BIBLE PICTURES © Serge Ceruti and Gérard Dufour 2008
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Two of the Temptations of Jesus in the Desert by Satan and Jesus served by the Angels; Master François; miniature; from St Augustine’s “La Cité de Dieu”; manuscript MMW 10 A 11; Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague.
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THE TEMPTATION IN THE DESERT |
WHAT YOU CAN SEE IN THIS PICTURE...AND IN OTHER PICTURES
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THE BIBLICAL NARRATIVE
Two of the Temptations of Jesus in the Desert by Satan and Jesus served by the Angels; Master François; miniature; from St Augustine’s “La Cité de Dieu”; manuscript MMW 10 A 11; Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague.
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THE TEMPTATION IN THE DESERT
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The Gospel according to Matthew, chapter 4 Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness
to be tempted by the devil. And when he had fasted forty days and forty
nights, he was afterward hungry. And when the tempter came to him, he
said : "If you are the Son of God, command
that these stones be made into bread." But he answered and
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Again, the devil took him up to an exceedingly high mountain, and showed
him all the kingdoms of the world, and their glory; And said to him: "All
these things I will give you, if you fall down and worship me." Then
Jesus said to him: "Get away, Satan: for it
is written, you shall worship the Lord your God, and him only you shall
serve"
Comment Jesus’ 40 fasting days echo the 40 years spent in the desert by the Hebrews waiting for their entry into the Promised Land. By overcoming the temptations, Jesus reveals he is ready to enter public life as the Messiah. |
SIMILAR PICTURES
THE TEMPTATION IN THE DESERT |
Two of the Temptations of Jesus in the Desert by Satan and Jesus served by the Angels; Master François; miniature; from St Augustine’s “La Cité de Dieu”; manuscript MMW 10 A 11; Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague. |
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The first temptation is the most frequently represented. The devil often takes a human form, that of a monk, among others. |
The Temptation of Christ; Simon BENING; 1525-30; tempera and gold on parchment; from the Prayer Book of Cardinal Albrecht von Brandenburg; J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
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The First Temptation; William BLAKE; 1616; watercolour; illustration for Milton’s “Paradise Lost”; Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, England
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After the third temptation, Jesus chases the devil and the angels come near to serve him. |
The Temptation of Christ; Fra ANGELICO; after 1450; fresco; fragment in cell 32; Museo San Marco, Florence Olga's Gallery - Online Art Museum
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The Temptation on the Mountain; DUCCIO di Buoninsegna; 1308-11; tempera on wood; recto of the panel on Majesty; Frick Collection, New York
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Two of the Temptations of Jesus in the Desert by Satan and Jesus served by the Angels; Master François; miniature; from St Augustine’s “La Cité de Dieu”; manuscript MMW 10 A 11; Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague.
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THE TEMPTATION IN THE DESERT
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The three temptations were understood as those of Abundance, wealth and power; which refers to three sins: greed, avarice and pride. To see the sin of avarice in the second temptation is rather strange.
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Jesus’ 40 fasting days have given the tradition of Lent which comes before Easter. During that period of penance, Catholics are invited to abstain from food rich in fat, in particular from meat, and to cease profane feasts so as to turn their attention to pious works. When the whole society had to live according to the precepts of the Church, it consisted in a diet without meat and in a particularly austere period. Hence the “loosening up of interdicts” during Carnival preceding Lent and in particular Shrove Tuesday (the last fat day before Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent) and also during the truce at half-time (or the third Thursday in Lent). Today the discipline of Lent has become a personal affair and Catholics have put the stress on the sharing of goods with the poor of the world. But in some regions, Carnival is still feasted to excess.
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In the Bible, the desert is the place of spiritual existence, the one in which temptation occurs but also where God reveals himself through solitude, silence in a mineral nature. This tradition of the desert is opposed to that of antique paganism that found the gods and the sacred in springs, forests and beasts. This experience was continued by hermits, monks and other spiritual masters who looked for God in the “deserts”: true deserts like that of Egypt for St Anthony in the 4th century, deserted places like the medieval forests where the Cistercian monks of St Bernard de Clairvaux settled down, places where one could escape from persecution like the French Protestants who met secretly in the Cévennes area after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685.
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BIBLE PICTURES © Serge Ceruti and Gérard Dufour 2008