allegedly recovered depontified, intiberized demon idol Pachamamas reappear at the END?

A lot of people… a LOT of people… are writing to me about how the Pachamama pagan demon idols were found and fished from the Tiber, are being held in a secure location and that Francis apologized for their theft and that they may be on display for the closing Mass of the Synod.

A lot of people… a LOT of people… are upset.

I say: GREAT!   Bring it on.  Please, display them.  Display them and many others.  Get even bigger ones.   Think Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in Manhattan: enormous gas giant Pachamamas floating around.   GO FOR IT.

While they’re at it, include some other idols.  Go even farther.  Dance around them.   Offer incense to them.  Why not?

Either you are proud of them, because they mean something to you, or they mean nothing to you.  And if they mean nothing to you, and aren’t significant, then you a playing with dolls.  So, which is it?  What’s it gonna be?

Let’s get it all out into the open.

I want them to be displayed on screens around the whole world.   Let everyone see what you are doing.

C’mon.  Show us what this is all about!

¡Hagan lío!

(And are the statues we may see really the ones flipped into the Tiber, or are they simply some extras that were in their extra box.  Apparently, there were quite a few around.)

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, Synod | Tagged ,
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ROME DAY 22: Lights, egg, and sweets

Sunrise in Rome was at 7:29 and Sunset 18:19 and the Ave Maria still at 18:30.

I’ve had a couple days I’d rather not talk much about.   I had a meeting at a certain shop and started to get things worked out.  Also a friend came to town whom I am glad to see.

Allow me to be brief.

I wrote about the church that has the tomb of Alexander VI, Borgia.  They are getting a new lighting system installed.  And BLAM amazing illumination of the side chapels.

Then, while wiling away a little time I was in the Via dei Pettinari, where I stopped at San Salvatore in Onda, I noticed this good street sign.  I’m sure I’ve seen this a zillion times.  It’s like many of the things in Rome.  Sometimes little details stand out.

Vi offero il mio cuore
e insieme l’alma mia [anima mia]
per me pregate
O Vergine mia.

“Se tu dirai di cuore ‘Ave Maria’ in cielo tu vedrai la faccia mia”

1705

A view up the same street, so familiar to me, since the early 80s.

A little food, so people won’t ask “Where’s the food?”

And egg.

Poached.  Cooking arrested with ice.  Slightly breaded.  Fried. Garnished with a truffle foam and some caviar.  So simple.  I’m going to perfect this technique.

After supper with 8-9 people (someone went and came back).

Little beignet.

Yum.

Back to the beignet, because the blog loaded the pictures in this order and I am too tired to change it.

It’s raining and that puts me into a mood.

In your goodness pray for Riccardo who is in the ICU in Rome.  He has some horrible flesh eating bacteria in his torso, may God help me.  One of the diners tonight left us, went to the hospital after a call, and returned at dessert time with the news.  We prayed for him. Do pray for him.

Pray for me tomorrow.

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to |
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Vatican employee caught messing with Wikipedia entry of @TaylorRMarshall

Here is something amusing.

Here is something not amusing at all.

First, do you remember the dust up over the doctored letter of Benedict XVI when he declined to review books about the theology of Francis?  A guy in the comms office edited to make it say something it didn’t say.   He lost his job, but they created a new one for him and slide him into it.

Now there’s this.

https://twitter.com/breeadail/status/1187325209197588480?s=21

Some of you might not get exactly what’s going on here.

Taylor Marshall is an outspoken critic of Francis and those around him.  Recently he supported the men who threw the pagan demon statues into the Tiber.

Suddenly Marshall’s Wikipedia entry changes.

By the rules, you are not supposed to change your own entry, but other people who have access can… and they do!

Someone went into Marshall’s wikipedia entry and planted bad stuff.  (That has happened to me, by the way; someone dedicated to the ordination of women planted insinuations and right now there is other tendentious stuff about – you guessed it – a certain Jesuit … but I digress.)

