Leonardo da Vinci: Part 6 – Did He Believe in God?


.
Myself By T.V. Antony Raj

.

Leonardo da Vinci - Religion

.

Almost every human has a theology of his own about God. The Jews believe that they are the Chosen People of God. Many Christians believe that Jesus of Nazareth is the only-begotten ‘Son of God’. The Muslims believe that Muhammad is the last and greatest prophet of God in human history. The Agnostics believe that mortal humans do not have enough intelligence or information to determine if God exists or not. And, the Atheists say that the entity called God does not exist.

Leonardo da Vinci, was a mysterious, strange person. For hundreds of years, researchers and writers have debated his actual religious beliefs and leanings. While some claim he was a Christian others have labelled him as an absent-minded Roman Catholic, an Agnostic, the forerunner of the Protestant Reformation, and even as an Atheist.

Among his contemporaries, Leonardo da Vinci was the most intelligent human. Hence, people would want to know what his theology was. Perhaps Leonardo probably had a good theology, and even the best theology that could help everyone in this life and in the next life, if there is one.

About Leonardi da Vinci, Giorgio Vasari wrote:

“[Leonardo’s] cast of mind was so heretical that he did not adhere to any religion, thinking perhaps that it was better to be a philosopher than a Christian.”

So, What was Leonardo’s theology? Was it the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church? If not, what did Leonardo base his beliefs on?

There was no formal scientific research in the Middle Ages. Unable to suppress the writings of the ancient Greeks, the Roman Catholic Church allowed the teaching of ancient Greek science as long as it did not conflict with the Holy Bible and its own teachings. The scholars had to accept the observations of nature passed down from Aristotle and other ancient Greeks.

The Roman Catholic Church forced the people to implicitly believe and follow its doctrines. The Church would not permit free inquiry. It imprisoned, tortured, and executed truth-seekers. Leonardo was a truth-seeker, and this fact would not endear him to the Roman Catholic Church. It was not so with most Italian contemporaries of Leonardo. Their ultimate goal was to have the eternal rapture in Heaven.

Leonardo’s writings show that he based all his beliefs on reason. He wrote:

“I can never do other than blame many of those ancients who said that the sun was no larger than it appears; among these being Epicurus; and I believe that he reasoned thus from the effects of a light placed in our atmosphere equidistant from the centre; whoever sees it never sees it diminished in size at any distance.

“Those who study the ancients and not the words of Nature are stepsons and not sons of Nature, the mother of all good authors.”

Reason is the capacity to perceive reality, applying logic, establishing and verifying facts and beliefs based on new or existing information.

The opposite of ‘reason’ is ‘faith’.

Faith is confidence or trust in a person, thing, deity, view, or in the doctrines or teachings of a religion, as well as confidence based on some degree of warrant. It can also be a belief that is not based on proof. The word faith is often used as a synonym for hope, trust, or belief.

The best definition I have come across for faith is by Mark Twain: “Faith is being convinced that what you don’t believe is true.”

Through reason we deduce that human beings built the pyramids of Egypt by themselves, while faith might lead us to conjecture that aliens helped the ancient Egyptians to build them.

So, ‘faith’ is believing in something without acceptable ‘reason’.

Leonardo valued reason much more than faith. He was a great artist, but he was also a great scientist of his age. Judging from his writings, his main goal in life was to know as much about the real universe as he could. He was the first to question the statements of Aristotle, Ptolemy, and other Greek and Roman philosophers. He stated that their teachings ought to be tested and challenged and not accepted as axioms.

Leonardo praised reason-based understanding and criticized faith-based beliefs. Here are some excerpts from his writings:

“I am well aware that because I did not study the ancients, some foolish men will accuse me of being uneducated. They will say that because I did not learn from their schoolbooks, I am unqualified to express an opinion. But I would reply that my conclusions are drawn from firsthand experience, unlike the scholars who only believe what they read in books written by others.”

