Praxiteles
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- February 20, 2009 at 11:22 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772508
Praxiteles
ParticipantAttached is a scan of a plate in Vol. XI of A.N.Dirdon’s Annales Archéologiques (ante p.136) published in 1851. It depicts the 13 th century armament of the sacristy door in Sens. It is regarded as a superb example of 13 century wrought iron work and of an extreme complexity of forging, applicationa dn fixing.
Now, the armaments on the doors of the West facade of Cobh Cathedral are of wrought iron, modelled on French 13th. century examples – such as that at Sens and on the Porte de Ste Anne at Notre Dame in Paris. It was executed by Fagan’s of Dublin. Neglect of this fine craftsmanship has resulted in serious deterioration of the ironwork.
With the connivance of Cork County Concil’s Heritage department and of Cobh Town Council, the armaments of the Baptistery doors dissappeared for “restoration” and have not ben seen since. We hope that the persons responsible for allowing this in Cork County Council and in Cobh Town Council took the time to do a little study of the sacristy door in Sens Cathedral and, if they did not, that they will be preparing to write letters of resignation!
In A.N. Didron’s description of the Sens door, he continually refers to the delicate appearance of this strapwork -which, however, lacks for nothing in strength. He also refers several times to the consolidation function of the strapwork. That is to say, the strrapwork consilidates (or holds to together -in small words) the door. presumably, without the strapwork a large door held together with wooden pegs could easily fall apart. Now, we might ask, what provisional measures have been taken by Cork County Council’s officers and Cobh Town Council to CONSOLIDATE the Baptistery doors in Cobh Cathedral since the strapwork was ripped off of it? I wonder aht would happen were thst door to fall apart? Are the pieces of newspapers stuffed into the hols in the door sufficient to consolidate it? We shall see ….and we shall see very soon!
February 19, 2009 at 10:41 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772507Praxiteles
ParticipantThe above can be found here:
February 19, 2009 at 10:40 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772506Praxiteles
ParticipantPraxiteles was just sent this:
Who’s responsible for all the concrete carbuncles?
Le Corbusier’s Unite D’Habitation (left) has spawned thousands of imitatorsBUILDING SITE
Architecture re-appraised by the MagazineMany would have only the vaguest idea of who he was. He designed no buildings in Britain. But as a new exhibition celebrates the work of Le Corbusier, architect and writer Guy Booth argues that his legacy was monstrous.
I only have to hear a fellow architect say “Corb” and I curl.
Chandigarh’s assembly building is one of Le Corbusier’s most famousEnlarge Image
Le Corbusier will do for me. This vain, mercurial megalith of Modernism wouldn’t have given the average architect a glance.
Only a fool would attempt to emulate his work. Thousands have – the public calls it “Modern Architecture”, a concrete desert where simple souls bend to an architect’s arrogant will.
Le Corbusier’s pincer-like powers lock us into the “modular” grids he so successfully imposed on our lives. Frigid, perfect, masterful – his works glimmer with the fatal splendour of a sunlit iceberg.
He died five years before I became a student at the Liverpool School of Architecture. The air was thick with his influence. In 1970 architecture and town planning still enjoyed the flux of post-war socio-economic theory.
Cumbernauld town centre is hated but its whole concept was controversialEnlarge Image
Le Corbusier had attained the status of a god – his work was not questioned, as the work of famous architects is not questioned today. I avoided his revolutionary manifesto of 1923, Towards a New Architecture. I skipped The Modular of 1948, and Modular II – all sacred architectural creeds. Now I know about Corbusier but approach with caution.
Three examples explain him in the context of how we experience our dwellings, towns and cities today. Each example – like a Hollywood movie star – is scintillatingly photogenic.
The Villa Savoye, built in 1930, is a fatally stupendous design, the second home near Paris of the wealthy Savoye family. Limousines linked the Paris house to the villa – the motor car generated the plan.
The elegant columns, piloti, that raise the principal “deck” of the residence above an immaculate, cemetery-like oblong of lawn (over which the villa “flies” like a plane) inspired thousands of horrible post-war shopping centres, dead average downtown office blocks, and lurid multi-storey car parks. Think lacklustre concrete slimed with pigeon muck. London’s Centre Point is a notable example.
Our climate cannot be blamed entirely, or the fact that the English are not good at large scale planning and hate piazzasLe Corbusier’s legacy
Functionalism demanded that these millionaires and their guests walked on floors surfaced with black quarry tiles (as for commercial kitchens) and linoleum. The villa is of reinforced concrete, finished in ever-to-be-repainted white.
Inside, you stand beautifully dressed round the walls, upstaged by your own living room where perfectly arranged furniture begs not to be used.
In Marseille, Unite d’Habitation was an experiment in communism. Opened in 1952, the leviathan block embodies in concrete the ideals of socialist family life – everything but the freedom to do as you want.
Le Corbusier is thought of by many in the world of architecture as the leading mind of the 20th CenturyWith its shops (half way up), its children’s garden on the roof, its modular facades gaily painted in Cubist colours, and location in a park, Unite was the “last word”. People hated it.
Modular planning – a grid controls everything – made the flats like railway compartments. The idea of a two-level duplex failed because the bedrooms were set on open balconies overlooking living areas.
Le Corbusier hoped that Unite would promote his 1920 vision of A City of Towers: identical, 60-storey apartment blocks set in a rigid grid within urban parkland.
Unite spawned plans for every awful working-class housing estate in Europe – the most notorious at Park Hill in Sheffield. The Barbican is a splendid attempt but still grim.
Plymouth Civic Centre is not beloved of all in the Devon cityThe Legislative Assembly Building in Chandigarh in India was completed in 1964. It is an overpowering architectural juggernaut created in sculptural reinforced concrete for a brand new Indian regional capital. Nehru invited Le Corbusier to create the Chandigarh Master Plan and design its civic complex.
The architect relished the megalomaniacal freedom of concept. The Assembly Building is a breathtaking cooling tower projecting from a square “cage” studded with a variety of “Architectonic functional nodes” . Yes, architectural jargon begins with Le Corbusier.
His post-war influence exerted a fatal fascination over a young generation of British architects. They relished a period of urban renewal gilded with socialist optimism. Architecture and town planning were to create the ideal society. London’s Royal Festival Hall and Plymouth city centre represent a keynote.
Le Corbusier’s chapel at Ronchamp sticks in the mindBut what of London’s National Westminster Tower, the Institute of Education, the Millbank Tower, the Churchill Gardens Estate, the Economist Building, St Thomas’s Hospital, Hemel Hempstead New Town, Harlow New Town, Cumbernauld, and even the BBC’s Television Centre? Despite the distinguished names involved, all miss the mark.
Why? Why was it all so disappointing? Why should Le Corbusier’s amazing concept of a reinforced concrete, minimal component structural building frame be so difficult to translate? Why should his modular design rationale have stultified thousands of projects?