The thing is, you can see the history of the changes and you can see who made them.  If you know what you are doing, you can dig past the initial information and really see some interesting things.

In this case, someone drilled in and found that the person who put the bad stuff on Marshall’s page was working from the IP address of the Vatican’s Office of Telecommunications.

So, someone who works for the Vatican screwed with Taylor Marshall’s Wiki entry in an unfavorable way.

Incompetent.

Ooops… sorry, not incompetent.  Didn’t mean that.  I meant

accompaniment!

That’s it.  This is new kind of “accompaniment” being offered by the Vatican to Taylor Marshall.

¡Hagan lío!

UPDATE:

Posted in ¡Hagan lío! |
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@JamesMartinSJ – the Bible might be wrong in condemning same-sex sexual behavior

This, folks, says just about everything.

What just happened?

“The issue is whether the biblical judgment is correct.”

Martin, inveterate Jesuit homosexualist activist quotes this Methodist who suggests: “Yes, the Bible condemns same-sex behavior.  BUT… is the Bible wrong?”

The Methodist – but NOT MARTIN! – places same-sex acts on the same plane as slavery.    If the Bible doesn’t condemn slavery, then the Bible doesn’t condemn sodomy.  And if that is the case, in condemning sodomy, the the Bible is wrong.

See the slight of hand?

But, hey, Martin is only quoting someone else, right?  It’s not as if he believes that argument.

Right?

Right?

 

 

Posted in Jesuits, Sin That Cries To Heaven | Tagged , ,
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ASK FATHER: Am I still forgiven if I don’t to my assigned penance?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I saw a tweet about a question on confession.  The person said the penance she got from the priest in confession was hard but she didn’t completely do it.  She wanted to know if she was forgiven her sins.  A priest answered and linked to an answer that didn’t seem right.  Can you help? I’ve done this, too, and I’ve sometimes forgotten to do it when it was something hard or had to be done later.

The tweet in question was included HERE.   The questioner was directed to another website which almost got it right.

This question, in one form or another, has come up before.

Sometimes people run into these priests who given “deferred” penances or “vague” penances (“Do something nice for someone later today.”).   How the heck do you know if you did it?  Something “nice”?

Priests should give penances that are clear so that people know when they have done them.  Don’t leave people scratching their heads, Fathers!  Also, people have lives to live and, often, they want to go to Communion very soon after going to confession.  Put them at ease and give them something they can do right away, after getting out of the confessional.

Let’s drill in now.

It is clear that “satisfaction” is a necessary part of the process of being absolved and reconciled with God, Church and self.  The Council of Trent makes this clear.  Can. 981 makes this clear.   Priests are to give penances and people are, personally, to fulfill them.  They can’t have someone else do them.    It is a Protestant error and an attack on the Sacrament of Penance to claim that some satisfaction for sin is unnecessary, because Christ fulfilled all satisfaction (which, in itself is true… more below).  Trent makes it clear that satisfaction is not for the remission of the eternal penalty of separation from God, which is absolved along with guilt through sacramental absolution, but rather for the temporal penalty which is not forgiven through absolution.  See the difference?

Validity of the absolution – removal of guilt and the future punishment of Hell – does not depend on whether or not the penitent does the penance assigned.   The penance assigned has to do with the temporal punishment due to sin.  The Sacrament of Baptism forgives also that, but Penance does not.

The reliable source The Catholic Encyclopedia states a good summary of the matter (my emphases):

In theological language, this penance is called satisfaction and is defined, in the words of St. Thomas: “The payment of the temporal punishment due on account of the offence committed against God by sin” (Summa Theologicæ Supplement.12.3). It is an act of justice whereby the injury done to the honour of God is required, so far at least as the sinner is able to make reparation (poena vindicativa); it is also a preventive remedy, inasmuch as it is meant to hinder the further commission of sin (poena medicinalis). Satisfaction is not, like contrition and confession, an essential part of the sacrament, because the primary effect, i.e., remission of guilt and eternal punishment — is obtained without satisfaction; [NB] but it is an integral part, because it is requisite for obtaining the secondary effect — i.e., remission of the temporal punishment. The Catholic doctrine on this point is set forth by the Council of Trent, which condemns the proposition: “That the entire punishment is always remitted by God together with the guilt, and the satisfaction required of penitents is no other than faith whereby they believe that Christ has satisfied for them”; ….. (Can. “de Sac. poenit.”, 12, 15; Denzinger, “Enchir.”, 922, 925).

