Praxiteles
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- September 17, 2008 at 1:21 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771950
Praxiteles
ParticipantPraxiteles is forming the impression that the Cloyne HACK has imported a big lib.
September 17, 2008 at 1:18 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771949Praxiteles
ParticipantWell, it looks as though Seasltz is a fan of Vosko, the great American Wreckovator:
Book Review:
GOD’S HOUSE IS OUR HOUSE
God’s House Is Our House: Re-imagining
the Environment for Worship.
By Richard S. Vosko. Collegeville: Liturgical
Press 2006. Pages, xxx + 253.
Paper, $19.95. ISBN: 0-8146-3014-6.
Richard S. Vosko is a priest of the diocese
of Albany, New York. He has been a design
consultant since 1970 and has been involved in
the construction and renovation of some of the
most important church edifices in the United
States, including the cathedrals in Los Angeles;
Seattle; San Antonio: Milwaukee; Superior,
Wisconsin and Rochester, New York.
God’s House Is Our House is a beautifully
designed book intended for those who are
involved in planning the building or renovation
of cathedrals, churches and chapels. It may also
serve as a tool to educate members of diocesan
liturgical commissions and parish councils.
Vosko is aware that the liturgy, and especially
the celebration of the Eucharist, has become the
focus of intense disagreements in this country.
Vosko addresses these issues by carefully setting
out the liturgical principles in the documents of
the Second Vatican Council which then provide
the foundation for his book. He stresses that the
church is meant to be a sacrament of unity in
which the baptized are obliged to participate in
worship as active partners, not as spectators;
hence church buildings are metaphors for the
church as the body of Christ and the people of
God and must reflect these basic realities in their
structure and appointment.
In his carefully structured introduction,
Vosko sets out his plans for the book. In his
Overview, he sets out the steps that a community
should go through in the development of
a project.
The main body of the book consists of three
parts. Part One, Building Blocks, explores various
areas that shape our beliefs as Christians. Vosko is
aware that unexplored misunderstandings about
basic Christianity, worship, art and architecture
often result in an emotional and hostile
environment throughout the building or
renovation project. In Part Two, he presents a
conceptual program describing the spaces and
appointments that make up a place of worship.
He is insistent that the design of a worthy worship
space does not begin with an architectural or
artistic concept but with a clear liturgical brief. In
Part Three, Further Planning, Vosko reviews
those areas that require serious attention and the
cooperation of all those involved in the project.
Included here are discussions of worship that is
ecologically sound and culturally appropriate as
well as the size of the church in terms of possible
population growth. Vosko strongly believes that
where we pray and worship shapes how we pray
and worship and proclaims what we believe as
Christians as well as how we live as Christians
in the world.
The book is amply illustrated with many
photographs, both black and white and in color.
New and renovated churches are featured; they
represent the work not only of Richard Vosko
himself but other liturgical consultants, including
James Moudry, Frank Kacmarcik, Richard Giles,
John Buscemi, Marchita Mauk and Robert E.
Rambusch. As Bishop Donald Trautman,
chairman of the Bishops’ Committee on the
Liturgy, states in his evaluation of the book,
“Father Vosko has brought many ‘new things and
old out of the storeroom. . .’ He offers valuable
and needed advice on art education for pastoral
leaders and for working with artists. This book
gives profound and practical insights that should
nurture good discussion in a parish.â€
R. Kevin Seasoltz O.S.B.
Saint John’s Abbey, Collegeville, MinnesotaSeptember 17, 2008 at 1:03 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771948Praxiteles
ParticipantANd some more on his magnum opus:
R. Kevin SEASOLTZ, God’s Gift Giving: In Christ and Through the Spirit. New York: Continuum, 2007. pp. 246. $35.73 pb. ISBN 13: 978-0-8264-2816-5.
Reviewed by Peter C. PHAN, Georgetown University, Washington, DC 20057
Kevin Seasoltz, OSB, who is one of the foremost American scholars on liturgy and worship and whose previous book A Sense of the Sacred: Theological Foundations of Christian Architecture and Art (Continuum, 2005) won First Place for liturgy in the Catholic Press Association’s Awards in 2006, now “gifts†us with another magnificent book, this time on God’s Gift-Giving.The idea of gift-giving has recently figured prominently in discussions among deconstructionist thinkers, feminist theorists, anthropologists, ethicists, and theologians. Among these the French philosopher and theologian Jean-Luc Marion obtains pride of place. Building upon the concept of gift-giving as gratuitous love and genrosity, giving without expecting anything in return, and above all as irrevocable self-giving, Seasoltz revisits the key elements of Christian theology and suffuses them with new insights. The first chapter expounds the theology of gift-giving as espoused by Hans Urs von Balthasar, Jean-Luc Marion, and Stephen Webb and hints at the ways in which this concept of gift-giving can enrich our understanding of the Triune God, Christ, sacrifice, the Eucharist, worship in word and sacrament, and the Holy Spirit.
