
The "Extra" Synod Father: Raphael
ANTHONY VERDONThe reproduction of his "Disputation on the Sacrament" by Raphael has been placed in the hall of the synod on the Eucharist. Timothy Verdon, whom Benedict XVI has called to Rome as an expert consultant, explains why.
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Disputation
on the Sacrament Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio) 1509 (click
to enlarge)
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In the hall
of the Vatican where the synod on the Eucharist is being held from October 2-23,
above the presider's table is a large screen. It displays a famous fresco by Raphael,
which illustrates for the synod fathers the theme of their meeting: the "Disputation
on the Sacrament." At the center of the depiction, on an altar surrounded by other
fathers who are reasoning and discussing while they adore is the
consecrated host exposed in a magnificent monstrance.
The original fresco
is nearby, in the wing of the Apostolic Palace visited daily by thousands of visitors
from all nations and faiths, a few steps away from the Sistine Chapel. Raphael
painted it in 1509. Pope Julius II commissioned him to paint it in what was the
library of his apartment for receiving visitors, which was later named the Stanza
della Segnatura.
The "Disputation," which is 7 m wide, completely filling
the wall it occupies, and is set off by a vaulted arch, was the first fresco that
the 27-year-old artist from Urbino painted at the Vatican. And it is also his
most richly theological work. On another wall of that same papal library, facing
the "Disputation," Raphael painted another famous fresco, "The School of Athens,"
immediately after the first.
Both of these frescoes, and the room as
a whole, provide an important means of understanding the Catholic faith as it
was lived by the humanists of the papal court, at the dawn of the modern era.
The insight they provide is still powerfully instructive, as Timothy
Verdon demonstrates in the text reproduced below. Verdon is one of the leading
specialists in sacred art worldwide. Born in New Jersey in 1946, he is now a priest
living in Florence. Educated as an art historian at Yale University, he has lived
in Italy for thirty years, where he directs the office of the Florence archdiocese
for catechesis through art. He is also a consultant for the Pontifical Commission
for the Cultural Heritage of the Church, a fellow of the Center for Renaissance
Studies at Harvard University, and a professor at Stanford University and at the
Theological Faculty of Central Italy.
Benedict XVI invited him to the
synod on the Eucharist as an expert.
Part of the text reproduced here
was published in L'Osservatore Romano on October 12, 2005. It will be published
again in a book by Verdon now being printed by Mondadori: La Basilica di San
Pietro: I papi e gli artisti [Saint Peter's Basilica: The Popes and the
Artists].
The "Disputation
on the Sacrament": A Manifesto in which the Church Tells its Own Story
by Timothy Verdon
What did this image
centered upon the Eucharist communicate to the people of its day? The dynamic
assembly painted by Raphael in 1509, with the glorified Christ displaying his
wounds in the center, was above all an iconographic reminder of the universal
judgment: the day on which Christ will come "amid the clouds, and every eye will
see him, even those who pierced him. All the peoples of the earth will lament
him" (Revelation 1:7).
For the sensibility of that time, the immediate
impact, the primary message of the fresco, was of an eschatological character.
It clearly showed the relationship between the Church militant upon the earth
and the Church triumphant in heaven.
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And
then, in the apparent confusion of the scene, beyond the strange platform of clouds
that divides the wall horizontally, the viewer would have noted the vertical axis
defined by: God the Father above; Christ, who is displaying his wounds, in the
middle; the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove descending in a nimbus of glory
below Christ; and further below on the altar placed upon three steps at
floor level the Eucharistic host in a monstrance.
So after the
first impression, which would have been generally eschatological, or referring
to the end times, the attentive observer would have made more specifically theological,
even dogmatic, reflections: a central trinitarian structure and the sacrament
as the visible extension of the life of the three divine persons, the object of
attention for the figures gathered around the altar at the bottom. The
fresco's main axis, from the Trinitarian group down to the host, seems to echo
the conclusion of the ecumenical council celebrated in Florence seventy years
earlier. The decree it issued, Laetantur Caeli, exalts the real presence
of the body of Christ in the consecrated host, right after defining as "reasonable
and licit" the addition of the Filioque to the creed: and Raphael, in fact,
shows the Spirit proceeding from the Father "and from the Son."
The timeliness
of these references, as also the inclusion of portraits of personages of the time
among those at the bottom of the fresco, are however situated within a context
that underlines the link with the past.
The personages of the era who
are depicted there for example, Sixtus IV, the uncle of Julius II who is
depicted standing to the right of the altar, mingle with the fathers and doctors
of the early and medieval Church without any break in continuity.
And
the placement of the Holy Spirit below Christ and directly above the host and
the altar evokes not only the affirmation of the council of Florence, but also
the ancient formula for the Eucharistic epiclesis, in which the priest entreats
God the Father to send the Spirit, the sanctifier, that the offerings may become
the body and blood of Christ.
