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"Icon of the Heavenly Jerusalem"
by Norman Fulkerson
Priests, Architects, members of liturgical councils
and parishioners gathered in Mundelein Illinois to discuss how a
Church will look in 2010. What most people want is beauty!
Building a Domus Dei
"I was in awe. In every direction I
looked, I saw images that reminded me that I was standing at the
meeting place of Heaven and earth," said the 13-year-old John
Schulte as he entered Assumption Cathedral in Covington, Kentucky.
Everything seemed to "draw me up," he continued, "and
away from the ordinary, and into the realm of the sacred."1
The year was 1965 and a lot has changed in
Church architecture and renovation since then. John Schulte, however,
was so moved by what he saw that day that he decided to become a
priest. Now, over 30 years later, he is pastor of All Saints Parish
in Walton, Kentucky, and is building his very own "Domus Dei"
or House of God with the enthusiastic support of his parishioners.
His love for beauty and attraction to the
sacred is not unique amongst Americans. That could have been the
reason for the large and enthusiastic turnout at the "Building
the Church for 2010 Conference" in Mundelein, Illinois, this
last October.
"The response was much greater than
we expected," said Denis MacNamara, the organizer. "Our
attendance was 300% of what we planned." One of the goals of
the conference, he continued, was "to provide a forum for discussion
about the role of traditional architecture and iconography in current
day church building."
Denis is the Assistant Director at St. Mary's
of the Lake University, the host for the conference. St. Mary's
was the ideal setting for such a seminar on architecture with its
magnificent colonial revival style buildings placed within a sprawling
800-acre estate. "One of the themes [throughout the conference],"
Denis said, "was that the church building is not simply a gathering
hall, but...an icon of the Heavenly Jerusalem."
Beauty: "That which when seen pleases."
Duncan Stroik, author of Reconquering Sacred
Space was one of the speakers at the conference. He is also
a Professor at Notre Dame University and the architect who designed
Fr. Schulte's House of God in Walton. "Why the revival of classical
and Gothic architecture?" he asked the attentive audience.
His answer was simple, "People are tired of their modernist
buildings from the 60's and 70's which in some cases are actually
falling apart. O'Hare airport is more beautiful than some of our
churches," he affirmed. "Laymen and pastors are again
demanding that churches look like churches."
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Such talk of traditional architecture and a heavenly
Jerusalem was very refreshing for me since I have heard my share
of complaints from dissatisfied Catholics regarding the bizarre
structures some people call churches. Take St. Clare of Assisi in
Ballwin, Missouri for example. Friends of mine refer to this place
of worship as the "potato chip church." Sad thing is that's
exactly what their church looks like. This may seem disrespectful
to some, but I see it as an obvious association of ideas. If it
looks like a potato chip, that is what people will call it.
While
members of St. Clare complain about the present, others mourn the
past. Many were the beautiful churches destroyed to make room for
architectural monstrosities that replaced them. And all of this
was done in the name of modernity.
According to the simple definition of St.
Thomas Aquinas, beauty is "that which when seen, pleases."
Now, that which formerly was very pleasing to the eye is sadly discarded
in favor of cost, comfort and convenience. Such is the mentality
of our utilitarian world, which places the material above the spiritual,
and ends up losing both.
There are plenty of people upset with this
utilitarian approach to sacred buildings, but little did I realize
that an intelligent defense of the spiritual and sacred -- in architecture
-- is being waged right here in America.
Dominican Nuns and their trusty architect
Many Americans attending the conference are
fed up with the "wreckovations," as they are commonly
called, going on in the Church today. Conspicuous among them were
a group of Dominican nuns from St. Cecilia's Congregation in Nashville,
Tennessee, dressed in the black headdresses and flowing white habits
of their spiritual father, St. Dominic. Of the 192 nuns currently
in their convent, 119 are 39 years or younger.
They are getting ready to build a new chapel,
renovate their motherhouse and add a new convent wing because of
the influx of new vocations.
"We are in a position where we have
to make bed space for them," said Sister John Mary Fleming.
"But we have to renovate it in such a way that is appropriate
to their spiritual formation." She was alluding to the positive
effect a beautiful building has on the soul . Traditional architecture,
a nice match for their wonderful Dominican habits, is at the same
time very compatible with their rapidly growing order.
To insure they got what they wanted, they
brought along their architect, Marion Fowlkes. "You have to
keep the customer happy," was how he explained his reason for
attending. It was amusing to see this man sitting amidst his customers,
a group of Dominican nuns, during the meetings. He was the trusty
architect protecting St. Dominic's daughters from architectural
absurdities.
"It was not a historical renovation,
it was trendy."
Timothy Ehlen of the Saint Francis Xavier
Guild in Petoskey, Michigan also brought his architect and good
friend Steve Wiseman. They are opposed to the renovation of their
parish church of St. Francis and explained how a neighboring church
had previously gone through the same process. That historic church
was ruined, causing tremendous division within the parish. They
hoped to prevent a similar catastrophe. Monthly guild meetings have
attracted as many as 250 concerned members of the parish and of
the 1100 families who previously called St. Francis home, over 900
were opposed to this renovation.
Steve Wiseman presented a restoration plan,
which the parish loved. The liturgical "experts," however,
did not. His plans were summarily rejected in favor of the modern
approach with no specific reason given. The desires of the parishioners
were completely ignored. "It was not a historical renovation,"
Ehlen said, "but one which was fashionable and trendy."
Mr. Wiseman is a convert from Lexington,
Kentucky. As an architect, he admits it was the beauty in church
buildings which played a big part in his conversion over fifteen
years ago. He quit going to church five years later when his church
in Lexington went through a similar "renovation." Missing
the beauty of the Faith, he eventually returned. "I came back
after studying what the Church really taught," he said. "Now
I know our faith is as solid as ever and we just have to keep fighting."
"The liturgist shrugged their shoulders"
Ben Coggeshall, a student at the University
of Illinois showed the same dogged determination. He decided that
he was going to be an architect when he read a book on Versailles.
"I want to build buildings like that," he categorically
affirmed, "and if they [modern day architects] don't want to
build them, then, by gosh, I will."
The parishioners of Fr. Schulte's house of
God echoed the same message to Duncan Stroik. "They insisted
from the beginning that they wanted a traditional church and the
first thing on their list was for the tabernacle to be in the center,"
he said, "which comes up a lot in parishes today."
In order to reconcile the desires of the
parish and that of the diocese -- who wanted a Blessed Sacrament
Chapel off to the side -- they ended up doing both. "The people
were elated," Stroik continued, "and the liturgist shrugged
their shoulders."
Many people might also shrug their shoulders
in bewilderment to hear about such a conference concerned with building
a true "icon of the heavenly Jerusalem" being held in
the United States of America. They might also wring their hands
in frustration when they realize that this desire for traditional
architecture in the most modern nation on earth is just one more
paradox that exists only in America.
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