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A New Direction in (Catholic) Church Design
Crisis Magazine ^ | August 27, 2014 | MICHAEL TAMARA

Posted on 08/27/2014 3:30:10 PM PDT by NYer

Blessed Sacrament Shrine

One day fifteen years ago, I happened to be channel surfing past the Eternal Word Television Network when I was greeted by a momentary flash of heavenly beauty across the screen. Quickly flipping back, I realized that it was a Mass being celebrated in an unusually majestic church with an extensively gilded and marbled interior.

Having never seen this church before, I distinctly remember asking myself why today’s churches can’t still be built to glorify God the way this beautiful “old” work of art had been. Within minutes, however, I felt as though a joke too good to be true had been played on me—what I was witnessing was in fact the Mass of Consecration for this magnificent and brand new church.

That church is the Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Hanceville, Alabama, which was commissioned by Mother Angelica and is now a longstanding familiar sight to viewers of EWTN. That day back in 1999 marked a turning point in my understanding of the direction of Catholic sacred architecture in the post-conciliar period.

Up to then, I had been conditioned to believe that such blatantly Catholic forms and furnishings were but a stale hangover from the Church’s distant “triumphalist” past, and that my attraction to them was some sort of perverse personal weakness that indicated an obstinate, unenlightened resistance to “the spirit” unleashed in the 1960s. Yet, as I slowly took in what was there before me on the television screen, at the threshold of the new millennium, I felt an unexpected sense of both joy and vindication. To my young mind at least, it was as though I was witnessing a visual clarion call challenging the prevailing mentality of modernism that had successfully held sway in the Church for some thirty years.

Now, let us fast forward to 2014. Relatively speaking, it is still somewhat of a rarity to see a new ecclesiastical project of such delicate care and quality. However, it is not nearly as rare as it was at the turn of the century, and considering various ongoing deterrents both within and outside of the Church, that alone is significant.

It is true that a certain indiscriminate preference for the contemporary remains firmly ensconced in the average American parish. Yet there has also quietly developed a parallel phenomenon: a deliberate and measured return to tradition, born of a deep desire to reestablish continuity and stability in Catholic life. Given the wide appeal it enjoys among younger priests and committed laity—the Church of tomorrow—I dare say it has gained a life of its own. A brief survey of just some of the many projects from the past several years serves to illustrate this point, and is a feast for the eyes and soul in the process.

Parish Life
1
In 2003, a small church in Houston, Texas was consecrated for the parish of Our Lady of Walsingham, designed by the very old and established firm of Cram & Ferguson Architects. This unique Marian title, based on the English apparition and pilgrimage site of the same name, is specifically evoked in the building’s neo-Gothic style, which draws heavily on the vernacular architecture found in the village of Walsingham, Norfolk, England. It therefore becomes a strong visual tie to its namesake.

St. Raymond of Peñafort Church, located in Springfield, Virginia, was consecrated in 2006. Designed by Bass Architects, Chartered as the first permanent home for a young parish founded in 1997, its fortress-like Romanesque stone façade and stout brick towers are prominently visible from the bustling Fairfax County Parkway, and therefore seen daily by thousands of passersby. It incorporates intricate stained glass and various antique furnishings.

5

Another larger project by Cram & Ferguson is St. John Neumann Church in Farragut, Tennessee, consecrated in 2009. Romanesque through and through, its vaulted interior contains large, newly completed apse and dome murals in a naturalistic style. With the parish having outgrown its previous building after just a couple decades, the size and permanence of this new church guarantees that it will adequately serve and inspire for generations to come.

St. Benedict’s Chapel is located in Chesapeake, Virginia, and was consecrated in 2011. Designed by Franck & Lohsen Architects for a parish operated by the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter (FSSP), it is possibly the first parish church in the United States built specifically for the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite, or Traditional Latin Mass, since before Vatican II. The elegant yet humble design clearly presents itself as a Catholic church, while also incorporating elements of the architecture typical to the local region.

9Franck & Lohsen also designed the stately St. John the Apostle Church a few hours north in Leesburg, Virginia, which was consecrated in 2012. This old parish had long outgrown its small nineteenth-century wooden church, and needed one large enough to accommodate the continuing population boom in Loudoun County. The new design employs various traditional details, with material choices and other elements reflective of the historic town, as well as reminiscent of the old church. The liturgical and devotional furnishings were rescued from a closed church in New Jersey, at which Venerable Fulton Sheen was the homilist for its consecration in 1929.

