God, Moses, and the Mystery of the Missing Kiss

God, Moses, and the Mystery of the Missing Kiss
AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino, File

For the nearly five million annual visitors to the Sistine Chapel, the "main events" are the ceiling painting of the creation of Adam and the altar-wall painting of the Last Judgment, the two gigantic masterpieces by Michelangelo. But when I visit this jewel-coffer of a space, I find myself quietly gravitating to one of the benches that line its sides.

From that marginal perch, my focus is less on Michelangelo's central works than on the chapel's long north and south walls, which display the less inventive though no less magnificent work of Perugino, Botticelli, Ghirlandaio, Rosselli, and d'Antonio. In depicting episodes from the life of Moses (north) and of Jesus (south), these paintings offer Christians the opportunity to reflect on how their faith conceives the latter's ministry as the fulfillment and completion of the former's mission.

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