Harlow New Town rather less soOur climate cannot be blamed entirely, or the fact that the British are not good at large scale planning and hate piazzas.
We must bring to earth a vision of one who saw architecture as cosmic, who made the impossible look easy. Students cannot resist Le Corbusier but his ideals are way too rich for them. He did not conceive form in solid terms – he manipulated an abstract concept of an ideal condition of living. Frigidity is essential to his genius.
Take two examples of Le Corbusier’s creed:
• “Industry, overwhelming us like a flood which rolls on towards its destined end, has furnished us with new tools adapted to this new epoch, animated by the new spirit.” (Towards a New Architecture, introduction to the section, Mass-Production Houses – 1923)
• “All this work on proportioning and measures is the outcome of a passion, disinterested and detached, an exercise, a game… a duty to be straight and loyal, dealing in honest-to-goodness merchandise.” (The Modular, Chapter 3, Mathematics – 1948)
For Le Corbusier humanity was the merchandise, piled in pallets in a standardised industrial environment – clean, impersonal, good. But people are warm, loving, dilatory and bad.
Le Corbusier’s creed of scrupulous Modernism was doomed to anti-climax – we cannot live up to it. Grasp this fact and we may forgive the brave attempts to emulate Le Corbusier during the three decades from 1950. Two centuries ahead of his time, Corbusier’s ideals, years after his death, remain sizzlingly innovatory.
Below is a selection of your comments.Most architects are very careful NOT to live in those dwellings they prescribe for the rest of us! How many more leaking flat roofs, sprawling concrete structures, south facing windows with no blinds, access via unreliable lifts, nowhere for children to play, nowhere for people to meet and socialise must we put up with before someone regards us as humans, not dehumanised “units” to be housed, fed and watered? When will architects stop being “artists” in concrete and driven by the admiration of their peers, not the realistic needs of people. Architecture doesn’t have to be boring to produce homes that we are pleased to live in, nor cities and towns that have a human scale. Whatever they do, they should be required to live in their creations(s) for say 5 years. That way things really would get better!
Gordon Thompson, Crich, Derbyshire U.K.Le Corbusier’s idealism was never going to work when imitated in cheap concrete by bean-counters. Give me Hattenschweiler any day.
Justin Ward, London UKA very interesting article, and absolutely right to question the reverence of Le Corbusier and, perhaps, his overwhelming sense of optimism particularly in “Towards a New Architecture”. But like any work, his writings must be read in context. I don’t believe it is impossible to translate Le Corbusier to another time and place, but a critical eye is necessary to retain the spirit without compromising architectural common sense.
Peter, DundeeSome of Le Corbusier’s buildings — particularly the early “Purist” white villas epitomised by Villa Savoye — are astonishing achievements; architectural tours-de-force. Anyone remotely interested in architecture should visit them. They are masterpieces of world architecture on a par with Palladio’s that transcend criticism. But others, such as Ronchamp Chapel or his earlier masterplans for Paris are exquisitely over-designed, unrestrained ego-trips by the out-of-touch leader of a cult of well-intended but deluded, wrong-headed professionals (architects having made mistakes on a similar scale to those made by economists and bankers more recently). Le Corbusier is not someone whose work can just be written off as bad — it’s complex, wide-ranging and pretty grown-up stuff and there is as much brilliant work as there is bad.
Ian Douglas, London, UKCouldn’t agree more. Thanks to several generations of unquestioning teaching of architectural principles based on le Corbusier we have, in the main, arrived at two styles of building: eyeless megalithic or Noddy Toytown. Neither serves our needs. That’s why a new building that doesn’t conform to this tyranny is so widely acclaimed and taken to a community’s heart; people are desperate for something to love. We see the human form and physionomy in leaf patterns, in clouds, in glowing embers; it is our instinct to anthropomorphise. Le Corbusier’s dehumanising work cruelly prevents this.
Susie Rogers, Somerset. UKI am gladdened to see Le Corbusier being taken down a peg in recent years. The article concludes of Le Corbusier’s creed that “we cannot live up to it”. I would argue we cannot live *in* it. Le Corbusier epitomizes the break between architecture as art and theory, versus architecture as a profession of creating usable (and beautiful) buildings. Like many an architect’s or landscape architect’s sketches, Le Corbusier’s ideas appeal on paper, they appeal in the abstract. A “City of Towers” sounds wonderful as a concept, because we picture the best of modern urbanity wedded with green open space. In practice, however, cities built in this fashion are horrid – impersonal, impossible to get around, and unattractive. One need only look at the picture of Cumbernauld town centre to wonder how anyone could think it was a good thing. Blocks of unimaginative and identical flats stretching on, an equally unimaginative urban centre built away from the people, though within walking distance – yet the only way to get there is by automobile, across a high-speed motorway!
Jeff Wutzke, Phoenix, Arizona, USAIt may be wishful thinking on the part of architects to suppose that their artistic insights drove the modular concrete revolution. In fact the resulting buildings may just have been cheap to construct and easy to design with pencil-and-ruler. Fortunately at least the second problem has been solved with better software – though no doubt that will be assigned to architects insights too!
Will Stewart, Blakesley UKI am no architecture expert, but this is all pretty subjective stuff, and changes in fashion have a lot to do with it. A lot of Victorian architecture was demolished in the 1960s, presumably because it was argued to be ‘dated’, in the same way as 60s architecture is argued to be ‘dated’ today (strangely, Victorian architecture appears to no longer be considered in this way). Of course there are many housing estates of the 50s/60s/70s that do appear grim today (being run-down and neglected doesn’t help) but there are also some great buildings from this period – personally I love the Barbican! Yes, it’s “of its time” – but so are the Houses of Parliament, and I don’t hear anyone arguing for their demolition quite yet.
Emma Thomas, Reading, UKIf it weren’t for those architectural ‘carbuncles’ then every city street would be packed with ‘gems’ that would be protected consequently never torn down to make way for something new. God bless carbuncles for allowing our cities to regenerate and renew. God forbid everywhere was Paris – things happen there, but nothing changes. Its a museum, not a place to live.
Peter Main, London‘People hated it.’ Architecture of any kind depends on context and detail. A building can be hugely impressive on paper (or on one of those rotating computerised simulations) but if it’s plonked in the wrong place it will immediately make enemies and thereafter contribute to the ruin of the local built environment. A building is not an isolated entity. It should not be slavish to its surroundings – that invariably looks stupid – but it should be designed to contribute to its eventual home rather than to steamroller it. One of our many problems with city planning comes from architects’ and their clients’ desire to make buildings ‘imposing’. This in and of itself is no bad thing, but if the ‘imposing’ quality of a building extends right down to street level, then the local street environment becomes intimidating and dehumanising. The City of London has suffered this (partly deliberate) phenomenon for centuries. Street-level architecture has different rules from the rest of the building: it has to make us feel comfortable and safe. There’s plenty of room for exciting, visually-stimulating surroundings, but comfort and safety are the bare essentials. Detail in architecture matters. Someone has to live or work inside a building. We all understand that. It is a separate issue from the aesthetics of the exterior, and it is a potential opportunity for an architect to befriend the users of his building. But if insufficient attention is given to the function and form of the interior, perhaps as a forgotten poor relation to the epoch-making exterior, the users will immediately become sworn enemies of architecture. Similarly, if construction methods are untried, and fail, quality of life goes down the plughole. More enemies of architecture.
