Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Paradiso: Canto XXIV -- The Triumph of Christ and St. Peter's Dance

Faith, the active response to divine revelation about which Fr. Brennan has already spoken, involves more than belief -- it involves a choice, which according to Aristotle is a "rational principle and thought," to pursue the good. The choices that we make are predicated upon our faith, upon our responding to grace, which is God's activity within the human person, according to our capacity. Often, as in the case of Blessed Luchesio and Buonadonna, who set in motion the Secular Franciscan Order, these choices are life changing, and they become so indelible a part of who we are that we cannot help but appropriately respond to God's love through them.



Dante's examination of faith is this kind of response -- without hesitation or consternation, he addresses each of St. Peter's questions, and the alacrity with which he correctly (and succinctly) deals with these complex issues of faith (while still managing to denounce Boniface VIII, line 110) greatly pleases the first vicar, who dances three times around him in the same form and manner with which he danced around Beatrice upon seeing her. What he had taken from her as self-evident, he receives from Dante as proof of his total orientation toward God, and this examination precedes his advancing into God's immediate presence in the same way that his lying prostrate before the angel who cut the P's into his forehead preceded his purification on the Mount. The importance of this examination preceding those of hope and love points to the fact that faith is the foundation upon which we engage those above.

S

9 Comments:

Blogger Fr. Earl Meyer said...

Commentator J. Gallagher observes that the comprehensive quiz on faith which St. Peter gives to Dante in this Canto is modeled on the bachelor examinations in medieval universities. Perhaps Dante is the source of all the humorous tales of St. Peters questioning those who knock on the pearly gates (e.g. Spelling test to enter heaven: For a Jew: spell God; for a Baptist, spell Jesus, for a Catholic, spell encyclical.)

Most students, especially at this time of year, if they woke up in eternity only to face an examination would not think that they had arrived in paradise!

Actually I like the test and I think it brings out well the double aspect of faith: content of truths and commitment to those truths.

3:17 PM  
Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

I prefer the Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade kind of examination, where Indy has to "leap" from the lion's head into what seems like a bottomless pit only to be saved by an invisible rock bridge that leads him to the holy grail or the Star Wars kind of examination where Yoda tests Luke's faith by having him try to raise his ship out of the swamp and confront his fears in the darkness.

S.

5:44 PM  
Blogger Fr_Martin_2B said...

I couldn't help but notice the contrast between the "spinning wheel of radiances" and Dante's entry into the inferno when he greats the lustful. Here the blessed seem to be beautifully choreographed in an upward spiral, while the unfortunate lustful were bounded around in a fitfull whirlwind.

Fr. Earl's comment on the medieval exams struck a chord with me as well, as I know that priests used to have to travel to see the bishop who would give them an oral exam before permitting them to enter into Holy Orders.

I am curious to know why Dante would choose to have St. Peter dance. I know that after curing a lame man in the Acts of the Apostles they went "walking and leaping a praising God," but the mental image of the gruff St. Peter twirling around seems rather amusing. Not to mention that it would seem to be a regular activity of his in heaven.

Finally, in Dante's final answer to St. Peter, I am reminded of the old story told about a bishop after the second vatican council. After being asked the rather silly question "what do we have left to believe in now that the Church has changed so much?", he simply replied "we believe in one God...

9:28 AM  
Blogger Adam M. Henjum said...

Is it safe to say that with all the dancing going on in heaven that Dante is telling us that liturgical dance is going to be part of the heavenly banquet? I mean Peter was dance and rejoicing in such a manner why not the rest of us. And if we will be praising God in such a way should we not start now here on earth? Just a thought I had. I have a hard time picturing St. Peter dancing around Dante.

7:37 PM  
Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

It is an amusing image, Fr. Martin 2B, of St. Peter's dance, and one that invokes the further image of the Santa Claus and Boogey Man dance of Tim Burton's A Nightmare Before Christmas.

It might be a helpful reminder of the imagery this close to God -- we stopped seeing souls that resembled human persons once we left the shadow of the earth (which lasted through the moon, Mercury, and Venus). By the time we get to the Sun, which is where Aquinas and Bonaventure rest, we start to see lights representing the souls, and this lasts from the Sun to Mars, and then to Jupiter. From the contemplatives of Saturn on, we have flickers of flame, and flames dance as part of their nature. Don't think, then, of a gruff old St. Peter a-dancing, and a-hoopin', and a-hollerin. Think of a flame leaping about in space, orbiting an object of its desire. Dante's turning into one, too, which you'll notice in subtle degrees.

As for Ahenjum's idea to re-invoke liturgical dance, who knows what the new pope will do for the liturgical structure of the mass. While you're waiting, though, feel free to bounce the idea off Fr. Morris, and use interculturalism as your argument -- if the seminary really is serious about all this global vision stuff, then why not also . . .

S.

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