Riley Block; Ordinary Mask of the Holy

Lane describes the ordinary mask of the holy in Landscapes of the Sacred by describing masks as being a façade and hiding what lies on the inside. He insists that God remains hidden behind a mask. An example of this is the bread and wine at mass that serves as a mask for God because it represents His body and blood without actually being God himself. Another example of an ordinary mask of the holy is the burning bush and how it represents God without actually being God through symbolism. These are both examples of encountering Christ through another person or object. Lane criticizes poets by saying that if everything becomes God, how can anyone understand the common place as a manifestation of God without the common place itself becoming God? In Picasso’s paintings, he uses masks of primitive people over the faces of women as a way to find the mask that gave life.

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