BENEDICT XVI GENERAL AUDIENCE /Wednesday,
31 August 2011
Castel Gandolfo
Art and
Prayer (excerpts)
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
It may have happened on some occasion that you paused before a sculpture, a picture, a few verses of a poem or a piece of
music that you found deeply moving, that gave you a sense of joy, a clear perception, that is, that what you beheld was not
only matter, a piece of marble or bronze, a painted canvas, a collection of letters or an accumulation of sounds, but something
greater, something that speaks, that can touch the heart, communicate a message, uplift the mind.
Indeed it resembles a door open on to the infinite, on to a beauty and a truth that go beyond the daily routine. And a work
of art can open the eyes of the mind and of the heart, impelling us upward.
However some artistic expressions are real highways to God, the supreme Beauty; indeed, they help us to grow in our relationship
with him, in prayer. These are works that were born from faith and express faith. We can see an example of this when we visit
a Gothic cathedral: we are enraptured by the vertical lines that soar skywards and uplift our gaze and our spirit, while at
the same time we feel small yet long for fullness.
I remember a concert of music by Johann Sebastian Bach in Munich, conducted by Leonard Bernstein. At the end of the last passage,
one of the Cantatas, I felt, not by reasoning but in the depths of my heart, that what I had heard had communicated truth
to me, the truth of the supreme composer, and impelled me to thank God. The Lutheran bishop of Munich was next to me and I
said to him spontaneously: in hearing this one understands: it is true; such strong faith is true, as well as the beauty that
irresistibly expresses the presence of Gods truth.
Dear friends, I ask you to rediscover the importance of this path also for prayer, for our living relationship with God. Towns
and villages throughout the world contain treasures of art that express faith and beckon to us to return to our relationship
with God. May the visits to places filled with art, then, not only be opportunities for cultural enrichment that too but
may they become above all moments of grace, incentives to strengthen our bond and our dialogue with the Lord so that in switching
from simple external reality to the more profound reality it expresses we may pause to contemplate the ray of beauty that
strikes us to the quick, that almost wounds us, and that invites us to rise toward God.