Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Vermont Journal I: Saint Anne’s Shrine
photograph by Hallie Cohen
Captain Pierre La Motte founded Fort Sainte Anne as a defense
against the Mohawks in 1666. It’s Vermont’s first European community and the site of
the first Jesuit mass and Catholic chapel. Saint Anne’s Shrine stands today
on the Isle of La Motte on Lake Champlain and wandering down across the parking
lot towards the lakefront, you come across a statue of Champlain himself (in the company of another
Indian warrior), a monument with the inscription "presented to the town of Isle La
Motte by the State of Vermont July 7, l968." The outdoor chapel was bathed in
sunshine on Sunday July 6, 2014 and the parishioners were on the knees intoning
the Lord’s Prayer, “Our Father Who Art in Heaven Hallowed be thy name.”
“Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned” and Christ’s “My God, my God, why has thou forsaken me?” might have come to mind to the tourists gazing through the foliage to the shimmering surface
of the lake, with its paddlers and sailors and water skiers. The Shrine is a
sanctuary which epitomizes peace and yet all around it life is proceeding in
successions of parallel cycles which recall Kierkegaard’s esthetic, ethical and religious states of being, with beauty in its materialized form and
serenity in its spiritual form holding hands like a pair of lovers on a summer’s day.
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