Thursday, July 20, 2017

Preciousness!


Athens

We enjoyed brilliant lectures from Ron and Kenny at the Pnyx (the birthplace of democracy) and the Areopagus (the judicial site of Athens, where Paul made his case for Christianity to the Athenians).  


Ron at the parthenon. . .



. . . reading Greek inscriptions clear as day.  Such a scholar, he is!  Jake could not help but be impressed.


Wonderful food at outdoor tavernas!



Mycenae

Ron was superb in leading the group through Mycenae, relevant to Homer's Greece and the home of civilization 5,000 years ago and beyond.  We had gorgeous views of Greece from Agamemnon's palace!



Friday, July 14, 2017

Socrates' Prison

The highpoint of my summer so far has been giving a site lecture at Socrates' prison!

Clare escaping prison!




Annie Learned to Ride a Bike!

She learned on the same bike, on the same tennis court, as Leigh did several summers ago!


Our Time in Umbria--Gorgeous!




Thomas Aquinas

We went to Thomas Aquinas' birthplace and family castle, Roccasecca.  We hike up to the ruins.  What a view!

   I also gave a site lecture at Fossanova, where he died.  We also visited Monte Cassino, where he was educated as a boy.  What a blessed day!

Jake


     Jake has had a big summer.  He decided to "take" my class, Philosophy of the Human Person.  He was going to sit in on it with the seventeen college students who had signed up for it.  
     But he wound up doing the readings, to make it worth while.  That led to him writing the first paper.  Then he took the plunge, and chose to take the final exam and write the second paper.  He's putting some of the students to shame! 
    It was truly a new frontier for me a a mom to have my son in my classroom, and for him to enjoy it so much.  We had rich discussions outside of class ranging from relativism to realism to Descartes and modus tollens


    Jake went into Rome without any of us, his family, taking two students with him.  They did a walking tour of churches in Rome.  They got into and back out of the city on public transportation.  I joked that it was like his bar mitzvah, becoming a man! 
 What a rare privilege it is for me to have him as my son!  


Ron photographing Kenny Marchetti's site lecture

Kenny's lecture on Dante was. . . divine! :)


Annie and her precious gelato!


Michelangelo's Holy Family

     Ron gave thoughtful reflections on the famous Holy Family, One of Michelangelo's only paintings (most of his work is sculpture or fresco).  This one was commissioned by a Florentine to hang in his home.  Unusual for Michelangelo.
     Why are there classical nude figures in the background?  Scholars suggest that the nude figures represent the world before Christ.  Then, the figure on the front right of the background is the young John the Baptist, heralding the Messiah.
   Then, the gray lintel is--strangely--all over Florence.  It is even in the Uffizzi--the demarkation of one space as separate from another.  Then, the Holy Family represents the new era for humanity.  Joseph is placing Christ on Mary's shoulder, and she is giving him to the world.  The whole painting can thus be seen as temporal, telling story through time.
   

Botticelli's Madonna and Perugino's Saint Sebastian

Walking through the Borghese gallery this year, Annie picked out her favorite art once again--a Botticelli Madonna and Child.  It is truly extraordinary.

    Here is a Saint Sebastian pained by one of my all-time favorites, Perugino!

The Suffering Servant


My favorite painting in the Uffizzi in Florence is this Suffering Servant by Sano di Pietro: 




    I have not yet found the words as to why the Suffering Servant means so much to me.  True, it is a balm to have the Son of God draw close when we suffer.  His companionship and empathy are a blessing, especially to those who experience life's hurts.  Beyond that, I am trying to put into words my wonder and awe that a divine image could ever look like this.  The Son of God being humiliated?  Tortured?  And that being a gift?  Redemptive?  I just do not have a way to express how counter-intuitive this is to me.  
    Even more shocking to me is that some humans--animalistic beings who have struggled so intensely for survival over these hundreds of thousands of years--would find meaning or inspiration in anyone's weakness or loss.   

Loving Italy

What is not to love about Italy? Our favorite evenings are those we have a party at the forno--outdoor kitchen with brick pizza oven.  Ron burns wood on a grill, makes his own coals, then places the coals around the perimeter of the pizza oven, which heats up the oven.  Then we place homemade pizzas in the oven, and a few minutes later, we are in paradise!  Ron also makes grilled chicken and sausages, grilled zucchini, and we make bruschetta.  Heaven on earth!