Simon Harvey, Colchester, UKI think the article was a bit harsh. You can’t blame Le Corbusier for bad copy-cats or Plymouth civic centre as much as you can’t blame Van Gogh for the countless poster reproductions on bedsit walls, but you can admire both men for the works of art they created.
Chris, Oxford, UKFrom what little I know, what much I have seen and hated I have come to the conclusion that while Le Corbusier was brilliant and highly intellectual he actually HATED people. Why else would you do this to us ?
Peter Galbavy, London, UKFebruary 19, 2009 at 10:34 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772505Praxiteles
ParticipantHere we have a drawing of the 15th. secene in the cycle of the lisfe of St Martin of Tours from the Tapisseries de Montepezat. These were woven at Tournai about 1520 and recount the life and miracles of St. martin of Tours as they are recounted in St. Severes’ Vita dating from the IV century.
What is interesting here is the the manner in which we see all the elements of a medieval church in use: our famous chair on the South side; the recessed credence with the cruets; the curtain hangings around the altar; the altar raised on one step; and even more interestingly, the position of the chalice on the altar -it is placed side-ways indicating that Holy Communion has already taken place (in fact St. Martin is in the act of reading the Last Gospel). This positioning of the chalice indicates that the makers of the tapestery depict him using -what in England is called the Sarum Rite or Usage, that is the celebration of the Mass according to the ritual use of the Cathedral of Salisbury which, in turn, was borrowed by the invading Normans from the Cathedral of Rouen in Normandy. This was the usage which also prevailed in Ireland before the reformation – as can be seen from the few relics left from the pre-reformation period, including items such as teh Meagh Chalice (which is slightly later) and the de Burgo chalice with the star shaped based which were required to prevent the chalice from rolling off of the altar.
The drawing was published in volume 3 of A.N. Didron’s Annales Archéologiques in 1845 (ante p. 95)..
February 18, 2009 at 6:47 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772503Praxiteles
ParticipantPraxiteles reently came across this example of what must the ultimate in stripped-down modernism applide to ecclesiastical architecture leaving us with an office feeling rather than anything else. However, in terms of theological degredation, it looks remarkably “old fashioned” in not having incorporated anything of the ‘huddeled around the table’ approach to the Mass so dear to the Cloyne HACK and its partigani.
February 17, 2009 at 9:42 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772502Praxiteles
ParticipantAnd for the benefit of the over educated members of the CLoyne HACK and their daft ideas of “communal” worship with everyone huddled around an “altar” (much as we saw in the church of 2010 above), well just to show how very un-Vatican II this is, take a look at this article published by the Ecclesiological Society showing pictures of the communion arrangement in Anglican churches in the post-reformation period, all of which conform to the ordinances of 1547 requiring the demolition of High Altars, the abandonment of the Chancel and the setting up of tressels in the nave surrounded by furrums. Underlying all this, of course, was the theological shift from the idea of the Mass as sacrifice to the idea of the communion as meal. Where have we heard that one before?
February 17, 2009 at 9:34 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772501Praxiteles
ParticipantAnd again from the Ecclesiological Society a short article on the Easter Sepulchre:
February 17, 2009 at 9:30 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772500Praxiteles
ParticipantFrom the Ecclesiological Society (aka The Camden Society -still going) comes this short article on Mass dials, a specific type of sun dial set in the South wall of medieval churches. Can anyone identify Irish examples?
February 17, 2009 at 9:15 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772499Praxiteles
ParticipantAn interesting link:
The Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain and Ireland
http://www.crsbi.ac.uk/search/location/ardskeagh*/site/id-ck-ardsk.html
February 17, 2009 at 3:29 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772498Praxiteles
ParticipantAnd some reflections on the influence of MediatorDei on church architecture -although Praxiteles might not be inclined to go along with everything here.
The Spirit of Mediator Dei
by Denis McNamara, appearing in Volume 4It is generally thought by liturgists and theorists of liturgical architecture that little occurred in the area of renewal of church design before the Second Vatican Council. The architectural modernism of the post-Conciliar era has therefore often been thought to represent the Council’s artistic intentions. However, before the Council, church architecture had already undergone significant change in response to the Liturgical Movement and Pius XII’s encyclical Mediator Dei (1947). Statements of popes, architects, and pioneers of the Liturgical Movement point to a liturgical and architectural context, which presents a vastly different approach to architecture than the stark interiors presented by many architects after the Council. Despite the prevailing belief that architectural modernism was the only available option for the modern church, the early twentieth century provides considerable evidence of representational, historically-connected and often beautiful architectural designs responsive to the same principles canonized in the documents of Vatican II.Sacrosanctum Concilium grew directly out of the ideas expressed in the Liturgical Movement and Mediator Dei, and must be read in that context to convey a full understanding of the authentic spirit of Vatican II regarding liturgical architecture.
The Liturgical Movement in America
Architects and liturgists of the early twentieth century proclaimed an almost unrelenting criticism of Victorian ecclesiastical design. It was, they argued, the product of a pioneer mentality in American Catholicism in which poor and under-educated patrons hired uninspired architects and purchased low quality mass-produced liturgical goods from catalogs. In response, architect-authors like Charles Maginnis and Ralph Adams Cram called for more adequate ecclesiastical design and furnishings. At the same time, the Liturgical Movement began to establish its presence in the United States. The movement’s leaders believed that American liturgy had suffered under an individualist pioneer mentality as well, leading to a minimalist liturgical practice and general lack of understanding about the place of the Eucharistic liturgy in the life of the Church. The Liturgical Movement mingled with the pre-existing traditionally-based architectural design methods of the 1920’s and 1930’s, and over the next several decades wrought considerable improvement in ecclesiastical design.One of the earliest American mouthpieces of the Liturgical Movement was the Benedictine periodical Orate Fratres, a journal of liturgy founded by Benedictine monk Virgil Michel and based on his studies of philosophy and liturgy in Europe in the 1920s. One of the journal’s first articles, entitled “Why a Liturgical Movement?,†was written by Basil Stegmann, O.S.B., who was later to become an active participant in the American liturgical discussions. He explained the need for liturgical reform to an American church still generally unaware of European developments. Stegmann cited Pius X’s 1903 Motu propio which expressed the pope’s “most ardent desire to see the true Christian spirit flourish again†and which claimed that “the foremost and indispensable fount is the active participation in the most holy mysteries and in the public and solemn prayer of the Church.†Stegmann called for all members of the Church to become intimately united with Christ and form “what St. Paul calls mystically the body of Christ.†The movement’s new concentration on the baptistery, altar and improved participation naturally lead to changes in church design. Other features of the Liturgical Movement included a “profound spirit of fidelity to the Church,†a patristic revival, a new interest in Gregorian chant, the use of the Liturgy of the Hours for laypeople and the more frequent following of Latin-vernacular missals.
