This is Raphael's Disputation of the Holy Sacrament, which is found in the Vatican Museum. It is a fresco measuring 16.4 feet by 25.2 feet. It was painted in the Vatican between 1509 and 1510. One can read many details about the fresco here.
Catholic church flower lore, film reviews and more . . .
This is Raphael's Disputation of the Holy Sacrament, which is found in the Vatican Museum. It is a fresco measuring 16.4 feet by 25.2 feet. It was painted in the Vatican between 1509 and 1510. One can read many details about the fresco here.
This early 20th century portrayal of a Corpus Christi procession in Santa Fe, New Mexico is by John French Sloan, an Easterner who routinely spent the summers in Santa Fe. It is oil on canvas and measures 30 X 36 inches. It was auctioned by Christie's (auctioneer) in 2016 and is in a private collection.
One of the most beautiful of Catholic devotional practices is the Corpus Christi procession. After mass, the priest carries a monstrance with the Blessed Sacrament held high through the nearby streets while the faithful sing Eucharistic hymns such as Tantum Ergo and Pange Lingua and make the sign of the Cross.
The image above depicts such a procession in Peru during the late Spanish Colonial period. It is oil on canvas and measures about 38 by 96 inches. It can be found in the Lima Museum, Lima, Peru.
We live in a time of vulgarity, irreverence -- and worse -- even in high places in church and state. We must not join in this. We need to frequently turn our minds to Our Lord, Our Lady, the angels and saints, and everything we know to be good, beautiful, and true.
We need to sanctify our homes in every way possible. We need statues, art, candles, music, books, and flowers that call our minds to higher things and refine us.
We need etiquette in our homes as well as in public places. We need to observe the proper order of things.
I hope that readers of this site will adapt information found here about church flowers to their "oratories" at home. I hope too that many will honor Our Lady with a Mary garden, whether it be outdoors or on a windowsill or table top. And I hope that our Queen will inspire us to remember that we are only as good as we are in private when we think no one is looking and forget that all of Heaven can see us.