In subsequent chapters these themes are elaborated at length. The second chapter focuses on God’s gift as sacrifice. Despite some contemporary theologians’ severe critique of the concept of sacrifice, Seasoltz is convinced of the “centrality of sacrifice not only in Christian kerygma and therefore in the faith, life and worship of all who call themselves Christian but also in the very constitution of the created universe and the basic physical and biological processes of life itself†(40). Seasoltz applies the concept of sacrifice to God’s act of creation and sees it as an ongoing act of God’s self-giving and self-limiting, and not a once-for-all act of overpowering omnipotence. He goes on to reexamine patripassionism and argues (against Thomas G. Weinandy) for a more nuanced understanding of God’s immutability and impassibility. The next chapter explores the implications of the concept of gift-giving for understanding Jesus’s death on the cross as sacrifice and for the understanding of original sin and of atonement. With regard to the latter, Seasoltz writes powerfully: “This understanding of redemption [as God’s self-gift] makes of God someone other than a child abuser. God did not choose the death of his Son as a solution to the problem of evil in the world†(115). In his discussion of God’s gift in the bible and in the sacraments in the fourth chapter, Seasoltz, following Louis-Marie Chauvet, emphatically stresses their intrinsic unity and their ecclesial context. The next chapter offers a pneumatology that reviews various theologies of the Holy Spirit from the Old Testament to the post-Vatican II era and makes insightful contributions to a theology of God the Creator Spirit.
God’s Gift Giving is a deeply learned book. There is practically no significant theologian, past and present, whose insights have not been discussed and appropriated. Yet the book is highly readable and even spiritually edifying. But if you think you have not had sufficient theological background to fully understand the first five chapters, then by all means read the last one. There Seasoltz unfolds some implications of the theology of God’s gift-giving for pastoral practice and spirituality. Your heart will be warmed by his wisdom, compassion, and inclusiveness. The last paragraph of the book summarizes well its basic thesis and its author’s spirituality: “The eucharist is indeed the gift of God’s food and love for us, but it is given so we in turn might be food and love for another…. And for all that—in fact for all God’s gifts—we give God thanks through Jesus Christ and in the power of the Holy Spirit†(242).
September 17, 2008 at 12:58 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771947Praxiteles
ParticipantA further update on the famous HACK/Cork County Council Conference.
The main speaker appears to be Kevin Seasoltz. Here we have some details on this one:
R. Kevin Seasoltz, OSB
Professor of Theology, 1972-; Rector, Saint John’s Seminary 1988-1992; B.A., Saint Mary’s College, Baltimore 1952; S.T.L., The Catholic University of America, 1956; J.C.L., Lateran University, Rome, 1962; J.C.D., The Catholic University of America, 1962. kseasoltz@csbsju.eduBooks
A Sense of the Sacred: Theological Foundations of Christian Architecture and Art (New York: Continuum 2005).
God’s Gift Giving: In Christ and through the Spirit (New York: Continuum forthcoming in 2007).
Articles
“Frank Kacmarcik and the Cistercian Architectural Tradition,” The Merton Annual: Studies in Culture, Spirituality and Social Sciences, ed. Victor Kramer (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press 2005), forthcoming.
“Brother Frank Kacmarcik Obl.S.B. 1920-2004, Worship 78 (May 2004) 195-199.
“One House, Many Dwellings: Open and Closed Communion,” Worship 79 (September 2005), forthcoming.
“The Coming of the Kingdom,” Spirituality, forthcoming.
“Light of the World, Salt of the Earth,” Spirituality, forthcoming.
“The Most Holy Trinity: The God of the Christians,” Spirituality 10 (June 2004) 148-151. Reviews
Searching for Sacred Space: essays on Architecture and Liturgical Design in the Episcopal Church, ed. John Ander Runkle (New York: Church Publishing Incorporated 2002) in Worship, 77 (July 2003), 380-384.
Liturgy and Muse: The Eucharistic Prayer, ed. Anton Vernooij (Leuven: Peeters 2002) in Worship, 77 (November 2003), 567-569.
Toward Ritual Transformation: Remembering Robert W. Hovda, ed. Gabe Huck and Others (Collegeville: Liturgical Press 2003), in Worship, 78 (January 2004), 80-81.
The Glenstal Book of Icons: Praying with the Glenstal Icons, by Gegory Collins (Collegeville: Liturgical Press 2004) in Worship, 78 (January 2004), 86-88.
Stained Glass in Catholic Philadelphia, ed. Jean M. Farnsworth and Others (Philadelphia: Saint Joseph University Press 2002) in Worship, 78 (March 2004) 183-185.
The New Westminster Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship, ed. Paul Bradshaw (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press 2002) in Worship 78 (March 2004), 191-9192.