Furthermore, the four Gospels emanating
from the wings of the Spirit who is hovering above the monstrance allude to the
unbreakable relationship between the word and the Eucharistic bread, as in the
Mass itself, where the readings orient us toward the fulness of the Scriptures:
Christ incarnate and really present in the sacrament of the altar.
So
for a visitor at the time of the Renaissance, the "Disputation" must have suggested
an eschatological situation announced beforehand by the liturgy.
And
the brilliant design in perspective, which must have aroused admiration in the
Rome of the early 1500's, leads the eye to the altar, which is situated in a space
delimited by the half-circle of clouds upon which Christ and the other figures
of the upper level are sitting. This semicircular space seems like the apse of
animmaterial Church, one without walls or roof, in which two assemblies, whose
members are of equal size and equal dignity, contemplate Christ. The earthly assemblies
sees him in the Eucharist in mystery, and they reason about this, as they are
still seeking to grasp the mystery's full meaning. The heavenly assemblies sees
him not in symbol, but as he now is in his glory, together with the Father and
the Spirit.
The hidden design by which Raphael composed the image is
also of fundamental importance: the great cross constituted by the horizontal
line of the saints, prophets, and patriarchs on the clouds, and the vertical line
of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, plus the Eucharist. This cross, as the framework
of the vision of glory, placed above the bookshelves, suggested that "Jews demand
signs and Greeks look for wisdom, but we proclaim Christ crucified […] the
power of God and the wisdom of God" (1 Corinthians 1:22-24).

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The
School of Athens Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio) 1509 (click
to enlarge)
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But there's
more. The "Disputation" is the first image that one sees when entering the Stanza
della Segnatura, but it's not the only one. To the rear of the visitor who enters
the room by the door on the northeast corner, there is "The School of Athens,"
which is painted on the wall of the room opposite the "Disputation." It is throught
this other fresco that one gathers the overall logic of the plan suggested to
Raphael.
The two walls, in fact, are connected. "School " and "Disputation"
constitute a single great image through which the visitor himself moves.
Standing in the middle of the room, one sees in "The School of Athens" figures
who are emerging from deep within a vast hall still under construction. Among
these noble figures one recognizes the greatest philosophers of antiquity: in
the center, Plato, pointing to the sky with his right hand and carrying in his
left the Timaeus; and Aristotle, who is gesturing toward the ground and
carrying the Nichmoachean Ethics. And then there are Socrates, Pythagoras,
Heraclitus, Diogenes, Euclid, Zoroaster, Ptolemy. Some of them have formed a group
and are carrying on a lively discussion; others remain alone, deeply immersed
in their own thoughts. The entire assembly seems to advance toward the viewer:
this impression is made using just a few figures and is reinforced through the
powerful design in perspective.
But in the "Disputation" on the other
side of the room, Raphael has created the opposite impression: The personages
on floor level seem to move away from the viewer, turning toward the altar in
the depths of the liturgical space defined by the half-circle of clouds.
So a person in the middle of the room has the sensation of participating in
a collective movement that begins at the "School of Athens" and ends at the altar
of the "Disputation." The magnificent hall of the "School" also has a specific
architectural form: it looks like the nave of a great church. It is, in fact,
in the form of the new Basilica of St. Peter designed by Raphael's friend Donato
Bramante, and begun three years before the painting of the frescoes of the Stanza,
in 1506. A visitor of that who was familiar with the life of the papal court must
have already known about Bramante's project, and thus would have been able to
identify the architectural space of the "School " as the planned basilica.

Placing
himself between the two principal frescoes of the Stanza della Segnatura, the
Renaissance era visitor must have felt as if he were in the transept of the church
under contruction, emblematic of the universal church, along the nave of which
the great thinkers of the ancient world advanced toward the altar placed in the
apse delineated by the clouds. And a humanist might have felt as if he were a
participant in the age-old progress of the human spirit from Greco-Roman paganism
through the present toward the eternity of Christ, which he could already glimpse
by faith in a marvelous symbol held up before man by the Church, the Eucharist.
For the visitor of the early 1500's as also for Catholic believers
today that small round of white that Raphael isolates at the center of
the altar was, therefore, the key to all the mysteries of the faith.
In Raphael's "Disputation," in fact, we see
not only Eucharistic adoration a purely religious act but a dynamic
"school" of thinkers gathered around the altar, who are intent upon penetrating
the meaning of the mystery. These Christian doctors are just as animated in the
search for truth as their pagan predecessors, in the "School of Athens " facing
them, were.
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In the bread of God, the humanists Christian
did not see the static object of devotion that the Eucharist had become in late
medieval pietism, but a dynamic reality of the life of that union of many members
which is the Church. Donato Acciaiuoli, in a sermon on the Eucharist he delivered
in 1468, lists ecclesial communion as the first benefit of the sacrament. But
he also insists upon the intellectual fascination that this mystery has always
exerted, and continues to exert, upon men. In Raphael's "Disputation," in fact,
we see not only Eucharistic adoration a purely religious act but
a dynamic "school" of thinkers gathered around the altar, who are intent upon
penetrating the meaning of the mystery. These Christian doctors are just as animated
in the search for truth as their pagan predecessors, in the "School of Athens
" facing them, were.