One of the newest functioning parish churches in the United States is St. Paul the Apostle Church in Spartanburg, South Carolina, designed by Duncan G. Stroik Architect, LLC, and consecrated in 2013. The heavy brick exterior, evoking the familiarity of earlier American immigrant churches, makes for a commanding and permanent presence from the outside. Inside, one is uplifted by a nobly simple, bright, and spacious classical serenity. The altar is given special prominence by its location under a colorful baldacchino, or altar canopy.

Also consecrated in 2013 is St. Catherine of Siena Church in Wake Forest, North Carolina, designed by O’Brien & Keane Architecture. This large church is reminiscent of the Romanesque architecture found throughout Tuscany, which St. Catherine herself would certainly have known. A boldly contrasted triforium arcade below the clerestory provides an additional element to draw the eye’s focus to the altar and tabernacle. Numerous shrines with larger-than-life wooden polychrome statues, custom made in Italy, line the side aisles.

15Currently under construction is St. Mary Help of Christians Church in Aiken, South Carolina, designed by McCrery Architects. The design is predominantly influenced by Renaissance architecture, and consists of a church that sits back from the street, behind an entry courtyard incorporating formal gardens and flanked by twin ancillary buildings with colonnades. This establishes a peaceful transitional zone between the outside world and the Holy of holies, and gives one a sense of being drawn in toward the façade.

Our Lady of Grace Church in Maricopa, Arizona, designed by Liturgical Environs, PC, has begun construction as well. This Gothic style design, which incorporates shallow pointed arches and a hammer beam ceiling, is the focal point in the development of a large parish campus. The church is intentionally designed with future expansion in mind, which will seamlessly allow for it to triple in size as the parish grows.

Religious Life
Various religious orders are experiencing a rise in vocations and are quite young in their overall composition. As a result, the United States has seen several new monasteries planned, begun, or completed in recent years to accommodate the anticipated continued growth. The Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration, who care for the aforementioned Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament on the grounds of Our Lady of the Angels Monastery in Alabama, are no exception.

16Another notable example is the Monastery at the New Mount Carmel, planned for the Carmelite Monks of Wyoming (producers of Mystic Monk Coffee) and designed by McCrery Architects. This sprawling Gothic Revival complex will include a chapel at its core, hermitages housing up to thirty monks, a refectory, guest and retreat quarters, and other spaces that will enable the monks to live faithfully according to their rule and flourish as a growing and thriving community for generations. The land is situated in a remote and peaceful mountain setting.

Our Lady of the Annunciation of Clear Creek Abbey, a Benedictine monastery founded in 1999 and situated in the Ozarks of Oklahoma, is a similar scenario. Designed by Thomas Gordon Smith Architects, it blends Romanesque and Renaissance elements, and it continues to be built in phases. The overall program is constructed piece by piece according to the highest priority, and the monks have the happy problem of not being able to build fast enough to keep up with their community’s steady growth.

Campus Life
On college campuses, perhaps in the category of “not your average Newman chapel,” the story continues. The Chapel of Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity, designed by Duncan G. Stroik and consecrated in 2009, is the focal point of the quadrangle at Thomas Aquinas College in Santa Paula, California. The design is true to its locale in the mission lands of Southern California, but also clearly tied to a sacred tradition that goes even further back. The result is a stunning edifice that would hold its own alongside the finest European churches.

Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity InteriorAlso in the Golden State is Our Savior Church and USC Caruso Catholic Center at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, designed by Elkus Manfredi Architects with Perkowitz + Ruth Architects, and liturgical furnishings by Liturgical Environs. Consecrated in 2012, the project consists of a church and adjacent student center in an Italianate Romanesque style. Some defining features are the rusticated travertine exterior, expansive stained glass windows, and open piazza tying the two buildings together.

The Diocesan See
We are even seeing signs that a rediscovery of tradition has begun to filter up to the highest levels. While new cathedral construction is not nearly as common as the other building types discussed, it is especially significant. As the mother church of the diocese, a cathedral is often seen as prototypical; an indication of the general philosophy a bishop would like to see adopted by the parishes under his auspices.