The Encyclopedia of Christianity, Vol. 3 (J-0), ed. Erwin Fahlbusch and Others (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans / Leiden: Brill 2003) in Worship, 78 (May 2004), 285-286.
Breath of Life: a Theology of the Creator Spirit, by Denis Edwards (Maryknoll: Orbis Books 2004 ) in Worship 78 (November 2004), 561-564.
Explorations in a Christian Theology of Pilgrimage, ed. Craig Bartholomew and Fred Hughes ( Burlington: Ashgate Publishing Co. 2004) in Worship 79 (January 2005), 89-90.
The Active Participation Revisited /La Participation Active 100 Ans apres Pie X et 40 Ans apres Vatican II, ed. Jozef Lamberts (Leuven: Peeters 2004) in Worship 79 (January2005), 93-95.
History of Vatican II, Vol. IV: Church as Communion, ed. Guiseppe Alberigo (Maryknoll” Orbis 2005), 183-185.
The Gestures of God: Explorations in Sacramentality, ed. Geoffrey Rowel and Christian Hall (New York: Continuum 2004) in Worship (March 2005),187-189.
Healing Liturgies for the Seasons of Life, by Abigail Rian Evans (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press 2004) in Worship 79 (March 2005), 190-191.
“One House, Many Dwellings: Open and Closed Communion,†Worship 79 (September 2005) 405-19.
“Frank Kacmarcik and the Cistercian Architectural Tradition,†The Merton Annual: Studies in Culture, Spirituality and Social Concerns 18 ( Louisville: Fons Vitae 2005) 22-32.
“Salt of the Earth, Light of the World,†Spirituality 11 (July-August 2005) 202-05.
“Words and Worries,†Spirituality 12 (July-August 2006) 204-07.
“The Coming of the Kingdom,†Spirituality (forthcoming).
“Liturgy and Law,†A Commentary on the General Instruction of the Roman Missal, ed. Edward Foley and Others (Collegeville: Liturgical Press forthcoming).
“Monsignor Frederick R. McManus 8 February 1923 – 27 November 2005,†Worship 80 (March 2006) 98-101.
Reviews
The Passion in Art. By Richard Harries (Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate 2004). In Worship 79 (July 2005) 37-72.
Worship Today: Understanding, Practice, Ecumenical Implications. Edited by Thomas F. Best and Dagmar Heller (Geneva: WCC Publications 2004). In Worship 79 (2005) 374-76.
Creation. By Alister McGrath (Minneapolis: Fortress 2004). In Worship 79 (2005) 381-82.
Singing the Lord’s Song in a New Land: Korean American Practices of Faith. By Su Yon Pak and Others (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press 2005) 382-83.
The Mystery of Faith: Reflections on the Encyclical Ecclesia de Eucharistia. Edited by James McEvoy and Maurice Hogan (Blackrock: Columba Press 2005). In Worship 80 (January 2006) 68-71.
A Benedictine Legacy of Peace: The Life of Abbot Leo A. Rudloff. By Brother John Hammond (Weston: Weston Priory 2005). In Worship 80 (January 2006) 71-73.
The New Westminster Dictionary of Christian Spirituality. Edited by Philip Sheldrake (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press 2005). In Worship 80 (January 2006) 84-85.
Late Ancient Christianity. Edited by Virginia Burrus (Minneapolis: Fortress Press 2005). In Worship 80 (July 2006) 363-65.
Encyclopedia of Christianity. Edited by John Bowden (New York: Oxford University Press 2005). In Worship 80 (July 2006) 375-76.
The Encyclopedia of Christianity. Volume 4 (P-Sh). Edited by Erwin Fahlbush and Others (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans/Leiden: Brill 2005). In Worship 80 (July 2006) 376-77.
The Jesuits and the Arts 1540-1773. Edited by John W. O’Malley and Gauvin Bailey (Philadelphia: Saint Joseph University Press 2005). In Worship 80 (July 2006) 379-81.
Rituals in Abundance: Critical Reflection on the Place, Form and Identity of Christian Ritual in Our Church. By Gerard Lukken (Leuven: Peeters 2005). In Worship 80 (2006) 381-83.
Lectures
Gave conferences to Saint Cloud Diocesan group and others: two talks on the Liturgical Movement and Saint John’s Abbey; “Eschatology” at St. Augustine’s Parish; Conference on “We Are Eucharistic People” to Diocesan Council of Catholic Women; Conference on “Eucharist and Reconciliation” at Staples; Conference on “Eucharist and Social Justice” for Saint Cloud Diocesan Pastoral Ministers.
“Liturgy and Social Justice,†two lectures for the Diocese of Winona, 23 October 2005.
“Liturgy, Morality and Social Consciousness,†Otto A. Shults Lectures in the Dioceses of Rochester and Albany, New York, 12-13 July 2006.
