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NoPlaceLikeRome
Guest
In a wonderful essay on Christ as hero of every man’s soul, Gerard Manley Hopkins says that He was the most perfectly beautiful man who ever lived, quoting the Song of Songs: “As the apple tree to the trees of the forest, so is my beloved among the sons of men”.
St. Therese, by contrast, if I remember aright refers in Story of a Soul to a passage in Isaiah which depicts the Messiah as ugly, and says that for this reason she chose the title “of the Holy Face”.
So, which do you think: during His earthly life was He very beautiful, or (until the Transfiguration and Resurrection) very homely, or neither? Scripture seems to support the latter to some degree, with the apostles not recognizing Him after the Resurrection, although this could be for other reasons…
St. Therese, by contrast, if I remember aright refers in Story of a Soul to a passage in Isaiah which depicts the Messiah as ugly, and says that for this reason she chose the title “of the Holy Face”.
So, which do you think: during His earthly life was He very beautiful, or (until the Transfiguration and Resurrection) very homely, or neither? Scripture seems to support the latter to some degree, with the apostles not recognizing Him after the Resurrection, although this could be for other reasons…