See what’s going on here?  There are two effects.  The first effect requires confession of all mortal sins in kind and number, true sorrow and firm purpose of amendment with penance, satisfaction.  Absolution is given and BAM! Your sins are gone and you are in the state of grace.

However, because our sins did harm, in justice we have to deal with the other issue of reparation, satisfaction for the temporal punishment due to sin.  This is necessary but it is not essential for absolution.

I’ll repeat in another way, in case this is hard.

When you are absolved, you are absolved.  You have a firm purpose of amendment and you intend to do your penance.  If you don’t intend to do the penance, that’s a problem.  That’s an indication that you aren’t really sorry, which would make the absolution invalid.

But … if you are sorry for your sins and you intend to do penance and amend your life, you are absolved.  In a sense, all penances are deferred: you aren’t doing them on the spot in the confessional before absolution: you do them afterward.   You do not cease to be absolved if you forget or are unsure about whether or not you did the (sometimes vague) thing the priest said to do.

The hinge here is “satisfaction”.  We do penance out of justice for the damage done, and for the good of our souls and, hopefully, to help us avoid sin in the future.  Satisfaction is necessary.  But we have to keep in mind that all penances, all satisfaction that we can do are not proportioned to the damage that our mortal sins cause.  By sinning mortally, we open a chasm that we humans cannot close on our own.  Christ closed it and continues to close the breeches we open up after baptism.  Christ perfectly fulfilled the satisfaction for sins through His Sacrifice on the Cross.  We cannot by our own efforts add to that or perfect it.  Hence, in a sense, every penance assigned in confession is arbitrary and ridiculously disproportional when it comes to “satisfaction for sins”.

Whether the priest assigns one Our Father or 500 Rosaries while kneeling on glass in salt water, Christ is the one who perfectly performed the ultimate penance and satisfaction for our sins.

But we avoid the error of Protestants and we indeed condemn it: we have to do penance for the temporal punishment due to sin out of justice.   This is also why a priest confessor is obliged to give a penance and why he should give one that people understand and can do in a reasonable time and way.  This is also why we should make use of indulgences for the sake of the deceased who did not do adequate penance in life and are being purified in Purgatory.

This is also why penitents can ask for a different penance!  If you don’t get what the confessor is talking about, or you think you cannot do something, ask for a different penance!

And, there is nothing to prevent you from doing more if you want to!   “Be truly sorry for your sins and for your penance say ONE Our Father.”  Want to say TEN?  Go ahead.    If you forget even the ONE Our Father because your lunch break was over 5 minutes ago and the guy ahead of you took up nearly the whole time you had?   You are still good to go.  You are absolved.  You still have penance to do, but you are forgiven.

Do NOT under any circumstances attempt to conclude that penance is not necessary.  I believe it was St. Teresa of Avila who appeared to a sister and said that she had had about a minute of Purgatory because she had once said an Our Father in a negligent way and that that minute was the worst of her existence.  Ponder that.

Ponder that and do your penances.

If you don’t do your penances, for one reason or another, confess that the next time you go to confession.  That’s how important it is to do the assigned penance.

We must make an effort.  Then, as St. Augustine says, Christ crowns His own merits in us, in what we do.

We receive something beautiful and awesome in absolution.  We should respond with our whole person in gratitude, in heart, mind, and body.

GO TO CONFESSION!

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, GO TO CONFESSION | Tagged , , , ,
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