22The Diocese of Raleigh, North Carolina has commissioned a new cathedral under the patronage of the Holy Name of Jesus, to replace the current cathedral, which has become inadequate to serve the rapidly growing Catholic population in the region. The design, currently in development by O’Brien & Keane, is of a style similar to that of the aforementioned St. Catherine of Siena in the same diocese, but on a larger and grander scale. Expected to take about two years to complete, renderings show that it will incorporate high vaulted ceilings, arcaded side aisles, and a substantial dome.

Across the globe, the Cathedral of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Fatima in Karaganda, Kazakhstan has arisen from the ashes of the former Soviet Union. Consecrated in 2012, it stands as a brand new witness to the triumph of Christian hope and perseverance over communist oppression. By the use of Gothic Revival, an expression of an earlier style that originated out of a purely Christian religious and social setting—as opposed to something postmodern that would only serve to reinforce the instability and uncertainty introduced by the oppressors—order is restored from chaos, and hope to the future. It is no accident that, in a town that housed concentration camps for people of faith within recent memory, the cathedral is dedicated to Our Lady of Fatima, who implored all of her children to pray daily for the conversion of Russia.

Despite the diversity of hands involved in these works, they are all steeped in timeless Catholic tradition and unmistakably state-of-the-art buildings: a true illustration of a hermeneutic of continuity. And while the focus here has been only on new construction, the increasing prevalence of traditional renovations—or re-renovations, to be more precise—merits its own attention, and will be the subject of a forthcoming essay in Crisis.

Lest delusion set in, the ratio of new traditional churches to posh amphitheater spaces still being built is grossly disproportionate. Nevertheless, after the epic social and liturgical upheavals of the last century, it is a wonder that any sort of traditional resurgence is happening at all, and these projects seem to be only increasing in number and scale with each passing year. Just a decade ago, attempting to write this piece would have proven difficult; twenty years ago, impossible.

This should give cause for optimism to those faithful who yearn for the vitality that flows from firm Catholic identity and its enduring visible expression. After all, as the saying attributed to Chesterton puts it, “Hope is the power of being cheerful in circumstances we know to be desperate.” Such wisdom is surely not lost on the many pastors, parishes, religious communities, architects and others helping to cultivate this budding sacred renaissance in the midst of a disintegrating culture that is too often hostile to faith.



TOPICS: Catholic; Current Events; Religion & Culture; Worship
KEYWORDS: architecture; churchdesign; crisismagazine; michaeltamara
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To: metmom

41 posted on 08/27/2014 10:15:16 PM PDT by narses
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To: NYer; x_plus_one; Patton@Bastogne; Oldeconomybuyer; RightField; aposiopetic; rbmillerjr; ...
+

Freep-mail me to get on or off my pro-life and Catholic List:

Add me / Remove me

Please ping me to note-worthy Pro-Life or Catholic threads, or other threads of general interest.

42 posted on 08/27/2014 10:15:34 PM PDT by narses
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To: Faith Presses On

This is a forum for conservatives. You’re on the wrong forum.


43 posted on 08/27/2014 10:17:37 PM PDT by NKP_Vet
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To: Faith Presses On

Trying to confuse them with the facts, eh?

Good try.


44 posted on 08/27/2014 10:19:32 PM PDT by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith...)
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To: metmom

Here’s some facts for ya!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1QYeST_9FUg


45 posted on 08/27/2014 10:27:06 PM PDT by NKP_Vet
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To: Faith Presses On

Come visit my parish ... we have folks from all over the world ... Honduras, Guatemala, Kenya, Nairobi, Vietnam, Phillipines, etc. Yes, mostly white (Dallas suburbia), but a lot of the others. We even host an African mass on occasion.

Segregation? Not here.


46 posted on 08/28/2014 4:02:13 AM PDT by al_c (Obama's standing in the world has fallen so much that Kenya now claims he was born in America.)
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To: NYer
Finally! Thank You God! My sister married her husband in his boyhood church. I had never been there before. But we had the address. I rolled into the parking lot. I was quite puzzled. I went in the church looked around it really did not look like a Catholic Church to me.

