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Post Info TOPIC: Appendix 6 The Portrait of Our Lady by St. Luke


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Appendix 6 The Portrait of Our Lady by St. Luke
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Appendix 6

The Portrait of Our Lady by St. Luke

In the church on St. Thomas Mount we find on the altar an oil

painting of the Madonna on wood. The tradition since a long time

has been that this picture was painted by the Evangelist St. Luke

and that St. Thomas brought it here with him. Mr. J. J. Cotton in

his famous “Tombs and Inscriptions in the Madras Presidency”

(Government publication) records: “This is a picture painted by St.

Luke, who was an artist. The Virgin died when St. Thomas was

away and on his return he had the tomb opened, in order that he

might once more look upon her. It was found that the body had

been miraculously removed and St. Thomas was so distressed that

St. Luke offered to paint him a portrait of the Virgin as a

consolation. This St. Thomas carried about with him in all his

wanderings”. The painting became famous from the year 1559,

after the Portuguese took possession of the shrine on the Mount.

There is also an interesting story narrated about this picture. One

of the Portuguese residents of Mylapore betrayed the other

Portuguese by falsely reporting to the Court of the Emperor of

Vijayanagar that they were very rich and in possession of much

gold and silver. The Emperor sent an army of 400,000 against just

a small number of Portuguese that were settled in Mylapore. They

ransacked the church of St. Thomas and the houses of the

residents and found that they had nothing. The Emperor was

enraged and ordered the capture of the one who had betrayed

them. He ran away in the direction of Nagapatam but the elephants

were sent to catch him. One of the elephants caught the man and

killed him. Thereupon the Emperor ordered that the coffer with

some Relics of St. Thomas and the picture of Our Lady mentioned

above be taken to his royal Court at Chandragiri along with 31

noble Portuguese as captives. That same night Our Lady appeared

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to the Queen and revealed that her husband would be killed in the

battle he was raging and that the Kingdom of Vijayanagar would

fall. From that time the decadence of the Kingdom started and it

was taken up in parts by various other rulers. The Emperor

however, ordered that the picture of Our Lady be returned in a

palanquin to St. Thomas Mount from where it was taken and the

relics in the coffer be returned to San Thome (Mylapore).

The Portrait

We had already seen the original legend as to how the painting of

Luke came into the possession of St. Thomas the Apostle64. But

how come that it was Luke who painted the picture of Mary and

not any other Evangelist like John or Mathew who should have

known Mary even better. We may adduce reasons for the tradition

that it was Luke who was attributed with this painting. In the first

place it was only Luke who exhibited some artistic characteristics

about him in the way he has made certain descriptions in his

Gospel. His description of the gracious and compassionate Father

in the parable of the Prodigal Son (Lk 15), his portrayal of the

agony of Jesus in the garden of Gethsemane, and his narration of

the sentiments of Mary at the Annunciation clearly show us the

artist in the person of Luke. He had shown a special love for Mary

in the way he has brought in a number of events about her around

the infancy stories of Jesus. Luke’s writing on the infancy of Jesus

is remarkable, and even long, compared with the other Evangelists.

(Lk 1-2). There is an emotional touch about Mary’s relationship

with the baby Jesus in the Gospel of Luke. Under such

circumstances it was quite easy for a tradition to develop that a

picture of the infant Jesus and a deeply reflective Mary clinging to

each other is from none other than the Evangelist Luke.

The figure of Mary in the above mentioned painting, eyes cast

down, a countenance of total surrender, and hands firmly clasped

to the child Jesus remind us of these texts in the Gospel of Luke.

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The first, “Let it be done to me according to your word” (Lk 1:38);

and the second, “But Mary treasured all these things and pondered

them in her heart” (Lk 2:19), which is repeated as, “His mother

treasured all these things in her heart” (Lk 2:51).



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