For Giorgio Vasari, the first commentator on the
"Disputation" during the 1500's, this intense intellectual activity painted by
Raphael represents a process: they are "writing the Mass," he says, and "discussing
the host upon the altar." The Mass, which makes present again, in an unbloody
manner, the sacrifice of Christ on the cross, is the liturgical action in which,
through the work of the Holy Spirit, the ecclesial community lives fully its conformity
to Christ. "Writing" the Mass implies the tireless and age-old effort to understand,
explore, and better live the mystery of communion, entrusted to the Church, between
heaven and earth, between God and man
Even outside of the liturgical
action, the Eucharistic host revealed the body of Christ to the humanists: and
this not only as a relic of his passion, but also and above all as communion,
friendship, Church. In Raphael's fresco and in the commentary on it made by Vasari,
we witness the world of the Renaissance recovering the ancient view of the Eucharist:
the view of the Didache and of writers such as Gaudentius of Brescia, for
whom the bread "comes from many grains of wheat, as also the mystical body of
Christ is one, but is formed of the whole multitude of the human race, which is
brought to perfection by the fire of the Spirit." And so it is for the blood:
many grapes become a single chalice. Finally, this ancient writer explains how
the unity of the Eucharist and the Church is accomplished: "Then comes the pressing
upon the wine-press of the cross. Then there is the fermentation that takes place
of its own accord within the ample spaces of hearts full of faith, hearts that
take up the cross."
Looking over the "Disputation" from bottom to top
from the Eucharist to Christ and the Father it appears clearly that
the unity of the Church on earth with its Head in heaven, of whom the Eucharist
is the symbol, is derived precisely from the "press" of the great concealed cross
that organizes the entire composition, and along the vertical axis of which we
contemplate the Trinity, while the horizontal one shows us our future in heaven
with Mary and all the saints.
At the point where these two axes cross,
preserving the unity between God and man we see Jesus Christ, the Man-God, who
is seated above the two "schools": that of the sainted doctors and that of Athens,
which is also part of the cosmic assembly.
We see Christ upon the invisible
cross of history as saint Thomas Aquinas had characterized him: "The cross was
not only the gibbet of him who suffered; it was the seat of him who taught." It
is a cross which, more than a gibbet, here becomes a cathedra.

In fact, through the mystery of the divine
will, even the pagans participate in the Church, the unsuspecting companions of
its pilgrimage toward God.
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In this perspective, the
Stanza della Segnatura presents itself as a manifesto in which the Church is telling
its own story, at the dawn of the modern era: it is a truly Catholic, truly universal
Church.
In fact, through the mystery of the divine will, even the pagans
participate in the Church, the unsuspecting companions of its pilgrimage toward
God. In their quest for spiritual wisdom, and in the desire to resolve the agonizing
division between man's individual experience and his shared destiny, the ancient
thinkers of "The School of Athens" laid the conceptual foundations upon which
the Church would later build. Unaware of it themselves, they drove history toward
the one the humanist Marsilio Ficino calls "the living book," Christ who teaches
from the cross.
So, like the patriarchs and prophets of Israel, the pagan
philosophers are also our forefathers in faith. In the transept of this church
that embraces all of history, with the ancients in the nave and, in front, in
the apse, the glory to come, the humanist believers of the 1500's might perhaps
called words addressed to the pagans of Ephesus at the Church's inception:
But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have become near
by the blood of Christ […]. So then you are no longer strangers and sojourners,
but you are fellow citizens with the holy ones and members of the household of
God, built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus
himself as the capstone. Through him the whole structure is held together and
grows into a temple sacred in the Lord; in him you also are being built together
into a dwelling place of God in the Spirit (Ephesians 2:13, 19-22).

Additional
Resources
Another recent commentary by Timothy Verdon,
on the images that accompany the "Compendium" of the Catechism of the Catholic
Church: A
Catechism for the Culture of the Image (5.7.2005)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Timothy Verdon. "The "Extra" Synod Father: Raphael." Chiesa
(October 17, 2005).
Reprinted with permission.
THE
AUTHOR
Timothy Verdon is one of the leading specialists in sacred
art worldwide. Born in New Jersey in 1946, he is now a priest living in Florence.
Educated as an art historian at Yale University, he has lived in Italy for thirty
years, where he directs the office of the Florence archdiocese for catechesis
through art. He is also a consultant for the Pontifical Commission for the Cultural
Heritage of the Church, a fellow of the Center for Renaissance Studies at Harvard
University, and a professor at Stanford University and at the Theological Faculty
of Central Italy.
Copyright © 2005 Chiesa