The Little Street,
Painted by Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675),
Painted ca. 1657–1658
Oil on canvas
© Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

The Little Street,
Painted by Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675),
Painted ca. 1657–1658
Oil on canvas
© Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Gospel of 13 March 2023

They intended to throw Jesus down the cliff

Luke 4:24-30

Jesus came to Nazara and spoke to the people in the synagogue: ‘I tell you solemnly, no prophet is ever accepted in his own country.

‘There were many widows in Israel, I can assure you, in Elijah’s day, when heaven remained shut for three years and six months and a great famine raged throughout the land, but Elijah was not sent to any one of these: he was sent to a widow at Zarephath, a Sidonian town. And in the prophet Elisha’s time there were many lepers in Israel, but none of these was cured, except the Syrian, Naaman.’

When they heard this everyone in the synagogue was enraged. They sprang to their feet and hustled him out of the town; and they took him up to the brow of the hill their town was built on, intending to throw him down the cliff, but he slipped through the crowd and walked away.

Reflection on the painting

In our Gospel reading today Jesus challenges the rather narrow view of God that the people of Nazareth, his home town, had. Just as they felt that Jesus belonged to them, so they felt that God belonged to the people of Israel. When Jesus then tries to broaden their minds by quoting some Old Testament scripture where God seemed to favour the pagans over the Jewish people, the people of Nazareth did not at all like what he was saying. In a violent response they even wanted to throw Jesus down a cliff. Jesus' violent rejection in Nazareth foretells the even more brutal rejection in Jerusalem that will soon be upon us at the end of Lent.

The God of Jesus is more compassionate, more generous, more expansive, more inclusive, more loving, more geographically appealing than than they (or we) could ever imagine. It is a beautiful vision of how God is fundamentally ‘good news’ for all who are willing to receive it, irrespective of culture, race, etc….

Our painting by Vermeer shows a quiet, narrow street in Delft, Holland. The street is narrow but the alleyway in which the woman is standing is even narrower. Jesus asks us to expand our views of the world and move out of the limited, narrow views of what we can see. Standing in a narrow alleyway we can only see a very limited view of the world. Moving to larger planes will expand our views. This is an unusual painting in Vermeer’s oeuvre and remarkable for its time, as it simply portrays some ordinary houses. The plain row of worn facades is rendered with meticulous attention to the mundane details that make up the history of these buildings. We notice cracks in the masonry, the peeling paint of the shutters, water stains in the whitewash that covers the brick halfway up the ground floor, etc…. We would never spend much time pondering these houses in the street, but Vermeer's scrutinising eye has made them worthy of our attention.

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Maria Contreras
Member
Maria Contreras(@gera)
15 days ago

Buena comparación , la calle estrecha con la mente estrecha. Jesús nos llama a no sentirnos exclusivos, sino a ver y comprender el mundo que nos rodea que va más allá de la calle donde vivimos. Debemos reflexionar sobre el Evangelio en esta Cuaresma de forma especial. La Iglesia en la Cuaresma nos llama a reflexionar en la pasión de nuestro Señor que finalmente lleva a la Resurrección.

Andy Bocanegra
Member
Andy Bocanegra(@bogie29)
16 days ago

I always find it amazing how Jesus just slips through a crowd of people who are meant to do him harm. How does He do that so easily?

Susana y
Member
Susana y(@blessedsoul)
16 days ago

Hello from Texas, USA. Wonderful reading and beautiful and simple painting opens my eye to my sometimes narrow mind that I fall into. My sweet Jesus have Mercy on me a sinner. Thank you Father for these beautiful illuminating reflections.

Andy Bocanegra
Member
Andy Bocanegra(@bogie29)
16 days ago
Reply to  Susana y

Welcome from Chicago, IL USA. I’m a graduate of the University of Texas at El Paso, by the way. Good to have you here with us. It is beautiful how the Internet makes the world a little smaller. God bless you.

Last edited 16 days ago by Andy Bocanegra
Patricia O'Brien
Member
Patricia O'Brien(@marispiper)
16 days ago

Thank you Patrick for your explanation of Jesus’s words, provoking such an extreme response. God truly is more wonderful, and loving, than we know.
As to the painting, I was lucky enough to be looking at this in the exhibition just a couple of weeks back. Stunning. Many of his paintings are tiny which makes the detail even more remarkable.

spaceforgrace
Member
spaceforgrace(@spaceforgrace)
16 days ago

One of my favourites, and one I remember seeing myself in Amsterdam (probably the Rijksmuseum?) I seem to remember it is quite tiny? I have never forgotten it and had a copy in my home for a while. Thank you for that memory Patrick! I like the way Jesus slips throught he crowd in this reading. He was destined for a far greater and vindictive one. My poor Jesus! We know what is ahead- but I don’t want to think about that yet! I shall continue with my Lenten observance and wish you all a peaceful day.

Charles Marriott
Member
Charles Marriott(@chazbo)
16 days ago

A lovely painting. I never got to the Vermeer show as half of Europe went to it and it got booked out. He is the painter of the age especially his ‘Girl with the Pearl Earing’ with her liquid eyes. (A bit vacant I think….). Time to go to the Hague and other Dutch and Belgian cities to see some of the enormous art wealth of the Low Countries. That’s what I think…
Jesus’ travails in today’s reading are a signaller for the future mission of St Paul who took the message of Christianity to the gentile world.

Patricia O'Brien
Member
Patricia O'Brien(@marispiper)
16 days ago

A propos seeing art, my rule of thumb has been – hear about it, book it!
We’re going to Ghent for two days next month to see the Van Eyck altarpiece.
I believe the Girl with the Pearl Earring will be back in the Mauritshaus (Den Haag) from 1st April but we saw it in Bologna years back – just as well, as you couldn’t get near it in the Rijksmuseum! We also saw the Goldfinch there as the Mauritshaus was closed for renovations so their paintings were doing a tour.

marleen de vlieghere
Member
marleen de vlieghere(@marleen)
16 days ago

wellcome, Patricia

Charles Marriott
Member
Charles Marriott(@chazbo)
16 days ago

See you in St Bavo’s Cathedral Patricia! I booked the Van Eyck exhibition but the pandemic scotched that!!
Determined to see it now.

marleen de vlieghere
Member
marleen de vlieghere(@marleen)
16 days ago

wellcome too, Chazbo!

Charles Marriott
Member
Charles Marriott(@chazbo)
16 days ago

I look forward!

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