Some years later I ended up moving to that town and ended up going to that church. It was a good Parish, just lacked the looks. I loved the old churches and I am glad they are making a comeback. Thee was one in that same town that completely rebuilt and it was a real beauty. Spent a pretty penny I might add. Of course there were some that whined about the money. But I will tell you that they had been investing the building fund at that Parish for years and years and never had to take any money from any of the charities to build it.

I was asked recently about the splendor of the Vatican. At the time it was late at night and I did not have a good answer. I am now reminded of that one show on EWTN, the one with the young priest and the old priest Fr. Bob. He was asked that question. He said that all that gold and whatnot has been given to the Church through the years by the faithful. Some were quite wealthy, some not so much. Many people leave all their worldly goods to the Church when they die. Might be as small as a golden candlestick.

Someone up this stream complained about the poor not being allowed in a parish. That never happens. All are welcome. The poor come dressed in their best. The wealthy often show up in shorts.

47 posted on 08/28/2014 5:00:52 AM PDT by defconw (Both parties have clearly lost their minds!)
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To: metmom

NO..............to correct you, it is NOT bragging, just telling the TRUTH. The King would be very pleased.


48 posted on 08/28/2014 5:12:47 AM PDT by Biggirl (“Go, do not be afraid, and serve”-Pope Francis)
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To: narses

Thank-you for making my morning with that! God Bless!


49 posted on 08/28/2014 5:13:18 AM PDT by Biggirl (“Go, do not be afraid, and serve”-Pope Francis)
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To: Faith Presses On

Slowly the old, beat up racecard is getting more decline messages and folks are not listening.


50 posted on 08/28/2014 5:16:38 AM PDT by Biggirl (“Go, do not be afraid, and serve”-Pope Francis)
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Comment #51 Removed by Moderator

To: NYer
It wasn't entirely a wasteland beforehand -

Our church was built in 1995:

Funny true story: the rector interviewed four architects - three Catholics and a Presbyterian - and asked for preliminary drawings. He specifically asked for a design that was contemporary but incorporated traditional Catholic symbolic elements - cruciform footprint, bell tower, elevated sanctuary, choir loft, etc. Three of the architects didn't listen but just provided the typical Catholic Prayer Barn. The fourth (the Presbyterian) did as instructed. His firm got the bid, and we got a nice Richardsonian Romanesque-Revival church.

. . . and for those griping about the expense - ANY building is going to cost a bundle, unless you go with a prefab steel shed. Might as well lift everyone's souls to God.

52 posted on 08/28/2014 7:08:54 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (Ecce Crucem Domini, fugite partes adversae. Vicit Leo de Tribu Iuda, Radix David, Alleluia!)
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To: CodeToad

The poor are often the ones giving their money to support having a beautiful church. They need the hope and inspiration such churches provide as much as they need anything else.


53 posted on 08/28/2014 8:11:11 AM PDT by married21 ( As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.)
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To: aMorePerfectUnion

The Roman Catholic Church is the largest non-government provider of health care services in the world.[1] In ancient times, the early Christians were noted for tending the sick and infirm, and priests were often also physicians. Christian emphasis on practical charity gave rise to the development of systematic nursing and hospitals. As Catholicism became a global religion, the Catholic religious orders, religious and lay people established health care centres around the world. In 2010, the Church’s Pontifical Council for Pastoral Assistance to Health Care Workers said that the Church manages 26% of the world’s health care facilities.[2] It has around 18,000 clinics, 16,000 homes for the elderly and those with special needs, and 5,500 hospitals, with 65 per cent of them located in developing countries.[3]

Catholic involvement in the field of health care is born of the teachings of Jesus Christ and of Catholic social teaching. Jesus, whom the church holds as its founder, placed a particular emphasis on care for the sick and outcast - such as lepers - and his Apostles reportedly went about curing and anointing the sick. Jesus identified so strongly with the sick and afflicted, that he equated serving them with serving him. The Benedictine rule of later centuries holds that “the care of the sick is to be placed above and before every other duty, as if indeed Christ were being directly served by waiting on them”. In 2013, Pope Francis likened the mission of his church to “a field hospital after battle”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caritas_%28charity%29

http://www.forbes.com/top-charities/

And I challenge anyone to show me a Church organization that does more for humanity than the KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knights_of_Columbus

For their support for the Church and local communities, as well as for their philanthropic efforts, Pope John Paul II referred to the Order as a “strong right arm of the Church.”[6] In 2013, the Order gave over US$170.1 million directly to charity and performed over 70.5 million man-hours of voluntary service. [7] Over 413,000 pints of blood were donated in 2010.[8] The Order’s insurance program has more than $90 billion of life insurance policies in force, backed up by $19.8 billion in assets,[9] and holds the highest insurance ratings given by A. M. Best and the Insurance Marketplace Standards Association.[10] Within the United States on the national and state level, the Order is active in the political arena lobbying for laws and positions that uphold the Catholic Church’s positions on public policy and social issues.