The early proponents of the Liturgical Movement sought to improve liturgical quality by putting the primary features of the liturgical life in their proper place. Previously, the prevailing individualist approach to liturgy meant that worshippers not only failed to follow along with the liturgical action, but often busied themselves with other things, often pious enough, but unrelated to the Eucharistic liturgy. With relatively little interest in making the liturgical action visible to the congregation, altars were sometimes set in deep chancels and attached to elaborate reredoses that overwhelmed their tabernacles. Various devotional altars had their own tabernacles, which quite often doubled as statue bases. Overly large and colorful statues only compounded the problem. With the Blessed Sacrament reserved in multiple tabernacles, the centrality of the Eucharistic liturgy as a unified act of communal worship became less clear. Since clarity of Church teaching on the Eucharist and liturgy were key features of the Liturgical Movement, architecture changed to serve its ends.
Liturgical Principles and Church Architecture
The Liturgical Movement called for clarity in representing the centrality of the Eucharist and the pious participation of the membership of the Mystical Body of Christ in the Eucharistic liturgy. At the most basic level, architects of the Liturgical Movement wanted to raise the quality of American liturgical life. By making the liturgical regulations of the Sacred Congregation of Rites more widely known, they hoped to bring about consistent practice in order to increase the reverence for the Mass and other devotions. Their concerns were not merely legalistic, however. Intimately connected with these goals was the desire to increase the active and pious participation of the laity, and architectural changes followed almost immediately to serve that end.Maurice Lavanoux lamented in a 1929 article in Orate Fratres that American architects and liturgists often failed to veil the tabernacle, ordered low quality church goods from catalogues, and designed reredoses that enveloped the tabernacle and thereby failed to make it suitably prominent.5 Art and historical continuity still had their place, but now the two primary symbols, the altar and crucifix, would dominate. Lavanoux asked that artists treat the altar with proper dignity, not simply view it as a “vehicle for architectural virtuosity.†He quoted M.S. MacMahon’s Liturgical Catechism in describing the new arrangement of the altar according to liturgical principles. Instead of the old Victorian pinnacled altar with its disproportionately small tabernacle, MacMahon wrote,
“the tendency of the modern liturgical movement is to concentrate attention upon the actual altar, to remove the superstructure back from the altar or to dispense with it altogether, so that the altar may stand out from it, with its dominating feature of the Cross, as the place of Sacrifice and the table of the Lord’s Supper, and that, with its tabernacle, it may stand out as the throne upon which Christ reigns as King and from which He dispenses the bounteous largesse of Divine grace.â€
The intention to simplify the altar originated in a desire to emphasize the active aspect of Mass and clarify the place of the reserved Eucharist.
Advocates of architectural and liturgical clarity received a new mouthpiece with the premiere of Liturgical Arts magazine in 1931. Its editors wrote that they were “less concerned with the stimulation of sumptuous building than…with the fostering of good taste, of honest craftsmanship [and] of liturgical correctness.†The resistance to mere sumptuous building and the emphasis on honesty were means by which the Liturgical Movement sought to correct the architectural mistakes of the nineteenth century while maintaining a design philosophy appropriate for church architecture. This call for honesty and simplicity was to be extraordinarily influential for two reasons: first, it was echoed strongly in Sacrosanctum Concilium, and second, with a changed meaning it became the leitmotif of Modernist church architects.Specific architectural changes appeared quickly in new construction and renovations. Altars with tall backdrops were replaced by those with a solid, simple rectangular shape and prominent tabernacles. Edwin Ryan included instructions on the design of the appropriate altar in the inaugural issue of Liturgical Arts. He asked for “liturgical correctness†and included an image of two prototypical altars fulfilling liturgical principles. The rectangular slab of the altar remained dominant, and the tabernacle stood freely. Its rounded shape facilitated the use of the required tabernacle veil. The crucifix remained dominant and read prominently against a plain backdrop. The tester or baldachino emphasized the altar and marked its status. Ryan made it clear that these suggestions were not meant to limit the creativity of the architect and that “within the requirements of liturgical correctness and good taste the fullest liberty is of course permissible.†A built example from the firm of Comes, Perry and McMullen gave the high altar of St. Luke’s Church in St. Paul, MN a figural backdrop. The sculpture group stood behind the altar and not on it, was dominated by the crucifix, and contrasted in color with the large tabernacle. Clarification of the place of the altar and the tabernacle did not necessarily mean a bare sanctuary and absence of ornamental treatment.
Another influential journal, Church Property Administration, provided information on the liturgical movement and its architectural effects. With a circulation of nearly 15,000 in 1951 that included 128 bishops, 11,007 churches and 802 architects, the magazine reached a popular audience but included numerous articles on architecture which evidenced the ideals of the Liturgical Movement. Michael Chapman penned a piece called “Liturgical Movement in America†in 1943 that spoke of liturgical law, tabernacle veils and rubrics, but his underlying thrust grew out of the context of the liturgical movement. The changes at the altar, he claimed, were meant to “direct the attention of our people to the inner significance of the Action performed at it.†The simplification of the altar and sanctuary was intended to help the altar resume “its functional significance as the place of Sacrifice; its very austerity serving to focus the mind and soul upon Him who is there enshrined, rather than on the shrine itself.†Chapman also critiqued nineteenth century architects for reducing tabernacles to mere cupboards and reiterated that liturgical law forbade the nonetheless common practice of putting a statue or monstrance atop a tabernacle.
The common abuse of using tabernacles as stands for statues and altar crucifixes became one of the immediate issues to resolve. This small but significant problem tied directly to the Liturgical Movement’s aim to clarify the place of the Eucharist in the life of the Church. Maurice Lavanoux lamented with “a sense of shame†that he had once designed an extra-shallow tabernacle “so that the back could be filled with brick as an adequate support†for a statue. Altar, tabernacle and statues were meant to be brought into a harmonious whole through placement, treatment, and number. The various parts would amplify the true hierarchy of importance without diminishing the rightful place of any individual component of Christian worship or piety. One author in Church Property Administration titled his article “Eliminate Distractions in Church Interiors,†and suggested that all things which “distract attentiveness and reduce the power of concentration†be removed or improved.10 As H.A. Reinhold, one of the pioneers of the liturgical movement, put it, liturgical churches would “put first things first again, second things in the second place and peripheral things on the periphery.â€
In the years leading up to the Second Vatican Council, much discussion continued concerning the appropriate church building and the kind of design it required. The great majority of architects and faithful held to their traditions without fear of appropriate updating. While certain Modernist architects built high profile church projects, such as Le Corbusier’s Notre Dame du Haut (1950-54) and Marcel Breuer’s St. John’s Abbey in Minnesota (1961), most church architects avoided this type of modernism. Even in 1948 when Reinhold suggested the possibility of semicircular naves, priests facing the people, chairs instead of pews, and organs near the altar and not in a loft, he would preserve his more traditional sense of architectural propriety. Before the Council, a middle road of architectural reform emerged, one that shared ideas with the Liturgical Movement and Mediator Dei.
