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‘What do you do for someone you love?' ‘I do a portrait of him, and I make sure he looks like it.' ‘What do you mean? It's the portrait that has to be a good likeness.' ‘No, it's the man!' This joke - attributed to Bertolt Brecht, the well-known playwright - strikingly recalls the story of the creation of man as it is told by the sculptor of Chartres. God the Father lovingly models Adam's face. But we have observed him beforehand, thinking about the being he is about to infuse with life. The image is heartrending: the man's face appears, vaguely, a little behind God's. On the two pictures, it is Christ's cross that provides the key to understand. The intense contemplation of the Father's face comes from the fact that he is contemplating what will be the Perfect Man. He models the first man in his own likeness. So God did a portrait of man. That is the mystery of our being and becoming. Can man reach the full stature that God planned for him? That, quite simply, is what holiness is. Nothing could be more pointless. Nothing could be more essential.