After journeying through the fourteen Stations of the Cross yesterday and Jesus being laid in the tomb, we now arrive at Holy Saturday—a day steeped in stillness, rest and contemplation.
And that is precisely what the lone figure in our painting is doing: reflecting. He stands upon a high precipice, gazing out over a vast sea of fog that blankets a rugged, mountainous landscape. The artist, Caspar David Friedrich, masterfully captures the fragile, fleeting presence of humanity amidst the grandeur of nature. Yet, there is an unmistakable tension in the air, a sense that change is imminent. The fog will lift, the sun will break through, and light will flood the shadowed valleys. Tonight, at the Easter Vigil, the fog will lift. The darkness will be pierced by light. Christ will rise!
It is no small detail that Friedrich chose a vertical canvas for this work, defying the traditional horizontal format of landscape painting. This upright orientation mirrors the stance of the solitary figure, drawing our eyes upward and hinting that there is more here than mere scenery. It is as though the figure stands on the threshold of the transcendent, caught in a moment of awe, encountering something far greater through the beauty of creation.
But for now, we wait in silence. We wait, poised between the death of Jesus and the birth of new life. We are in an in-between moment. In stillness, we await the resurrection... an aching stillness in quiet anticipation...
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