The Spirit of Mediator Dei
In his 1947 encyclical Mediator Dei, Pius XII praised the new focus on liturgy. He traced the renewed interest to several Benedictine monasteries and thought it would greatly benefit the faithful who formed a “compact body with Christ for its head†(§5). However, one of the introductory paragraphs explained that the encyclical would not only educate those resistant to appropriate change, but also address overly exuberant liturgists. Pius wrote:“We observe with considerable anxiety and some misgiving, that elsewhere certain enthusiasts, over-eager in their search for novelty, are straying beyond the path of sound doctrine and prudence. Not seldom, in fact, they interlaid their plans and hopes for a revival of the sacred liturgy with principles which compromise this holiest of causes in theory or practice, and sometimes even taint it with errors touching Catholic faith and ascetical doctrine†(§8).
Pius was concerned with abuses of liturgical creativity, a blurring of the lines between clerics and lay people regarding the nature of the priesthood, and the use of the vernacular without permission. In matters more closely related to art and architecture, he warned against the return of the primitive table form of the altar, against forbidding images of saints, and against crucifixes which showed no evidence of Christ’s passion (§62). Mediator Dei offered strong recommendations for sacred art as well, allowing “modern art†to “be given free scope†only if it were able to “preserve a correct balance between styles tending neither toward extreme realism nor to excessive ‘symbolism’…â€(§195). He deplored and condemned “those works of art, recently introduced by some, which seem to be a distortion and perversion of true art and which at times openly shock Christian taste, modesty and devotion…†(§195). Jesuit Father John La Farge, chaplain of the Liturgical Arts Society, lost no time in taking the words of Pius XII to the readers of Liturgical Arts in 1948, even before the official English-language translation was available.13
By the 1950s, the use of contemporary design methods had begun to merge with the liturgical movement and provided a new set of buildings which have received little notice in the liturgical and art historical journals. With a few notable exceptions, most architects worked within the requests of Mediator Dei while adapting new materials and artistic methodologies to church design. Despite some arguments against a supposed “false†and “dishonest†use of historical styles like Gothic, architects continued to either build overtly traditional churches or use new idioms which maintained a logical continuity with those that came before. Architects like Edward Schulte and others who echoed Pius XII’s call for moderation in liturgical innovation found few allies in the architectural media. Without much fanfare, they simply continued to design church buildings that served the needs of the day.
Schulte, a Cincinnati architect and onetime president of the American Institute of Architects, took an approach to church design that truly grew organically from that which came before. His Blessed Sacrament Church in Sioux City, Iowa appeared in Church Property Administration in 1958 and provided a dignified and substantial answer to the problem presented by the architectural Modernists: how to make a modern church which espoused new ideas in liturgical design.14 The generous openings of the west facade and the single image of “Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament†embodied noble simplicity as expressed by the Liturgical Movement without sacrificing content or resorting to an industrial aesthetic. The interior presented a large sanctuary with a prominent tabernacle, a dominant crucifix, all of it at once appropriately ornamental and without distractions. The limestone piers supported visible truss arches which fulfilled much of the movement’s demand for “honesty†in construction. The adoring angels painted on the ceiling appropriately enriched the church in a style which copied no past age. Schulte satisfied the demand to focus attention on the high altar by placing his one side altar outside the south arcade. Most strikingly, he placed the choir behind the high altar, satisfying the requests of those such as Reinhold and others to restore what many liturgical scholars believed to be an ancient arrangement.
Another novel yet historically continuous approach to the Liturgical Movement produced the Church of the Holy Trinity in Gary, Indiana. Published in 1959, it used a style called “modern classic†but partook of the ideas generated by the Liturgical Movement. Architect J. Ellsworth Potter gave the exterior a campanile, porticoed entrance, and a dignified ecclesiastical air growing from continuity of conventional ecclesiastical typology. The plan proved a departure, however, turning the nave 90 degrees and putting the sanctuary against the long end. This arrangement gave all of the congregation direct sight lines to the sanctuary’s prominent tabernacle and forceful imagery. By providing seating for 432 with only 12 rows of pews, the church brought “the congregation of Holy Trinity closer to the main altar.†Fulfilling the Liturgical Movement’s requests for an increased prominence for Baptism, the baptistery was a substantial chapel-like room. Instead of competing with the high altar, another special shrine was pulled out from the main nave and given its own small chapel. The desires of the Liturgical Movement were incorporated within a church which otherwise maintained a recognizable architectural continuity with older churches. It grew organically from those that came before.
In one other example, an article entitled “Dignified Contemporary Church Architecture†appeared in Church Property Administration in 1956 and presented the Church of St. Therese in Garfield Heights, Ohio. Designed by Robert T. Miller of Cleveland, the building used a palette recalling his early days as a designer of industrial buildings, but nonetheless maintained a sense of Catholic purpose. The very large church seated 1,000 people, using materials of steel, concrete block, and brick. Despite the incorporation of industrial building methods, the architect was content to let the “modern†materials be a means rather than an end. The tall campanile proved visible for miles and the west front of the building offered a grand entry. A well-proportioned Carrara marble statue of St. Therese in a field of blue mosaic with gold crosses and roses was surrounded by an ornamental screen inset with Theresian symbolism. A dramatic three-story faceted glass window with abstracted figural imagery gave the baptistery a grandeur it deserved. The sanctuary received dramatic natural lighting over the high altar and its prominent tabernacle. Images of Joseph and the Virgin form part of the scene, but without altars of their own. The symbolism in the aluminum baldachino joined with the precious materials of the altar to establish its proper status. The altar carried the simple but essential message “Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus.†Modern materials came together with a decorous arrangement of parts to form a dignified contemporary church.
These churches were built in the spirit of Mediator Dei. They eschewed the claims of some for unusual shapes, banishment of ornament, and the use of exposed industrial materials. Despite the prevailing notion that the post-war United States saw nothing but modernist architecture, in 1954 three “traditional†churches were being built for every one “modern†church. Ironically, Modernist architect-heroes disproportionately found their way into the secular press, impressed other architects and persuaded building committees. No matter how clearly the traditional architects adopted features of the Liturgical Movement, they could not compete with the excitement of the stylistic avant-garde. The Modernist critique of traditional architecture reached all levels, from educational institutions to popular culture to chancery offices.
While leading architectural journals praised the latest concrete designs, William Busch, a liturgical pioneer and collaborator with Virgil Michel in the Liturgical Movement, asked readers to understand the true nature of a church building. In 1955, he penned an article entitled “Secularism in Church Architecture,†discussing the term “contemporary†and its associations with modern secular buildings. Secularism in church architecture, he feared, would lead to buildings which would “lack the architectural expression which is proper to a church as a House of God and a place of divine worship.â€18 Furthermore, he denied claims of some architectural modernists by writing:
“A church edifice is not simply a place for the convenient exercise of prayer and instruction and for the enactment of the liturgy. The church edifice itself is a part of the liturgy, a sacred thing, made holy by a divine presence through solemn consecration: it is a sacramental object, an outward sign of invisible spiritual reality.â€
The concept of the church building as a “skin†for liturgical action, as would be presented later in documents like Environment and Art in Catholic Worship (BCL, 1978), was absolutely proscribed. In fact, Busch criticized architect Pietro Belluschi, who would become one of the major forces in American church architecture, for seeing a church as “a meeting house for people.†He asked instead:
“Where is the thought of church architecture as addressed to God? And where is the thought of God’s address to man in hallowing grace? Are we to imagine modern society as in an attitude of more or less agnostic and emotional subjectivism, and unconcerned about objective truth and the data of divine revelation?â€
H.A. Reinhold, a prominent voice of the Liturgical Movement, also urged moderation. He asked that architects neither “canonize nor condemn any of the historic styles,†rather, “appreciate all of these styles of architecture, each for its own value.†Although he spoke of “full participation of the congregation†he cautioned against centralized altars.
Other writers and architects had different ideas, and many church architects who ignored Mediator Dei often received considerable notoriety. Articles in Liturgical Arts became more and more clearly aligned with a “progressive†notion of liturgical reform at the same time that architectural modernism under architects like Le Corbusier and Pietro Belluschi were taking hold. Even before the arrival of the Second Vatican Council, Liturgical Arts was discussing abstract art for churches, presenting images of blank sanctuaries, and encouraging Mass facing the people. Modernist architects and liturgists who privileged what Pius XII called “exterior†participation in reaction to the individualism of the previous decades held the majority opinions and established the normative principles of new church architecture.
The language of the Liturgical Movement found its way into the documents of Vatican II and remains relatively unchanged despite the variety of architectural responses that claim to grow from it. Phrases such as “noble simplicity†and “active participation†were formative concepts in pre-Conciliar design which nonetheless allowed for a traditional architecture, one suitably elaborate yet clear in its aims. In contrast to the conceptions of post-Conciliar architecture promoted by architectural innovators, the 1940s and 1950s provide contextual clues for the architecture of the Liturgical Movement. It is reasonable to ask whether the writers of Sacrosanctum Concilium had the larger history of the liturgical movement in mind when they called for “noble beauty rather than mere extravagance†(SC, §124).
Similarly, in understanding Vatican II’s statement giving “art of our own days…free scope in the Church†(SC, §123), it can be remembered that Pius XI (reigned 1922-39) had chastised certain modern artists for deviating from appropriate art even as he argued that the Church had “always opened to door to progress…guided by genius and faith.†Moreover, the very words of Pius XII’s Mediator Dei which read “modern art should be given free scope in the due and reverent service of the church†found their way into Sacrosanctum Concilium. The proper context for this “free scope†comes in relation to Pius’ other exhortations from Mediator Dei: preservation of images of saints and the representation of the wounds of Christ on the crucifix (§62), the priority given to interior elements of divine worship (§24), the encouragement of extraliturgical devotions (§29-32), the warning against seeing ancient liturgical norms as more worthy than those developed subsequently (§61) and the prohibition of the table form of the altar (§62). Mediator Dei appeared only 12 years before plans for the Council were announced, yet almost immediately after the Council, architects and liturgists were defying its requests. Even Paul VI critiqued artists for abandoning the Church, and for “expressing certain things that offend us who have been entrusted with the guardianship of the human race.†While he asked artists to be “sincere and daring,†he also said to them:
“One does not know what you are saying. Frequently you yourselves do not know, and the language of Babel, of confusion, is the result. Then where is art?â€
Paul VI asked of artists the same thing that the Liturgical Movement asked of architects: clarity and lack of confusion. In spite of great efforts to the contrary, architectural and liturgical disorientation has characterized the period since the Council, and many search for ways to reestablish that clarity. Understanding the “spirit of Mediator Dei†and its resultant architecture may prove very useful.
That the artistic recommendations of Vatican II grew so directly out of the context of the Liturgical Movement and the recommendations of Mediator Dei gives credence to the idea that some of what came before Vatican II might provide insight into understanding what the Council fathers intended. The liturgical architecture of the decades before the Council need not be ignored or seen as outdated relics of a past age. In fact, forty-five years later, pre-Conciliar church architecture inspired by the Liturgical Movement might yield significant clues for proper implementation of the renewal.
Dr. Denis McNamara is an Architectural historian and assistant director at the Liturgical Institute, University of Saint Mary of the Lake.
February 17, 2009 at 3:21 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772497Praxiteles
ParticipantAnd here we have Pius XII in Mediator Dei addressing the Cloyne HACK and to the Cobh Cathedral clergy (and hopefully they will soon arrange to wash the filthy altar linen there):
206. We cherish the hope that these Our exhortations will not only arouse the sluggish and recalcitrant to a deeper and more correct study of the liturgy, but also instill into their daily lives its supernatural spirit according to the words of the Apostle, “extinguish not the spirit.”[184]
February 17, 2009 at 3:15 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772496Praxiteles
ParticipantNad for the grotty creatures currently running around in the filth of Cobh Cathedral, this excerpt from Mediator Dei may be of use -if they can read it! Indeed, this paragraph could have been tailor-made for the present state of Cobh Cathedral.
189. We desire to commend and urge the adornment of churches and altars. Let each one feel moved by the inspired word, “the zeal of thy house hath eaten me up”;[169] and strive as much as in him lies that everything in the church, including vestments and liturgical furnishings, even though not rich nor lavish, be perfectly clean and appropriate, since all is consecrated to the Divine Majesty. If we have previously disapproved of the error of those who would wish to outlaw images from churches on the plea of reviving an ancient tradition, We now deem it Our duty to censure the inconsiderate zeal of those who propose for veneration in the Churches and on the altars, without any just reason, a multitude of sacred images and statues, and also those who display unauthorized relics, those who emphasize special and insignificant practices, neglecting essential and necessary things. They thus bring religion into derision and lessen the dignity of worship.
February 17, 2009 at 3:11 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772495Praxiteles
ParticipantAnd on some prcatical points:
172. In order that the errors and inaccuracies, mentioned above, may be more easily removed from the Church, and that the faithful following safer norms may be able to use more fruitfully the liturgical apostolate, We have deemed it opportune, Venerable Brethren, to add some practical applications of the doctrine which We have explained.
173. When dealing with genuine and solid piety We stated that there could be no real opposition between the sacred liturgy and other religious practices, provided they be kept within legitimate bounds and performed for a legitimate purpose. In fact, there are certain exercises of piety which the Church recommends very much to clergy and religious.
174. It is Our wish also that the faithful, as well, should take part in these practices. The chief of these are: meditation on spiritual things, diligent examination of conscience, enclosed retreats, visits to the blessed sacrament, and those special prayers in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary among which the rosary, as all know, has pride of place.[163]
175. From these multiple forms of piety, the inspiration and action of the Holy Spirit cannot be absent. Their purpose is, in various ways, to attract and direct our souls to God, purifying them from their sins, encouraging them to practice virtue and, finally, stimulating them to advance along the path of sincere piety by accustoming them to meditate on the eternal truths and disposing them better to contemplate the mysteries of the human and divine natures of Christ. Besides, since they develop a deeper spiritual life of the faithful, they prepare them to take part in sacred public functions with greater fruit, and they lessen the danger of liturgical prayers becoming an empty ritualism.
176. In keeping with your pastoral solicitude, Venerable Brethren, do not cease to recommend and encourage these exercises of piety from which the faithful, entrusted to your care, cannot but derive salutary fruit. Above all, do not allow – as some do, who are deceived under the pretext of restoring the liturgy or who idly claim that only liturgical rites are of any real value and dignity – that churches be closed during the hours not appointed for public functions, as has already happened in some places: where the adoration of the august sacrament and visits to our Lord in the tabernacles are neglected; where confession of devotion is discouraged; and devotion to the Virgin Mother of God, a sign of “predestination” according to the opinion of holy men, is so neglected, especially among the young, as to fade away and gradually vanish. Such conduct most harmful to Christian piety is like poisonous fruit, growing on the infected branches of a healthy tree, which must be cut off so that the life-giving sap of the tree may bring forth only the best fruit.
February 17, 2009 at 3:07 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772494Praxiteles
ParticipantAnd on the cult of the Eucharist:
130. The Sacred Councils teach that it is the Church’s tradition right from the beginning, to worship “with the same adoration the Word Incarnate as well as His own flesh,”[123] and St. Augustine asserts that, “No one eats that flesh, without first adoring it,” while he adds that “not only do we not commit a sin by adoring it, but that we do sin by not adoring it.”[124]
131. It is on this doctrinal basis that the cult of adoring the Eucharist was founded and gradually developed as something distinct from the sacrifice of the Mass. The reservation of the sacred species for the sick and those in danger of death introduced the praiseworthy custom of adoring the blessed Sacrament which is reserved in our churches. This practice of adoration, in fact, is based on strong and solid reasons. For the Eucharist is at once a sacrifice and a sacrament; but it differs from the other sacraments in this that it not only produces grace, but contains in a permanent manner the Author of grace Himself. When, therefore, the Church bids us adore Christ hidden behind the eucharistic veils and pray to Him for spiritual and temporal favors, of which we ever stand in need, she manifests living faith in her divine Spouse who is present beneath these veils, she professes her gratitude to Him and she enjoys the intimacy of His friendship.
132. Now, the Church in the course of centuries has introduced various forms of this worship which are ever increasing in beauty and helpfulness: as, for example, visits of devotion to the tabernacles, even every day; benediction of the Blessed Sacrament; solemn processions, especially at the time of Eucharistic Congress, which pass through cities and villages; and adoration of the Blessed Sacrament publicly exposed. Sometimes these public acts of adoration are of short duration. Sometimes they last for one, several and even for forty hours. In certain places they continue in turn in different churches throughout the year, while elsewhere adoration is perpetual day and night, under the care of religious communities, and the faithful quite often take part in them.
133. These exercises of piety have brought a wonderful increase in faith and supernatural life to the Church militant upon earth and they are reechoed to a certain extent by the Church triumphant in heaven which sings continually a hymn of praise to God and to the Lamb “who was slain.”[125] Wherefore, the Church not merely approves these pious practices, which in the course of centuries have spread everywhere throughout the world, but makes them her own, as it were, and by her authority commends them.[126] They spring from the inspiration of the liturgy and if they are performed with due propriety and with faith and piety, as the liturgical rules of the Church require, they are undoubtedly of the very greatest assistance in living the life of the liturgy.
134. Nor is it to be admitted that by this Eucharistic cult men falsely confound the historical Christ, as they say, who once lived on earth, with the Christ who is present in the august Sacrament of the altar, and who reigns glorious and triumphant in heaven and bestows supernatural favors. On the contrary, it can be claimed that by this devotion the faithful bear witness to and solemnly avow the faith of the Church that the Word of God is identical with the Son of the Virgin Mary, who suffered on the cross, who is present in a hidden manner in the Eucharist and who reigns upon His heavenly throne. Thus, St. John Chrysostom states: “When you see It [the Body of Christ] exposed, say to yourself: Thanks to this body, I am no longer dust and ashes, I am no more a captive but a freeman: hence I hope to obtain heaven and the good things that are there in store for me, eternal life, the heritage of the angels, companionship with Christ; death has not destroyed this body which was pierced by nails and scourged, . . . this is that body which was once covered with blood, pierced by a lance, from which issued saving fountains upon the world, one of blood and the other of water. . . This body He gave to us to keep and eat, as a mark of His intense love.”[127]
135. That practice in a special manner is to be highly praised according to which many exercises of piety, customary among the faithful, and with benediction of the blessed sacrament. For excellent and of great benefit is that custom which makes the priest raise aloft the Bread of Angels before congregations with heads bowed down in adoration, and forming with It the sign of the cross implores the heavenly Father to deign to look upon His Son who for love of us was nailed to the cross, and for His sake and through Him who willed to be our Redeemer and our brother, be pleased to shower down heavenly favors upon those whom the immaculate blood of the Lamb has redeemed.[128]
136. Strive then, Venerable Brethren, with your customary devoted care so the churches, which the faith and piety of Christian peoples have built in the course of centuries for the purpose of singing a perpetual hymn of glory to God almighty and of providing a worthy abode for our Redeemer concealed beneath the eucharistic species, may be entirely at the disposal of greater numbers of the faithful who, called to the feet of their Savior, hearken to His most consoling invitation, “Come to Me all you who labor and are heavily burdened, and I will refresh you.”[129] Let your churches be the house of God where all who enter to implore blessings rejoice in obtaining whatever they ask[130] and find there heavenly consolation.
February 17, 2009 at 3:00 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772493Praxiteles
ParticipantAnd on the same subject, Mediator Dei again:
107. It is to be observed, also, that they have strayed from the path of truth and right reason who, led away by false opinions, make so much of these accidentals as to presume to assert that without them the Mass cannot fulfill its appointed end.
108. Many of the faithful are unable to use the Roman missal even though it is written in the vernacular; nor are all capable of understanding correctly the liturgical rites and formulas. So varied and diverse are men’s talents and characters that it is impossible for all to be moved and attracted to the same extent by community prayers, hymns and liturgical services. Moreover, the needs and inclinations of all are not the same, nor are they always constant in the same individual. Who, then, would say, on account of such a prejudice, that all these Christians cannot participate in the Mass nor share its fruits? On the contrary, they can adopt some other method which proves easier for certain people; for instance, they can lovingly meditate on the mysteries of Jesus Christ or perform other exercises of piety or recite prayers which, though they differ from the sacred rites, are still essentially in harmony with them.
February 17, 2009 at 2:56 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772492Praxiteles
ParticipantAgain, Mediator Dei on the subject of lay participation in the Eucharist. The Cloyne HACK could well read this:
91. But there is also a more profound reason why all Christians, especially those who are present at Mass, are said to offer the sacrifice.
92. In this most important subject it is necessary, in order to avoid giving rise to a dangerous error, that we define the exact meaning of the word “offer.” The unbloody immolation at the words of consecration, when Christ is made present upon the altar in the state of a victim, is performed by the priest and by him alone, as the representative of Christ and not as the representative of the faithful. But it is because the priest places the divine victim upon the altar that he offers it to God the Father as an oblation for the glory of the Blessed Trinity and for the good of the whole Church. Now the faithful participate in the oblation, understood in this limited sense, after their own fashion and in a twofold manner, namely, because they not only offer the sacrifice by the hands of the priest, but also, to a certain extent, in union with him. It is by reason of this participation that the offering made by the people is also included in liturgical worship.
93. Now it is clear that the faithful offer the sacrifice by the hands of the priest from the fact that the minister at the altar, in offering a sacrifice in the name of all His members, represents Christ, the Head of the Mystical Body. Hence the whole Church can rightly be said to offer up the victim through Christ. But the conclusion that the people offer the sacrifice with the priest himself is not based on the fact that, being members of the Church no less than the priest himself, they perform a visible liturgical rite; for this is the privilege only of the minister who has been divinely appointed to this office: rather it is based on the fact that the people unite their hearts in praise, impetration, expiation and thanksgiving with prayers or intention of the priest, even of the High Priest himself, so that in the one and same offering of the victim and according to a visible sacerdotal rite, they may be presented to God the Father. It is obviously necessary that the external sacrificial rite should, of its very nature, signify the internal worship of the heart. Now the sacrifice of the New Law signifies that supreme worship by which the principal Offerer himself, who is Christ, and, in union with Him and through Him, all the members of the Mystical Body pay God the honor and reverence that are due to Him.
February 17, 2009 at 2:39 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772491Praxiteles
ParticipantOn the problem of free-standing altars, such as we have in the proposed church for 2010 above, just found this:
http://www.newliturgicalmovement.org/2008/01/bringing-verticality-and-presence-back.html
February 17, 2009 at 11:37 am in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772490Praxiteles
ParticipantMediator Dei on the subject of rt and architecture:
What We have said about music, applies to the other fine arts, especially to architecture, sculpture and painting. Recent works of art which lend themselves to the materials of modern composition, should not be universally despised and rejected through prejudice. Modern art should be given free scope in the due and reverent service of the church and the sacred rites, provided that they preserve a correct balance between styles tending neither to extreme realism nor to excessive “symbolism,” and that the needs of the Christian community are taken into consideration rather than the particular taste or talent of the individual artist. Thus modern art will be able to join its voice to that wonderful choir of praise to which have contributed, in honor of the Catholic faith, the greatest artists throughout the centuries. Nevertheless, in keeping with the duty of Our office, We cannot help deploring and condemning those works of art, recently introduced by some, which seem to be a distortion and perversion of true art and which at times openly shock Christian taste, modesty and devotion, and shamefully offend the true religious sense. These must be entirely excluded and banished from our churches, like “anything else that is not in keeping with the sanctity of the place.”[178]
196. Keeping in mind, Venerable Brethren, pontifical norms and decrees, take great care to enlighten and direct the minds and hearts of the artists to whom is given the task today of restoring or rebuilding the many churches which have been ruined or completely destroyed by war. Let them be capable and willing to draw their inspiration from religion to express what is suitable and more in keeping with the requirements of worship. Thus the human arts will shine forth with a wondrous heavenly splendor, and contribute greatly to human civilization, to the salvation of souls and the glory of God. The fine arts are really in conformity with religion when “as noblest handmaids they are at the service of divine worship.”[179]197. But there is something else of even greater importance, Venerable Brethren, which We commend to your apostolic zeal, in a very special manner. Whatever pertains to the external worship has assuredly its importance; however, the most pressing duty of Christians is to live the liturgical life, and increase and cherish its supernatural spirit.
February 17, 2009 at 11:31 am in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772489Praxiteles
ParticipantAnd here is some more from Mediator Dei:
Pius XII stated that exaggerated reforms have harmful effects on Catholic spirituality: This way of acting bids fair to revive the exaggerated and senseless antiquarianism to which the illegal Council of Pistoia gave rise. It likewise attempts to reinstate a series of errors which were responsible for the calling of that meeting as well as for those resulting from it, with grievous harm to souls, and which the Church, the ever watchful guardian of the “deposit of faith” committed to her charge by her divine Founder, had every right and reason to condemn.[53] For perverse designs and ventures of this sort tend to paralyze and weaken that process of sanctification by which the sacred liturgy directs the sons of adoption to their Heavenly Father of their souls’ salvation.[10]
February 17, 2009 at 11:28 am in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #772488Praxiteles
ParticipantAs an example of what Mediator Dei has to say about unreasonable excesses in the liturgical reform movement here we have a sample:
Assuredly it is a wise and most laudable thing to return in spirit and affection to the sources of the sacred liturgy. For research in this field of study, by tracing it back to its origins, contributes valuable assistance towards a more thorough and careful investigation of the significance of feast-days, and of the meaning of the texts and sacred ceremonies employed on their occasion. [9]
But it is neither wise nor laudable to reduce everything to antiquity by every possible device. Thus, to cite some instances, one would be straying from the straight path were he to wish the altar restored to its primitive tableform; were he to want black excluded as a color for the liturgical vestments; were he to forbid the use of sacred images and statues in Churches; were he to order the crucifix so designed that the divine Redeemer’s body shows no trace of His cruel sufferings; and lastly were he to disdain and reject polyphonic music or singing in parts, even where it conforms to regulations issued by the Holy See. [9]
What application might this have, for instance, in the c hurch for 2010 above?
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