Award
Received the Berakah Award from the North American Academy of Liturgy at the annual meeting in Louisville, Kentucky (7 January 2005) and presented a lecture in response to the award.
The Catholic Press Association, at its annual meeting in Nashville, TN, in May 2006, awarded my book, A Sense of the Sacred: Theological Foundations of Christian Architecture and Art (New York: Continuum 2005), first place in the liturgy division.
Other Activities
Editor of the liturgical journal Worship 1987 to present
Participated in Lilly Endowment Colloquium in Indianapolis (January 2003).
Wrote the draft for a pastoral letter on the Eucharist to be published by the Bishops of Minnesota in the fall.
Saint John’s School of Theology·Seminary
Collegeville, Minnesota 56321
Phone: 320-363-2102
Toll-Free: 800-361-8318
Fax: 320-363-3145September 16, 2008 at 6:02 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771946Praxiteles
ParticipantMore on Fr. Seasoltz.
Father Kevin Seasoltz OSB
Father Kevin Seasoltz marks the 50th anniversary of his ordination. He was born on December 29, 1930, in Johnstown, Pennsylvania. He professed first vows on November 13, 1960, having already been ordained a priest on May 26, 1956. He earned the licentiate in theology from The Catholic University of America in 1956. In 1962 he earned both a licentiate in canon law from the Lateran University, Rome, as well as a doctorate in canon law from The Catholic University of America.Father Kevin has been Professor of Theology since 1972 and served as Rector of Saint John’s Seminary from 1988 to 1992. Author of numerous articles, his most recent book is A Sense of the Sacred: Theological Foundations of Christian Architecture and Art (Continuum, 2005). He received the prestigious Berakah Award from the North American Academy of Liturgy at the 2005 meeting in Louisville, Kentucky. He has been editor of the liturgical journal, Worship, from 1987 to the present.
He is retired at the moment.
September 16, 2008 at 5:57 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771945Praxiteles
ParticipantRe the Conference being held in the Oriel House Hotel, Ballincollig, on Friday, 3 October 2008 in which the Cloyne HACK and the Cork County Council are about to “balance” values of conserving the integrity of Historic Structures and what are called changing liturgical requirements, attached find a copy of the brochure for the Conference and the application form which can be filled in and sent back to Cork County Council.
We would strongly encourage a heavy turn-out for this gathering.
September 15, 2008 at 11:30 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771944Praxiteles
ParticipantA strong rumour has it that the Cloyne HACK is about to have a love-in with Cork County Council early in October. A telephone call to Cork County Council caused a certain blush with no very straightforward answers coming from that side of the house. Attempts to contact the HACK “chairperson”, John Terry, aka Alwahabi in Kanturk, have proved fruitless as he never sems to be at home.
Just in case anyone has forgotten, we re-print some fo the familiar faces fromt he HACK – especially as the season of long wintery nights is fast approaching and we might not want to run into these characters in the dark:
The following have all been sitting on the HACK:
1. Canon Séan Cotter, aged c.70 parish priest of Charleville.
2. Rev. Robert Forde, aged 82, retired parish priest of Milford.
3. Mr. Dick Haslam, aged c. 80, retired County manager for Limerick (1970-1988).
4. Mr. John Lynch, an architect based in Donoughmore and responsible for the wreckage of the interior and the palladian sancturay of Killavullen church and for its refitting in a style of blank buddhist anonymity.
5. Fr. Daniel Murphy, aged c.38, a liturgical “expert” who recommended the whole scale destruction of the interior of St. Colman’s Cathedral in a discredited document entitled Liturgical Requirements.
6. Mr. Peter Murray, aged 51,director of the Crawford Art Gallery in Cork.7. Mons. Denis Reidy, aged 71, parish priest of Carrigtwohill, Co. Cork, and the real eminence grise behind the whole escapade to wreck Cobh Cathedral.
8. Canon John Terry, aged 72, parish priest of Kanturk, Co. Cork who is not known for his regular contributions to Appollo but acts as “chairperson” of the Cloyne HACK.
9. Mr. Alex White, aged c. 70, an architect better known for having built, among other things, some holiday cottages in West Cork.Below we have Top row (l to r) Peter Murray, Denny Reidy, Bob Forde,
Second Row (l to r) Danny “I’m a liturgist” Murphy,September 15, 2008 at 3:50 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771943Praxiteles
ParticipantThe Cathedral of the Immaculate Coception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Denver, Colorado
Here we have some nice photographs of the High ALtar of this important neo-Gothic Cathedral. As we can see, they show Solemn High Mass being celebtrated at the High Altar after an haitus of some 40 years. Indeed, here we have a very good example of a 21 st century liturgy being conducted quite successfully in a 19th century sanctuary and with evident and fervent active participation on the part of the lay faithful. If ever evidence were needed as to the direction the liitugical wind is blowing, then surely this must be it.