54 posted on 08/28/2014 9:51:28 AM PDT by NKP_Vet
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To: CodeToad; NYer
Dear Code,

I was just thinking about your comment about how the poor need us to sell off the churches and take care of their needs.

I can see where you're coming from, but I don't think it quite meets the reality, which is more complex. Back where I came from, an old Snow-Belt Rust-Belt Catholic Industrial city (Erie, PA), the big, beautiful churches were built by the poor, 100 - 140 years ago, and they were their pride and joy.

I'm not taling about the welfare-EBT card poor: those things didn't exist. I'm talking abnout the immigrant-poor, the Irish, Slavs, and Italians, who moved to Erie to work in the industries: Hammermill Paper, National Forge and Steel, General Elecric, National Sterilizer. They shook $5 bills and $10 bills out of their thin, thin wallets to build those churches.

Italian stonecutters made the altars. German woord-carvers made the altar rails. Construction trades people worked all day at their jobs, but worked evenings and weekends on the church. Catholic cops and waitresses, nurses and laundry workers (like my father) were glad to blow a week's wages at the annual Church Festival to pay down the building debts.

Back in the day, this expressed people's sense of propriety, their idea of the "fittingness of things,": they provided the ebst they had, to build the most beautiful churches for the love of God.

Do not make the mistake of thinking that people of modest means, necessarily would rather have free sandwiches for their picnics, than stained glass windows for Christ Our Lord.

Auction off old, consecrated church buildings --- to whom, a Saudi prince? --- so you can give the money to the panhandlers in the city park, and the Saudis can install minarets on a gutted, whitewashed, deconsecrated Church of the Blessed Sacrament??

The architecture and art treasures are, in a sense, a public trust maintained by the Church for our common use and enjoyment (that is, not set up for public tours for a cash admission charge!) --- and not readily convertible to liquid assets. If all that were converted to cash, and given away, it would be gross cultural vandalism, unethical alienation of property, and a violation of fiduciary trust --- or I should say, rather, the unethical violation of the sweat and labor, and hope and intentions of the people who raised those churches, and their children and grandchildres, for whom --- in God's name -- they raised them.

The Catholic Church is selling of dozens of churches annually in the East and Northeast. Instead of evangelizing the neighborhoods on which those churches sit. It's a crime and a sin.

55 posted on 08/28/2014 10:15:49 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Nothing emboldens the wicked so greatly as the lack of courage on the part of the good -- Leo XIII)
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To: Mrs. Don-o

Well said!


56 posted on 08/28/2014 10:45:12 AM PDT by defconw (Both parties have clearly lost their minds!)
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To: AnAmericanMother

Nice looking Church!


57 posted on 08/28/2014 10:46:44 AM PDT by defconw (Both parties have clearly lost their minds!)
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To: NKP_Vet

Wow! That was a big cut and paste - and brag. The widow who gave two tiny mites never told a soul and Christ said she had given more than the others.

So while everything your post named is good, that isn’t the basis Christ uses to evaluate giving. Others may give substantially less and it will count as more - and there will be no accompanying clanging gong.


58 posted on 08/28/2014 12:18:03 PM PDT by aMorePerfectUnion ( "I didn't leave the Central Oligarchy Party. It left me." - Ronaldus Maximus)
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To: aMorePerfectUnion

The Catholic Church been practicing what Christ instructed it to do 2,000 years ago. End of story.


59 posted on 08/28/2014 1:19:05 PM PDT by NKP_Vet
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To: Faith Presses On
what I’ve been starting to see is how closely Catholicism is tied to racial segregation in the U.S.

Do you actually know anything about history at all? Do you understand where segregation started, and what the predominant religion is in that part of the world?

60 posted on 08/28/2014 3:00:49 PM PDT by Campion
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