“Although I cannot quote from authors in the same way they do, I shall rely on a much worthier thing, actual experience, which is the only thing that could ever have properly guided the men that they learn from.”

“These scholars strut around in a pompous way, without any thoughts of their own, equipped only with the thoughts of others, and they want to stop me from having my own thoughts. And if they despise me for being an inventor, then how much more should they be despised for not being inventors, but followers and reciters of the works of others.”

“When the followers and reciters of the works of others are compared to those who are inventors and interpreters between Nature and man, it is as though they are non-existent mirror images of some original. Given that it is only by chance that we are invested with the human form, I might think of them as being a herd of animals.”

“Those who try to censor knowledge do harm to both knowledge and love, because love is the offspring of knowledge, and the passion of love grows in proportion to the certainty of knowledge. The more we know about nature, the more we can be certain of what we know, and so the more love we can feel for nature as a whole.”

“Of what use are those who try to restrict what we know to only those things that are easy to comprehend, often because they themselves are not inclined to learn more about a particular subject, like the subject of the human body.”

“And yet they want to comprehend the mind of God, talking about it as though they had already dissected it into parts. Still, they remain unaware of their own bodies, of the realities of their surroundings, and even unaware of their own stupidity.”

“Along with the scholars, they despise the mathematical sciences, which are the only true sources of information about those things which they claim to know so much about. Instead, they talk about miracles and write about things that nobody could ever know, things that cannot be proven by any evidence in nature.”

“It seems to me that all studies are vain and full of errors unless they are based on experience and can be tested by experiment, in other words, they can be demonstrated to our senses. For if we are doubtful of what our senses perceive then how much more doubtful should we be of things that our senses cannot perceive, like the nature of God and the soul and other such things over which there are endless disputes and controversies.”

“Wherever there is no true science and no certainty of knowledge, there will be conflicting speculations and quarrels. However, whenever things are proven by scientific demonstration and known for certain, then all quarreling will cease. And if controversy should ever arise again, then our first conclusions must have been questionable.”

As often happens with great geniuses, stories and legends have been woven around Leonardo’s death. In the 1568 enlarged edition of “The Lives“, Giorgio Vasari describes Leonardo’s final months. He claims that Leonardo, regretted not having followed a life governed by the laws of the Church:

“Finally, being old, he lay sick for many months. When he found himself near death, he made every effort to acquaint himself with the doctrine of Catholic ritual… He died on May 2, having received the sacraments of the Church”

It seems odd that this version of Leonardo’s death was not recorded in the first edition of “The Lives“. It is almost as if Vasari felt the need after a while to make Leonardo seem Roman Catholic. Perhaps the Roman Catholic Church pressured Vasari to add this detail.

So, the perennial question is: “Did Leonardo da Vinci believe in God?

Answer: “May be, yes.”

Leonardo wrote about God as if God exists. Here are some excerpts from the Leonardo’s writings:

“Good Report soars and rises to heaven, for virtuous things find favor with God. Evil Report should be shown inverted, for all her works are contrary to God and tend toward hell.”

“O you who look on this our machine, do not be sad that with others you are fated to die, but rejoice that our Creator has endowed us with such an excellent instrument as the intellect.”

“We may justly call… paintingthe grandchild of nature and related to God.”

“We, by our arts may be called the grandsons of God.”

“Fame alone raises herself to Heaven, because virtuous things are in favour with God.”

“If the Lord—who is the light of all things—vouchsafe to enlighten me, I will treat of Light; wherefore I will divide the present work into three Parts: Linear Perspective, The Perspective of Colour, The Perspective of Disappearance.”

“Thou, O God, dost sell unto us all good things at the price of labour.”

.

 ← Previous -Leonardo da Vinci: Part 5 – His Final Years 

.

RELATED ARTICLES

 

.

12 thoughts on “Leonardo da Vinci: Part 6 – Did He Believe in God?”

