We are meditating on the meaning of the resurrection of Notre Dame Cathedral at this time. 

Henry Adams reminds us that Mary, after whom the Cathedral is named, represented the energy “of love and of matter.” Mary is a protector and living intercessor between mankind as individuals and “the perils of law, whether human or divine.” 

A carved-wood depiction of Mary — unusual in that here, the infant Jesus is directly facing her, rather than towards the viewer, and both appear completely adoring of each other. Location unknown. Photo by Grant Whitty on Unsplash.

A martial religion of “predominate masculine energy” ruled in the 11th century, but Mary represented “the assertion of the supremacy of love over force” with the Gothic reality of the 12th and 13th centuries. She represented “boundless sympathy” and “not even the weakest human frailty could fear to approach her.” 

As Adams puts it, she represented the Buddhist sense of compassion, “the first of all virtues.” 

She represented a new civilization which included a whole new creation of education, when the university movement in the cities displaced the monastic hold on education in the countryside. And “university” originally meant a place to go to find one’s place in the universe. (Not just one’s place in a man-made work world, which is what it has come to mean during the modern era.)

The Virgin of the twelfth and thirteenth century had not only the powers of Eve and Demeter and Venus; she was also the mistress of all the arts and sciences, was afraid of none of them, and did nothing, ever, to stunt any of them…She was Queen by divine right and compassion and understanding, not by law and formula. She was “the practice of the true balance of powers, with the individual always tilting the balance.” 

Highlights from the reopening of Notre Dame de Paris on December 7th, 2024. Video by CBS Sunday Morning. You can also watch the replay of the entire opening ceremony HERE.

She was a “personal presence” and a “saving grace” [and] the personal equation at the heart of law and justice.” She gave birth to “fresh creations of order.”* 

The very word “cathedral” derives from the word for throne (as does the Goddess Isis, the original Black Madonna). So another aspect to Notre Dame Cathedrals is that they honor the Goddess who sits ruling a city (or a country) with compassion and justice for the poor, not for the rich. And for the celebration of life. (Again, anthropocentric and patriarchal religion have reduced the “throne” in the cathedral to a place where a bishop sits, but that leaves out the cosmos and the divine feminine that are so central to the deeper meaning of cathedra.) 

Such a building offers a fine reminder for our time of a new cosmology, a cosmogenesis story of how our Earth and our species made the 13.8-billion-year journey to be here.

The South Rose Window in the cathedral of Notre Dame de Paris. Photo by jmvnoos in Paris on Flickr.

And to be grateful for being here. Which is religion’s task, to spread the thanks. As Thomas Aquinas (who was in Paris at the time the rose windows were being installed in Notre Dame cathedral) put it: “Religion is supreme thankfulness or gratitude.” And that is what the Sabbath is about, he says: giving thanks and first and foremost for creation.

It seems the Divine Feminine might have something needed and necessary to say to our times. Maybe the resurrection of Notre Dame de Paris might assist us in taking in that wisdom. If we choose to listen.


* Cited in R.P. Blackmur, Henry Adams: A Leading Critic’s Account of a Great American Figure, pp. 177, 189f., 182-184, 203, 206f.

See Matthew Fox, “The Green Man and the Black Madonna: Sacred Marriage of Nature” in Fox, The Hidden Spirituality of Men: Ten Metaphors to Awaken the Sacred Masculine,” pp. 231-242. 

And Fox, The Tao of Thomas Aquinas: Fierce Wisdom for Hard Times, pp. 41-44.

To read the transcript of Matthew Fox’s video meditation, click HERE.

Banner Image: Progress being made on the restoration of Notre Dame de Paris in 2021, viewed from the river Seine. Photo by cjbphotos1 on Flickr.



Queries for Contemplation

What issues of our perilous times do you see the archetype of Mary, the Divine Feminine and the resurrection of Notre Dame de Paris addressing for us?


Recommended Reading

The Hidden Spirituality of Men: Ten Metaphors to Awaken the Sacred Masculine

To awaken what Fox calls “the sacred masculine,” he unearths ten metaphors, or archetypes, ranging from the Green Man, an ancient pagan symbol of our fundamental relationship with nature,  to the Spiritual Warrior….These timeless archetypes can inspire men to pursue their higher calling to connect to their deepest selves and to reinvent the world.
“Every man on this planet should read this book — not to mention every woman who wants to understand the struggles, often unconscious, that shape the men they know.” — Rabbi Michael Lerner, author of The Left Hand of God

