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TLC 247/12 online

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The December 8 edition of The Living Church is available online to registered subscribers. In this edition art professor Dennis Raverty writes in a cover essay on the early 20th-century Russian painter Marc Chagall:

What is surprising, given the artist’s Jewish background and faith, is the number of Christian themes that emerge in his work from these years: more than a dozen depictions of the crucifixion are in the exhibit. Sometimes the crucifixion of Jesus is the principal subject, as in his well-known White Crucifixion. Often, however, the crucifixion itself is not the principal subject of the painting in which it is included — almost, it seems, as commentary inserted in the margins, what Jews call “Midrash.”

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By Ephraim Radner

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Sacraments of Initiation by Liam G. Walsh
Review by Bryan D. Spinks

15 Days of Prayer series
Review by Mark Michael

Wounded Visions by Jonas Jonson
Review by Michael Root

English Catholic Exiles in Late Sixteenth-century Paris by Katy Gibbons
Review by Mark F.M. Clavier

Cultures
Chagall’s Midrash
By Dennis Raverty

Catholic Voices
Martha, Martha, Be Still
By Leonard Freeman

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