September 14, 2008 at 6:23 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771941Praxiteles
ParticipantUnfortuntely, Ballymurn is not yet in the buildings of Ireland survey for Wexford.
But St. Peter’s College, Wexford is:
http://www.buildingsofireland.ie/niah/search.jsp?type=images&county=WX®no=15504014
September 14, 2008 at 6:12 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771940Praxiteles
ParticipantAnd a small news item:
Archiseek features on p. 134 of Daire Keogh’s new biography of Blessed Edmund Ignatius Rice, just released by the Four Courts Press, in relation to our old friend Brother Michael Augustine O’Riordan – the remnants of whose oeuvre is still subject to summary week-end demolition with the blessing of Cork County Council.
September 14, 2008 at 6:07 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771939Praxiteles
Participant@ake wrote:
brilliant. thought so. Is it true there is a third version of this work somewhere? or was is only two?
Well, J. Turpin lists the following in his catalogue raisonné:
78: Pietà , St. Nicholas of Myra, Francis Street, Dublin, c. 1831. Pryamidal composition deriving from Michaelangelo’s Pietà in St. peter’s and from Canova’s at Possagno. Comissioned by Archdeacon Flanagan, himself a sculptor, for the new church built by John Leeson 1829-1834, it and two flanking angels were imported from Rome. This is a unique composition in Hogan’s oeuvre and caused a sensation in Rome and established his reputation in Ireland. Hogan received £150 for the commission.
85: Pietà , plaster, in the Crawford Art Gallery Cork, 1842. This is the cast from which the Ballymarn, Loreto and St. Saviour’s Pietà were cut. Hogan’s sister-in-law, Silvia Bevignani, is said to have served as a model for Our Lady. The dead Christ figure resembles the figure of Christ in St. Nicholas of Myra, Francis Street, Dublin. Still mercifully in place despite the iconoclasm.
86: Pietà , marble, Ballymyrn 1843.
87: Pietà , marble, Loreto Abbey, Rathfarnam, 1843. Cannot say if this survived the closure of the convent. Mentioned in A. Crookshank, Apollo, 1966, p.312, and in H. Potterton, Irish Art and Architecture, p. 218.
98: Pietà , marble St. Saviour’s, Domnick Street, 1857.Received £250 for the commission. Mecifully, it just about survived Austin Flannery’s devastation of St. Saviour’s interior.
Four variants of the Pietà are also extant:
1. St. John the Baptist, Blackrock, Co. Dublin
2. Sts Peter and Paul’s, Balbriggan, Co. Dublin.
3. St. Patrick’s Church, Dungarvan, Co Waterford -done by Scannell.
4. Loreto Convent, Balbriggan, believed to by Parnell.The Pietà motiv containing Our Lady, however, should not be confused with the Cristo Morto (Dead Christ) motiv which does not. Of the latter, there are four versions: Carmelites, Clarendon Street, Dublin (1829); a plaster in the Crawford Gallery Cork (1832); the South Parish in Cork (1832); Basilica of St. John in St. John’s, Newfoundland (1853).
September 14, 2008 at 12:14 am in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771937Praxiteles
ParticipantIs this a morturary chapel or a mosaleum?
Attached is the mosaleum built to house the remains of Eoin O Growney in the graveyard of Maynooth College c. 1899.
September 13, 2008 at 11:58 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771936Praxiteles
Participant@ake wrote:
I came across this little church recently in Ballymurn; it’s in south/central county Wexford,a townland somewhere near the Slaney.
[ATTACH]8260[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]8261[/ATTACH]Pity about the groovy lanterns. It can boast of this wonderful sculpture, set under the altar;
[ATTACH]8262[/ATTACH][ATTACH]8263[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]8264[/ATTACH][ATTACH]8267[/ATTACH]This is of course the pietá by Hogan, another copy of which is in St.Saviours, Dominic Street- it somehow survived the onslaught. Now I’ve heard hearsay that this is actually by the hand of Hogan himself and not a second hand copy by a different sculptor, and the quality would suggest so. Can anybody confirm that? A local family, the Mahers, were apparently responsible for such adornements.
Outside, they had their mortuary chapel built, and a what a beauty it is;[ATTACH]8265[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]8266[/ATTACH]Hearsay again tells me that this is by Pugin – Augustus himself. Is this true? It’s a lovely little miniature – and there is stained glass in the little windows.
Anyone got the info?
John Tupin’s Catalogue Raisonné of John Hogan, no 86, describes this work as a Pietà executed in 1843 for John Maher, MP (Wexford) and erected in the church at, Ballymarn (sic), Crossbeg, Co. Wexford, in memory of his daughter Margaret Maher 1808-1838. Hogan noted final payment of £110 received in November 1843 (UCD: MS no. 4179). There is no doubt that the relief is by Hogan.