The Tao of Thomas Aquinas: Fierce Wisdom for Hard Times

A stunning spiritual handbook drawn from the substantive teachings of Aquinas’ mystical/prophetic genius, offering a sublime roadmap for spirituality and action.
Foreword by Ilia Delio.
“What a wonderful book!  Only Matt Fox could bring to life the wisdom and brilliance of Aquinas with so much creativity. The Tao of Thomas Aquinas is a masterpiece.”
–Caroline Myss, author of Anatomy of the Spirit


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7 thoughts on “Notre Dame Rising from the Ashes, Part II”

  1. In my silence, I contemplate Jesus as Lord and His earthly mother, our eternal Mother Mary, and listen, listen, listen. There is promised in Revelation 21:1 “a ‘new heaven’ and a ‘new earth’ “. Shall we contemplate the old or the new? Let me know as I am listening. — BB.

  2. The restoration of Notre Dame is a wonderful metaphor for demonstrating what can be done. Firstly, I don’t call these “perilous” times. It’s utterly the wrong mindset. We are living in days of the greatest challenge and opportunity that allow us to invoke a tremendous spirit of Will, and Love, and Determination. What Mahatma Gandhi called “Soul Force”. I believe Our Lady is calling for the same and always has done.

    That is what is required, and it’s invocation – whether personal or national (as took place in the reconstruction of Notre Dame) – is the greatest power in the Universe. We need to reconstruct it in our own lives and allow nothing to stop it. Allelujah!

  3. Good Morning,
    Matthew, thank you for today’s inspirational post.
    Yesterday I watched a newscast which reviewed the reconstruction of Notre Dame and I felt such joy and hope in seeing the workers, crafts people, architects, and other creators pour their energy and time into this recreation. United we can create “something” new and beautiful.

    Perhaps, we begin in small groups using our energy to bring peace and love into the world in sparks of our energy.
    We start with ourselves.
    Peace and Love to all.🧡

  4. The DIVINE FEMININE SPIRIT, as represented by the resurrection of the Notre-Dame de Paris cathedral, hopefully is being Resurrected in our Human Hearts because All of Us need more awareness of the Presence of Her DIVINE LOVE~WISDOM in our Hearts~Souls and in our Beautiful Sacred Mother Earth to help heal and transform our Sacred Connections within Ourselves, with One Another, with Earth, and within Our Evolving Sacred COSMOS – Our SOURCE~CREATOR’S LOVING DIVERSE ONENESS in the Sacred Process of the ETERNAL PRESENT MOMENT….

  5. Thank you so much for your meditation this morning, Matthew—for Thích Nhất Hạnh’s
    reflections on the Eucharist, the import of creativity in healing Democracy, and on your comparison of the funding of Notre Dame’s restoration with U.S. fighter jets. It is all so meaningful, and I need this right now. In a time of despair over the seeming triumph of hate over love, of gloom over hope, of blame and retribution over welcome, the story of the restoration of Notre Dame gives me a modicum of faith that we of good heart will survive these times. So many people, religious and not, donated to restore one of humanity’s treasures. Just seeing the white walls and restored paintings gives me hope. I believe I will go to France one day, meditate within Our Lady’s walls, weep perhaps, and have the strength to continue God’s work for peace, for justice, and for the restoration of the planet God so graciously gave to us. Just seeing the restoration online is helping me already. Bless you for focusing on beauty and hope in these meditations. May it be a sign that “All shall be well. All shall be well. And every manner of things shall be well.”

  6. Dear Matthew,
    What a beautiful and meaningful reflection on the Norte Dame Cathedral. It is in stark contrast to the videos of the Opening Ceremonies where, as usual, patriarchy prevails — Archbishop tapping on the door, procession of bishops, attendance of world dignitaries (including Trump!), etc. I don’t seem to recall any women. My prayer is that your final words come to fruition.
    Peace,
    Agnes

  7. Serendipity: Yesterday I decided to browse through sections of Matthew’s book SHEER JOY. I opened at page 478 and saw my under linings from yesteryear:

    “A tyrant is himself…seditious when he spreads discord and strife among the people subject to him so that he may dominate them more easily. For tyranny is is the directing of affairs to the private benefit of the ruler with harm to the community….A society of free persons is not to be regarded as acting unfaithfully in thus disposing a tyrant, even if it had previously sworn to him forever; for he deserved to be deserted in not keeping faith in the ruling of his people since this is an obligation on his part, if the compact made with him by the subjects is to be maintained.”
    Somehow I was reminded of Leonard Shlain’s book SEX TIME AND POWER which I believe is relevant to our current global challenges.

    https://www.miriamofnazareth.com/Sex,TimeandPowerReview.html

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