E
edwest2
Guest
Dear Portrait,Dear Baelor,
Cordial greetings and a very good day. Hope all is well.
Given man’s fallen estate and his propensity to sin, it is surely the height of folly, dear friend, to assume that he would not find the sight of an undraped body sexually arousing. Such a naive view hardly reckons with the whole issue of concupiscence and the need to continually subdue the baser instincts. Moreover, it admits of no doubt that the display of a naked body is a near occasion of sin, inasmuch as impure thoughts will in all probability be incited, given man’s innate sinfulness. Only a very inadequate view of the human condition would think or suggest otherwise, especially in view of the increasing sexualisation of contemporary Western culture and all the adulteries of modern art. Surely, if anything, there is need today for extra vigilance concerning matters of decency and good taste. Thus being against nude modeling cannot be blitheley dismissed as some sort of misplaced modesty verging on Puritan prudery. On the contrary, it is the appropriate and only Catholic response from those with a well-formed conscience and an elementary knowledge of moral theology.
Nude modeling is opposed to the virtue of modesty and therefore poses a serious threat to the preservation of chastity. ‘Purity requires modesty, an integral part of temperance. Modesty protects the intimate centre of the person. * It means refusing to unveil what should* remain hidden. It is ordered to chastity to whose sensitivity it bears witness’; moreover, '…the baptized must continue to struggle against concupiscence of the flesh and disordered desires" (CCC, paras. 2521, 2520, emphasis mine). How this can be squared with nude modeling is beyond me, old chap, and it most decidedly cannot make the ‘struggle against concupiscence of the flesh’, already an arduous task, any easier for fallen men.
As for art museums having to close down, dear friend, I think that is highly unlikely to happen in the decadent times in which our lot is now sadly cast, after all we pride ourselves today on living in an age of enlightenment which has cast off so called Victorian inhibitions.
Unless we have allowed ourselves to become so distracted and demoralized by the ungodly and worldly influences with which we are surrounded, and believe it to be healthily frank to represent and appreciate the beauty of human beings in a natural state of nudity, we will see nude modeling as shamefully offending against decency and the moral sense.
Certainly, dear friend, the good God designed our bodies, male and female and no healthly-minded man can regret that He devised the reproductive method that He did. Nevertheless, it is no accident that historically our genitalia have been termed our ‘private parts’. Several years ago I remember reading of a lady writing in forceful protest to the editor of some women’s journal, which was making its first venture into pictorial representation of near nudity. This lady did not say, ‘This is disgusting’ or ‘I am outraged’, she simply said, ‘Please leave something for my bedroom’. Jolly good point that. Sadly in our modern age we have lost the distinction between the public and the private. It is just one more of those ironings-out of distinctions which mark the godless post-Christian mentality. My fear is that far too many modern Catholics are getting caught up with this very unspiritual mindset, which is why they end up defending something as morally offensive as nude modelling.
Indeed, dear friend, a doctor, who must sometimes examine his patients in a state of undress, can be at risk from being aroused by unchaste thoughts, but there is really no way around this as his *duty *is to preserve the life of those under his care. He must be jolly vigilant for sure and perhaps it is advisable, if at all possbile, for patients to be examined by a doctor of their own gender, so as to minimise any unprofessional misconduct. However, this is hardly the same as a model making a choice to pose nude for an artist. Any risk of stimulating impure thoughts can at least be avoided in this instance by the model simply making the choice not to pose, or for the artist making the choice not to paint nude models.
God bless.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait
Pax
Allow me to offer you some praise for your post. Seeing the live model is indeed problematic. There are good anatomy books that show, by way of drawings, no photographs, how to render muscle and bone and other necessary information.
However - and God knows I’m a sinner - there are those who post often to find a way to convince Catholics and others, that there are “serious” reasons to view the live nude model. I worked in a large hospital for almost 10 years and was sometimes asked to assist in procedures or be in situations where the partly clothed/partly nude patient was undergoing a procedure or in a situation where partial exposure could not be avoided, but even in those cases, care was taken to cover whatever else could be covered.
Over a period of the last four decades, the media has gradually dulled our sensitivity and things were legalized that never should have been legalized. Now some Catholics firmly believe, as if it were the 11th Commandment, that nobody can tell them what to read, watch or hear. This, I believe, is the heart of the issue. Also, there are those that believe adulthood allows them the capability to tolerate a little bit of sin, apparently for their entertainment.
All I have seen over this time period is a continuing erosion of natural hearts and a hardening of hearts to the words and proper warnings given for our benefit out of proper concern and love by the Church.
God bless,
Ed