Here's an archetypal legend that I truly love about what is named as the "Child Jesus of Prague." This story plays a large role in my life.
At one time Santa Teresa de Avila sent an ornate small statue of the Child Jesus to a rich patron of the Catholic Church in Prague. It was given to the church and installed in its own altar. It exhibited some healing powers and gained a following. Later, during one of the religious wars associated with the Reformation, the church was badly damaged, the altar was destroyed and the statue vanished. A priest who loved the image dug through the rubble for weeks and finally found the image, which had lost its right hand, the hand of agency and blessing, the hand of spiritual power. The priest was sad because he couldn't fix it. He thought of hiding it. Then a voice "of God" said, "No don't hide it. Place it in full view at the front of the church and pray to the Holy Mother for help", which he did. The next day a passing craftsman saw and took it, returning in a few days with it fully repaired. He and the priest then built a new altar and installed the image which soon exhibited many times more healing power and today is still venerated as a major iconic miracle-producing image.
The archetypal lesson is that societal childhood trauma must be revealed so it can be healed, become creative and release even more power. In an emerging modern psychological/medical model, this would be called by someone like Gabor Maté, The Wisdom of Trauma.
It's also related to the Magical Child meme, drawing on the work of Piaget and popularized by Joseph Chilton Pearce.
In an aesthetic rather than analytic fashion the Brazilian painter Petrônio Bax portrays Menino Jesus de Praga as embedded in the deep sea, which is an archetype for the unconscious, the amniotic fluid of the Mother, and a deep dive into the psyche.
