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Solemnity of All Saints
Matthew 5:1-12A + Homily
19 Minutes 28 Seconds
Link to the Readings:
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/110120.cfm
(New American Bible, Revised Edition)
From the parish bulletin of Sunday 1 November 2020:
The wife of a most distinguished oil painter who taught at the Art Students League for many decades, having started there as a boy with a scholarship given by Mayor LaGuardia, told me that he had “perfect pitch” when it came to mixing his palette. She also confided that he never painted autumnal scenes of leaves at full peak because the colors are so brilliant that on canvas they would seem artificial. In my brief tutelage under him, I found his happiness in his work contagious. But the most important thing I learned was that lesson about the natural outdoing artifice. And this can be taken a step further with reference to God’s grace which, as Aquinas said, does not destroy nature but perfects it, despite our limitations.
By Fr. George William RutlerSolemnity of All Saints
Matthew 5:1-12A + Homily
19 Minutes 28 Seconds
Link to the Readings:
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/110120.cfm
(New American Bible, Revised Edition)
From the parish bulletin of Sunday 1 November 2020:
The wife of a most distinguished oil painter who taught at the Art Students League for many decades, having started there as a boy with a scholarship given by Mayor LaGuardia, told me that he had “perfect pitch” when it came to mixing his palette. She also confided that he never painted autumnal scenes of leaves at full peak because the colors are so brilliant that on canvas they would seem artificial. In my brief tutelage under him, I found his happiness in his work contagious. But the most important thing I learned was that lesson about the natural outdoing artifice. And this can be taken a step further with reference to God’s grace which, as Aquinas said, does not destroy nature but perfects it, despite our limitations.