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You have chosen this picture After The Last Supper : Christ washes the Feet of his Apostles; 1200; miniature on vellum; manuscript KB 76 F 5; Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague
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The Washing of Feet |
What you can see in this picture……
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THE BIBLICAL NARRATIVE
After The Last Supper : Christ washes the Feet of his Apostles; 1200; miniature on vellum; manuscript KB 76 F 5; Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague
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The Washing of Feet |
The Gospel according to John, chapter 13 Before the feast of Easter, at the Last Supper during which Jesus is with his apostles: ...He rose from supper, and laid aside his
garments; and took a towel, and girded himself. After that he poured water
into a bason, and began to wash the disciples' feet, and to wipe them
with the towel with which he was girded. |
When he has finished, he says to them: For I have given you an
example, that you should do as I have done to you.
Comment The Washing of feet is a gesture of hospitality in a country where people walk in the dust but this gesture is made by the lowest of servants. Jesus thus shows he is the Servant and he invites his disciples to wash one another’s feet and then to be one another’s servants.
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SIMILAR PICTURES
The Washing of Feet |
After The Last Supper : Christ washes the Feet of his Apostles; 1200; miniature on vellum; manuscript KB 76 F 5; Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague
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These two representations emphasize Peter’s gesture and the other apostles’ great haste, but Duccio keeps the oriental frontal view, whereas Bening places the scene in a long narrow hospital ward. |
The Washing of Feet; DUCCIO di Buoninsegna; 1308-11; tempera on wood panel. Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, Siena, Italy
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Christ washing the Apostles’ Feet; Simon BENING; c.1525-1530; tempera, gold paint, gold leaf, and ink on parchment; J. Paul Getty, Los Angeles |
Two original compositions but which rightly put back the washing of feet before the Last Supper; the table is visible and laid. The stress is put on the relation between Peter and Christ but, while Brown’s apostles admire, Tintoretto’s seem to fool around. |
Christ washing Peter’s Feet; Ford Madox BROWN; 1852-56; oil on canvas; Tate Collection, London
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Christ washing his Disciples’ Feet; Jacopo TINTORETTO; c. 1547-49; oil on canvas; Museo del Prado, Madrid
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The gesture of washing the feet still has a meaning in the Orient but for us it is anachronistic. Nowadays one offers a shower to the guest who has just arrived from a journey. Is it a similar sign of purification from exterior impurities? Is it a similar sign of hospitality and integration into the family?
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This gesture was adopted by monastic communities for the religious ceremony on Maundy Thursday (Thursday before Easter). It became very important in England where on each Laundry Thursday, the King washed the feet of a certain number of poor people and then distributed alms to them. The ceremony was suppressed at the Court of London in 1736. It has remained in Rome and has been taken up in Catholic churches for the celebration of Maundy Thursday.
Maundy Thursday in Noumea’s cathedral. |
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BIBLE PICTURES © Serge Ceruti and Gérard Dufour 2008