September 13, 2008 at 11:33 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771935Praxiteles
ParticipantThis must be one of the most extraordinary pronouncements ever made to the Institut de France. The Pope’s reflections on Western Culture and Civilisation:
VOYAGE APOSTOLIQUE
EN FRANCE À L’OCCASION DU 150e ANNIVERSAIRE
DES APPARITIONS DE LOURDES
(12 – 15 SEPTEMBRE 2008)AU MONDE DE LA CULTURE
DISCOURS DU PAPE BENOÃŽT XVI
Collège des Bernardins, Paris
Vendredi 12 septembre 2008Monsieur le Cardinal,
Madame le Ministre de la Culture,
Monsieur le Maire,
Monsieur le Chancelier de l’Institut,
Chers amis,Merci, Monsieur le Cardinal, pour vos aimables paroles. Nous nous trouvons dans un lieu historique, lieu édifié par les fils de saint Bernard de Clairvaux et que votre grand prédécesseur, le regretté Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger, a voulu comme un centre de dialogue de la Sagesse chrétienne avec les courants culturels, intellectuels et artistiques de votre société. Je salue particulièrement Madame le Ministre de la Culture qui représente le gouvernement, ainsi que Monsieur Giscard d’Estaing et Monsieur Chirac. J’adresse également mes salutations aux ministres présents, aux représentants de l’UNESCO, à Monsieur le Maire de Paris et à toutes les autres autorités. Je ne veux pas oublier mes collègues de l’Institut de France qui savent ma considération et je désire remercier le Prince de Broglie de ses paroles cordiales. Nous nous reverrons demain matin. Je remercie les délégués de la communauté musulmane française d’avoir accepté de participer à cette rencontre ; je leur adresse mes vœux les meilleurs en ce temps du ramadan. Mes salutations chaleureuses vont maintenant tout naturellement vers l’ensemble du monde multiforme de la culture que vous représentez si dignement, chers invités.
J’aimerais vous parler ce soir des origines de la théologie occidentale et des racines de la culture européenne. J’ai mentionné en ouverture que le lieu où nous nous trouvons était emblématique. Il est lié à la culture monastique. De jeunes moines ont ici vécu pour s’initier profondément à leur vocation et pour bien vivre leur mission. Ce lieu, évoque-t-il pour nous encore quelque chose ou n’y rencontrons-nous qu’un monde désormais révolu ? Pour pouvoir répondre, nous devons réfléchir un instant sur la nature même du monachisme occidental. De quoi s’agissait-il alors ? En considérant les fruits historiques du monachisme, nous pouvons dire qu’au cours de la grande fracture culturelle, provoquée par la migration des peuples et par la formation des nouveaux ordres étatiques, les monastères furent des espaces où survécurent les trésors de l’antique culture et où, en puisant à ces derniers, se forma petit à petit une culture nouvelle. Comment cela s’est-il passé ? Quelle était la motivation des personnes qui se réunissaient en ces lieux ? Quels étaient leurs désirs ? Comment ont-elles vécu ?
Avant toute chose, il faut reconnaître avec beaucoup de réalisme que leur volonté n’était pas de créer une culture nouvelle ni de conserver une culture du passé. Leur motivation était beaucoup plus simple. Leur objectif était de chercher Dieu, quaerere Deum. Au milieu de la confusion de ces temps où rien ne semblait résister, les moines désiraient la chose la plus importante : s’appliquer à trouver ce qui a de la valeur et demeure toujours, trouver la Vie elle-même. Ils étaient à la recherche de Dieu. Des choses secondaires, ils voulaient passer aux réalités essentielles, à ce qui, seul, est vraiment important et sûr. On dit que leur être était tendu vers l’« eschatologie ». Mais cela ne doit pas être compris au sens chronologique du terme – comme s’ils vivaient les yeux tournés vers la fin du monde ou vers leur propre mort – mais au sens existentiel : derrière le provisoire, ils cherchaient le définitif. Quaerere Deum : comme ils étaient chrétiens, il ne s’agissait pas d’une aventure dans un désert sans chemin, d’une recherche dans l’obscurité absolue. Dieu lui-même a placé des bornes milliaires, mieux, il a aplani la voie, et leur tâche consistait à la trouver et à la suivre. Cette voie était sa Parole qui, dans les livres des Saintes Écritures, était offerte aux hommes. La recherche de Dieu requiert donc, intrinsèquement, une culture de la parole, ou, comme le disait Dom Jean Leclercq : eschatologie et grammaire sont dans le monachisme occidental indissociables l’une de l’autre (cf. L’amour des lettres et le désir de Dieu, p.14). Le désir de Dieu comprend l’amour des lettres, l’amour de la parole, son exploration dans toutes ses dimensions. Puisque dans la parole biblique Dieu est en chemin vers nous et nous vers Lui, ils devaient apprendre à pénétrer le secret de la langue, à la comprendre dans sa structure et dans ses usages. Ainsi, en raison même de la recherche de Dieu, les sciences profanes, qui nous indiquent les chemins vers la langue, devenaient importantes. La bibliothèque faisait, à ce titre, partie intégrante du monastère tout comme l’école. Ces deux lieux ouvraient concrètement un chemin vers la parole. Saint Benoît appelle le monastère une dominici servitii schola, une école du service du Seigneur. L’école et la bibliothèque assuraient la formation de la raison et l’eruditio, sur la base de laquelle l’homme apprend à percevoir au milieu des paroles, la Parole.
