“The world will be saved by beauty!”
Fyodor Dostoevsky wrote that, Dorothy Day quoted it, and centuries before Jesus, Confucius made it central to his pedagogy. They were on to something.
Beauty is a special language that cuts through and sidelines all the things that divide us – history, race, language, creed, ideology, politics, economic disparity, gender, sexual identity and personal wounds.
Beauty melts down all differences. Its speech, like that of a newborn, has no explicit words, but is a language so perfect that it can only be soiled by violating oneself.
Two things in this world cannot be argued with, beauty and a baby. They also cannot defend themselves and have only their own vulnerability as protection.
In classical Western philosophy, beauty is seen as one of the transcendental properties of being, and therefore as one of the properties of God.
God is understood as having four transcendental qualities, namely, as being one, true, good and beautiful. Hence, beauty possesses a divine, sacred quality.
Artists and everyone sensitive to aesthetics have always recognized this, not necessarily in that they affirm explicitly that beauty is a property of God, but that they recognize a godly quality in beauty; they sense a “blaspheme” whenever it is defaced and feel the energy to create as divine.
Beauty, as we know, takes many forms.
Who of us has not at times felt the stunning power of physical beauty?
Who has not been momentarily transfixed by the beauty of a sunset, an ocean, a mountain range, the stars, a full moon, a desert landscape, a particular tree, a thunderstorm, fresh snow, a gentle rain, an animal in the wild, a work of art or architecture or a human body?
Physical beauty is self-justifying.
It cannot be argued with and may never be denigrated by an appeal to something higher and more spiritual. It is unequivocally real and thus needs to be recognized, affirmed and blessed.
For most of us, when we hear the word beauty, physical beauty is what comes to mind. Now, while that beauty is real, powerful and can transform the heart, other kinds of beauty are equally as powerful and transforming.
I am not sure what language works in terms of what I am about to describe, so forgive me if my expression here is amateur and awkward, but we can speak, and need to, of beauty in the emotional and moral realm.
There is something we might call emotional beauty or moral beauty.
Emotional beauty is not the beauty of a sunset or a great painting but is the beauty of a particular expression of love, of empathy or of compassion that, like a beautiful sunset, we are occasionally graced to witness.
For example, we can be transfixed when seeing the miraculous rescue of a child, when seeing a helpless animal saved by rescuers, when seeing an elderly couple affectionately holding hands or when hearing of a generous response by the public to a plea for help by a poor family.
As with physical beauty, there is a divine quality here, something only the most boorish of persons would dare smudge.
However, whenever our emotions are involved, there is always the danger of an unhealthy sentimentality also being present; but, that danger notwithstanding, our emotions, like our eyes, are also an opening to beauty.
Finally, not least, there is moral beauty, beauty of soul.
The salient example here is martyrdom and every other kind of love that sacrifices its own wishes, desires and life for something higher. While this does not always make for a beautiful body, it does make for a beautiful soul.
In affirming this, I am not thinking, first, of its most salient examples, the religious martyrs who gave up their lives rather than deny their faith, or even of persons like Mohandas Gandhi, Albert Schweitzer, Martin Luther King Jr., Dorothy Day, Maximillian Kolbe, Oscar Romero and the many today who give up their lives for others.
These are powerful examples of moral beauty, but many of us see this firsthand in our own families and circle of friends.
For example, I look at my own mother and dad who for most of their lives sacrificed to provide for a large family and, especially, to provide that family with what is more important than food and clothing, namely, faith and moral guidance.
There was a moral beauty in their sacrifice, though sometimes during those years, by Hollywood standards, my mom and dad looked more haggard than beautiful.
Moral beauty, though, is measured by a different standard.
That being said, we need to be cautious here: While emotional beauty carries the risk of sentimentality, moral beauty carries the risk of fanaticism.
Fanatics, serial killers and snipers are also highly focused morally. Morality, like anything else, can be misguided.
“The world will be saved by beauty!”
True, though I would employ the present tense, “The world is being saved by beauty.”
Editor’s note: Used with permission of the author, Fr. Ron Rolheiser, OMI, this article first appeared on his website. Fr. Ron is a theologian, teacher and award-winning author. He can be contacted through his website: RonRolheiser.com. Follow him on Facebook: Facebook.com/RonRolheiser.
A Missionary Oblate priest who serves as President Emeritus of the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio.