Apologia: The Fullness of Christian Truth


``Where the Bishop is, there let the multitude of believers be;
even as where Jesus is, there is the Catholic Church'' Ignatius of Antioch, 1st c. A.D


Labyrinths:
Symbols of Hell & the Pilgrim's Way

 





 
Background:
In Greek mythology, King Minos of Crete defeated King Aegeus of Athens and threatened to destroy his country unless, every nine years, he sacrificed seven boys and seven girls to the Minotaur -- a half-man, half-bull monster -- who lived in the labyrinth in Crete. King Aegeus's son, Theseus, decided to go to the labyrinth and kill the Minotaur, releasing the captives and ending the sacrifices once and for all.

On the way to fulfill his mission, he met King Minos's daughter, Ariadne, who fell in love with him and promised to help him find his way back out of the labyrinth if he would marry her and take her back to Athens with him. She gave him a sword and a ball of thread and told him to fasten one end of thread at the labyrinth's entrance and unravel the spool behind him as he walked through to find the Minotaur and kill him with his sword. Following the thread in reverse, he'd be able to find his way out of the dark, twisting passages. Theseus did as Ariadne told him, killed the Minotaur, and followed the thread back out to safety (neither here nor there with regard to our purposes, he left Ariadne behind when he went back to Athens! (The classic-style, seven-circuit, Cretan labyrinth is shown at right.)

From 19th c. archaeologist Rodolfo Lanciani's "Pagan and Christian Rome":

Theseus killing the Minotaur in the labyrinth of Crete, and labyrinths in general, were favorite subjects for church pavements, especially among the Gauls. The custom is very ancient, a labyrinth having been represented in the church of S. Vitale at Ravenna as early as the sixth century. Those of the cathedral at Lucca, of S. Michele Maggiore at Pavia, of S. Savino at Piacenza, of S. Maria in Trastevere at Rome (destroyed in the restoration of 1867), are of a later date. The image of Theseus is accompanied by a legend in the "leonine" rhythm: Theseus intravit, monstrumque biforme necavit ["Theseus entered, and killed the bi-form monster"]. 

The classical world's labyrinths were at first seen by Christians as metaphors for sin and the powers of Hell, as can be seen from this inscription which was originally found at the center of the Chartres labyrinth:

This stone represents the Cretan's Labyrinth. Those who enter cannot leave unless they be helped, like Theseus, by Ariadne's thread.

"Ariadne's thread" -- the help of the woman, Mary, who leads us from the pits of Hell by pointing toward her Divine Son. Interestingly, the Chartres labyrinth is situated at the Western end of the nave and has the same dimensions as the rose window on that side of the cathedral -- a window which is as high up on the facade as the labyrinth is away from the West wall. If you could fold the cathedral over onto itself as if it were hinged where the West facade and floor meet, the rose window depicting Our Lady would line up perfectly with -- and cover -- the maze, beautifully symbolizing the power of Mary's help in our struggle against evil. Stained glass itself has another level of symbolism, which St. Bernard of Clairvaux described so beautifully: “As a pure ray enters a glass window and emerges unspoiled, but has acquired the colour of the glass … the Son of God Who entered the most chaste womb of the Virgin, emerged pure, but took on the colour of the Virgin, that is, the nature of a man and a comeliness of human form, and He clothed himself in it.”

Chartres labyrinth and West Rose Window


Though originally seen as metaphors for the dark powers of Hell and our need to rely on Our Lady to show us her Son, over time labyrinths came to be seen quite differently. During the Crusades when Christians couldn't make visits to the Holy Land, and in the same manner that the Way of the Cross devotion developed as a sort of substitute "pilgrimage" to the Holy City, labyrinths came to be used as substitute "Chemins de Jerusalem." Christians, barred from earthly Zion, would walk the labyrinths, often on their knees in penance, meditating on the Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

Sound easy? The paths of the Chartres labyrinth, for example, make for a journey of 858 feet. Imagine walking on your knees on cold, hard marble for almost the length of three football fields!

At any rate, the entire symbology of the labyrinth was reversed: the center of the labyrinth was seen as the goal -- physical Jerusalem or the Heavenly Zion -- instead of that which is to be escaped -- the pits of Hell. The classical and Carolingian name "labyrinth" gave way to "Chemin de Jerusalem" or "Rue de Jerusalem."

No matter which Christian symbology is used to perceive them, note that, unlike the mythological labyrinth of the Minotaur, church labyrinths, like classical representations of the Minotaur's lair, are not designed with dead ends and trickery (for this reason, some refuse to call them "mazes," though the terms are interchangeable); they are designed such that one begins at one end and walks the path, without veering, to the other, the symbol of the Heavenly Jerusalem (or the escape from Hell). There is only one way in (or out), one path toward (or away from) the center -- and that path is direct, as the Way of Christ is direct. Though direct, that path, as in following Him as "The Way," is a winding road, full of turns and suffering and hardship (especially if that path is "walked" on one's knees!). But always, the Heavenly Jerusalem (or the "way out" from sin and its effects) -- is in sight from any place in the labyrinth, and one knows that if one remains on that path, he will find himself where he wants to be.

Be aware that labyrinths have been enjoying a surge in popularity recently -- but mostly among pagans and Modernist Catholics who perceive them as "earth wombs" or tools for tapping into "earth energies" and such nonsense. They are over-valued by those who see labyrinths as being magical and as possessing inherent power -- a power often imagined as emanating from the earth itself.

In spite of all that, I include the topic here because the traditional Catholic position must be known, and because I find them lovely and their original Christian purposes fascinating. Either as "Chemins de Jerusalem" or metaphors for Hell, the proper use of labyrinths is quite Catholic and beautiful; it would be sad indeed if labyrinths were to become associated only with New Agers -- especially when many of the labyrinth designs they use were made specifically for the great cathedrals and other churches of Christendom, such as those at Amiens, Reims, and Calais.


Left to Right: Labyrinths of Amiens, Reims, and Calais


Large, full-sized labyrinths can be walked in penance on one's knees, walked as "pilgrimage" much the same as the Way of the Cross, or walked simply as a way of disciplined prayer in that it forces one to slow down. In all cases, however, Jesus Christ and the Christian's journey -- not "one's self," "inner god/ess," "the unconscious mind," etc. -- is always the focus of any Catholic devotion and prayer!

If you don't have access to medieval labyrinths, facsimiles -- full-sized affairs made of brick, concrete or tiles, or small ones drawn on paper and traced with a finger -- can be used. They can be used in the traditional way if size allows, or can be enjoyed as a symbol of the Heavenly Jerusalem, the escape from Hell, the Christian journey, a memorial to the great cathedrals of the Age of Faith -- or simply admired for their aesthetic beauty, a beauty enhanced by the knowledge that our Catholic ancestors used these designs for holy purposes.


Just for fun: a closer look at the geometry
of the Chartres-style labyrinth or "Chemin de Jerusalem"



The Chartres labyrinth is an "11 circuit" labyrinth, meaning that from one edge to the center are 11 "circuits," or rows of paths, made by 12 concentric circles (i.e, it is 22 circuits across, plus the center). We will let:

A = width of each circuit (path). This includes the width of the lines that form the paths (E)
B = diameter of center
C = diameter of entire labyrinth
D = the lenght of only the circuits on both sides of the center, but not counting the center itself
E = width of actual lines that form the circles and paths
F = radius of center

A = (C-B) / 22
B = C/4
B = 22A / 3
B = C - D
C = 22A + B
C = 4B
C = B + D
D = 3/4C
E = (A/9)2
F = 1/2B

The above equations give the relationships between the size of each path and the diameters of the center and of the entire labyrinth, and will let you design your labyrinth by choosing first either the size of the path, or of the center, or the diameter of the entire thing.

Example:
Say you want a labyrinth with a diameter (C) of 42 feet. C=42:
1. To determine the diameter of the center (B), divide C by 4:
B = 10.5 feet
2. To determine the width of the circuits without the center (D), subtract the diameter of the center from the total diameter C):
D = 31.5 feet
3. To determine the width of each path (A -- this includes the lines that form the paths!), divide the number gotten in #2 above by 22:
A = 1.43 feet

Example:
Say you want a labyrinth with paths (A) that are each 2 feet wide (the path width includes the width of the actual lines that form the paths). A=2:
1. To determine the width of just the circuits without the center (D), multiply A by 22:
D = 44
2. To determine the diameter of the center (B), divide 66 by 3:
B = 14.6
3. To determine the diameter of the entire labyrinth (C), add D+B:
C = 58.6

After you have your values for A, B, C, D, E, and F, you need to come up with a measuring guide of some sort. This could be a ruler, if you are drawing a small design, or a rope if you are making a "life-size" labyrinth in your garden or some such. Whatever you use as a measuring guide must be long enough to extend past the edges of the labyrinth from the center (i.e., it must be a bit longer than 1/2D + 1/2B).

Now, secure the measuring guide to the exact center of B such that the guide is totally fastened at the center, but can move all the way around the circle in 360o. Measure out from the center of B, where the guide is secured, to determine where your outermost circle will be. To locate that first circle, add the radius of the center (1/2B ) to 1/2D.

Now you need to mark, in an impermanent way, the entrance and straight paths that are found on the "south" side of the labyrinth in the diagram. In churches, the entrances to Chemins de Jerusalem were built such that when one first entered the labyrinth, one faces East, as we do at Mass (i.e., in the diagram, the top of the picture would be "East"). Whatever you decide, from B's perimeter, lay the guide out so that it reaches the outer perimeter of the labyrinth, on that side of the labyrinth where you want the entrance to be. Now measure out two lines, A's width apart, heading toward the center from the outside of the labyrinth. The actual lines should be A/9 in width, the width moving from the lines that mark the first path and toward the center. Now, facing the center, go left of that path you just made, and mark another line A's width away from it, making the line no thicker than A/9, the width extending from that line and toward the other two lines you've already made.

Now you mark the circles of the paths. Mark your guide at regular distances of A apart (i.e., if A = 2 ft., mark your guide every 2 feet, starting from the perimeter of the center). Lay the guide down on the surface and mark where its markings indicate. Move the guide forward a few degrees around the circle, and mark again. Then connect the dots, taking note of where the turns will be, and making the lines no more wide than A/9.

Now the turns are added in their proper places, and the rose petals at the center are added. The rose petals are 6 in number, and their tips extend halfway from the outer perimeter of the center and the center's radius.(F/2). There should be a petal point exactly across from the entrance to the center.

The lunations or little "cogs" on the outside of the labyrinth are placed as far apart as the diameter of the labyrinth divided by 36 (C/36) (there will be 114 lunations minus one which would have been where the entrance to the maze is). The length of the lunations will equal their distance apart. Start the lunations at the entrance: make the first ones at either side of the entrance exactly 1/2 the distance away from the entrance path as the lunations are apart from each other: (C/36)/2.



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