Pour avoir une vision d’ensemble de cette culture de la parole liée à la recherche de Dieu, nous devons faire un pas supplémentaire. La Parole qui ouvre le chemin de la recherche de Dieu et qui est elle-même ce chemin, est une Parole qui donne naissance à une communauté. Elle remue certes jusqu’au fond d’elle-même chaque personne en particulier (cf. Ac 2, 37). Grégoire le Grand décrit cela comme une douleur forte et inattendue qui secoue notre âme somnolente et nous réveille pour nous rendre attentifs à la réalité essentielle, à Dieu (cf. Leclercq, ibid., p. 35). Mais elle nous rend aussi attentifs les uns aux autres. La Parole ne conduit pas uniquement sur la voie d’une mystique individuelle, mais elle nous introduit dans la communauté de tous ceux qui cheminent dans la foi. C’est pourquoi il faut non seulement réfléchir sur la Parole, mais également la lire de façon juste. Tout comme à l’école rabbinique, chez les moines, la lecture accomplie par l’un d’eux est également un acte corporel. « Le plus souvent, quand legere et lectio sont employés sans spécification, ils désignent une activité qui, comme le chant et l’écriture, occupe tout le corps et tout l’esprit », dit à ce propos Dom Leclercq (ibid., p. 21).
Il y a encore un autre pas à faire. La Parole de Dieu elle-même nous introduit dans un dialogue avec Lui. Le Dieu qui parle dans la Bible nous enseigne comment nous pouvons Lui parler. En particulier, dans le Livre des Psaumes, il nous donne les mots avec lesquelles nous pouvons nous adresser à Lui. Dans ce dialogue, nous Lui présentons notre vie, avec ses hauts et ses bas, et nous la transformons en un mouvement vers Lui. Les Psaumes contiennent en plusieurs endroits des instructions sur la façon dont ils doivent être chantés et accompagnés par des instruments musicaux. Pour prier sur la base de la Parole de Dieu, la seule labialisation ne suffit pas, la musique est nécessaire. Deux chants de la liturgie chrétienne dérivent de textes bibliques qui les placent sur les lèvres des Anges : le Gloria qui est chanté une première fois par les Anges à la naissance de Jésus, et le Sanctus qui, selon Isaïe 6, est l’acclamation des Séraphins qui se tiennent dans la proximité immédiate de Dieu. Sous ce jour, la Liturgie chrétienne est une invitation à chanter avec les anges et à donner à la parole sa plus haute fonction. À ce sujet, écoutons encore une fois Jean Leclercq : « Les moines devaient trouver des accents qui traduisent le consentement de l’homme racheté aux mystères qu’il célèbre : les quelques chapiteaux de Cluny qui nous aient été conservés montrent les symboles christologiques des divers tons du chant » (cf. ibid., p. 229).
Pour saint Benoît, la règle déterminante de la prière et du chant des moines est la parole du Psaume : Coram angelis psallam Tibi, Domine – en présence des anges, je veux te chanter, Seigneur (cf. 138, 1). Se trouve ici exprimée la conscience de chanter, dans la prière communautaire, en présence de toute la cour céleste, et donc d’être soumis à la mesure suprême : prier et chanter pour s’unir à la musique des esprits sublimes qui étaient considérés comme les auteurs de l’harmonie du cosmos, de la musique des sphères. À partir de là , on peut comprendre la sévérité d’une méditation de saint Bernard de Clairvaux qui utilise une expression de la tradition platonicienne, transmise par saint Augustin, pour juger le mauvais chant des moines qui, à ses yeux, n’était en rien un incident secondaire. Il qualifie la cacophonie d’un chant mal exécuté comme une chute dans la regio dissimilitudinis, dans la ‘région de la dissimilitude’. Saint Augustin avait tiré cette expression de la philosophie platonicienne pour caractériser l’état de son âme avant sa conversion (cf. Confessions, VII, 10.16) : l’homme qui est créé à l’image de Dieu tombe, en conséquence de son abandon de Dieu, dans la ‘région de la dissimilitude’, dans un éloignement de Dieu où il ne Le reflète plus et où il devient ainsi non seulement dissemblable à Dieu, mais aussi à sa véritable nature d’homme. Saint Bernard se montre ici évidemment sévère en recourant à cette expression, qui indique la chute de l’homme loin de lui-même, pour qualifier les chants mal exécutés par les moines, mais il montre à quel point il prend la chose au sérieux. Il indique ici que la culture du chant est une culture de l’être et que les moines, par leurs prières et leurs chants, doivent correspondre à la grandeur de la Parole qui leur est confiée, à son impératif de réelle beauté. De cette exigence capitale de parler avec Dieu et de Le chanter avec les mots qu’Il a Lui-même donnés, est née la grande musique occidentale. Ce n’était pas là l’œuvre d’une « créativité » personnelle où l’individu, prenant comme critère essentiel la représentation de son propre moi, s’érige un monument à lui-même. Il s’agissait plutôt de reconnaître attentivement avec les « oreilles du cœur » les lois constitutives de l’harmonie musicale de la création, les formes essentielles de la musique émise par le Créateur dans le monde et en l’homme, et d’inventer une musique digne de Dieu qui soit, en même temps, authentiquement digne de l’homme et qui proclame hautement cette dignité.