  1. your definition of faith is woefully flawed, as are the supposed examples. if your earthly father paid the bills for 20 years, even at times money seemed tight, and a day came where momey was tight again, you can have faith that your father will pay the bills… not because you don’t believe it, but precisely because you DO believe it, even though you may not be able to concretely prove it to someone else.

    this is a human analogy, and humans are imperfect, so sure, sometimes he may let you down and fail. but the principle holds true. God however, is perfect and doesn’t break His promises. God can be shown to be true by many evidences, but for His own reasons we may not be able to “prove” He exists. however, like the faithful earthly father, we can see that God is perfectly faithful from the evidence the bible presents that can be evaluated and tested sincerely, which shows His trustworthiness. therefore we can have faith in Him like we did in our earthly father, but even more confidently. ..

    Like

  2. Leonardo fue, como los grandes artistas de su época, neoplatónico. El Cenacolo gira en torno a De amore, de Ficino. Pero, como comprendieron personas inteligentes (por ej. Nietzsche), no era cristiano. Su madre fue una esclava medio oriental, posiblemente yazidi, y hay motivos para pensar que esa fue su religión: la prohibición de comer carne (transmigración) compartida por su amigo Zoroastro; la figura del Angel encarnado, hermafrodita; los nudos en la mesa del Cenacolo, etc. El Angel encarnado es también Juan Bautista y Baco.

    Like

  3. “Reason is the opposite of faith”, this is a false statement. This is also not what God taught in the Bible. On the contrary, no one can truly come to believe in God and fully understand the revelations in the Bible without reason. Both King David and King Solomon used reason when thinking on the creation and God’s word as we read in the Psalms, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes. Job expressed his many reasonings in the book about his trials. The prophets used reason to understand that they were prophesying of the future Christ/Messiah to come. The apostles used reason to understand that Jesus truly fulfilled and accomplished that which was prophesied beforehand about the Christ/Messiah in the word written by God’s servants. It is through reason that humans are able to come to the full understanding of the mind of God, to have faith in God, and to hope in what God has promised though the life, ministry, death, and resurrection of His Son Jesus who is the Christ/Messiah and the Gospel [good news] message. It is written in the Gospel of John, “There was the true Light [Jesus] which, coming into the world, enlightens every man.” ‭‭(John‬ ‭1:9‬ ‭NASB‬‬95) This enlightenment that Jesus revealed was the true and full understanding of all that God was working to accomplish throughout history from the beginning of time so that humans might be saved through reason, repentance, forgiveness, mercy, patients, grace, hope, faith, righteousness to to receive God’s Spirit, love, joy, peace, rest, and eternity in the paradise that is in His Kingdom.

    Like

  4. The discussion of Leonardo’s belief in God entirely leaves out his paintings. Leonardo said that first and foremost he was a painter. He spent his artistic life painting Jesus and his mother. The image of Jesus with his mother in the Madonna of the Rocks or the Virgin with St. Anne are characteristic of his paintings. It makes nonsense of his life to suggest he didn’t believe in the divinity of Jesus and his mother. He was clearly a worshipper of the Virgin Mary and of the sacred child. No painter ever put so much energy into sacred paintings as he did. And I have so far said nothing about the “Last Supper,” perhaps the greatest Christian painting ever. He put great effort and months if not years of his life into this masterpiece. In our day we think of science as opposed to faith. For Leonardo his science fed his faith and deepened the religious truths of his paintings.

    Ben Foster, author of “Leonardo da Vinci and the Meaning of Life.”

    Like

  5. Just to tell you when he says “And yet they want to comprehend the mind of God, talking about it as though they had already dissected it into parts. Still, they remain unaware of their own bodies, of the realities of their surroundings, and even unaware of their own stupidity.” he is actually saying that all the people is only believing what God says and now they have every thing figured out but they are not putting science into the bible and all they are doing is believing what ever they read . But you have to put science with the bible you can’t just leave science out.

    Like

    1. God is the Life Flow in all that is. Science or our understanding of what we name science science is also part of the Life Flow.

      Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.