Enfin, pour s’efforcer de saisir cette culture monastique occidentale de la parole, qui s’est développée à partir de la quête intérieure de Dieu, il faut au moins faire une brève allusion à la particularité du Livre ou des Livres par lesquels cette Parole est parvenue jusqu’aux moines. Vue sous un aspect purement historique ou littéraire, la Bible n’est pas simplement un livre, mais un recueil de textes littéraires dont la rédaction s’étend sur plus d’un millénaire et dont les différents livres ne sont pas facilement repérables comme constituant un corpus unifié. Au contraire, des tensions visibles existent entre eux. C’est déjà le cas dans la Bible d’Israël, que nous, chrétiens, appelons l’Ancien Testament. Ça l’est plus encore quand nous, chrétiens, lions le Nouveau Testament et ses écrits à la Bible d’Israël en l’interprétant comme chemin vers le Christ. Avec raison, dans le Nouveau Testament, la Bible n’est pas de façon habituelle appelée « l’Écriture » mais « les Écritures » qui, cependant, seront ensuite considérées dans leur ensemble comme l’unique Parole de Dieu qui nous est adressée. Ce pluriel souligne déjà clairement que la Parole de Dieu nous parvient seulement à travers la parole humaine, à travers des paroles humaines, c’est-à -dire que Dieu nous parle seulement dans l’humanité des hommes, à travers leurs paroles et leur histoire. Cela signifie, ensuite, que l’aspect divin de la Parole et des paroles n’est pas immédiatement perceptible. Pour le dire de façon moderne : l’unité des livres bibliques et le caractère divin de leurs paroles ne sont pas saisissables d’un point de vue purement historique. L’élément historique se présente dans le multiple et l’humain. Ce qui explique la formulation d’un distique médiéval qui, à première vue, apparaît déconcertant : Littera gesta docet – quid credas allegoria…(cf. Augustin de Dacie, Rotulus pugillaris, I). La lettre enseigne les faits ; l’allégorie ce qu’il faut croire, c’est-à -dire l’interprétation christologique et pneumatique.
Nous pouvons exprimer tout cela d’une manière plus simple : l’Écriture a besoin de l’interprétation, et elle a besoin de la communauté où elle s’est formée et où elle est vécue. En elle seulement, elle a son unité et, en elle, se révèle le sens qui unifie le tout. Dit sous une autre forme : il existe des dimensions du sens de la Parole et des paroles qui se découvrent uniquement dans la communion vécue de cette Parole qui crée l’histoire. À travers la perception croissante de la pluralité de ses sens, la Parole n’est pas dévalorisée, mais elle apparaît, au contraire, dans toute sa grandeur et sa dignité. C’est pourquoi le « Catéchisme de l’Église catholique » peut affirmer avec raison que le christianisme n’est pas au sens classique seulement une religion du livre (cf. n. 108). Le christianisme perçoit dans les paroles la Parole, le Logos lui-même, qui déploie son mystère à travers cette multiplicité et la réalité d’une histoire humaine. Cette structure particulière de la Bible est un défi toujours nouveau posé à chaque génération. Selon sa nature, elle exclut tout ce qu’on appelle aujourd’hui « fondamentalisme ». La Parole de Dieu, en effet, n’est jamais simplement présente dans la seule littéralité du texte. Pour l’atteindre, il faut un dépassement et un processus de compréhension qui se laisse guider par le mouvement intérieur de l’ensemble des textes et, à partir de là , doit devenir également un processus vital. Ce n’est que dans l’unité dynamique de leur ensemble que les nombreux livres ne forment qu’un Livre. La Parole de Dieu et Son action dans le monde se révèlent seulement dans la parole et dans l’histoire humaines.
Le caractère crucial de ce thème est éclairé par les écrits de saint Paul. Il a exprimé de manière radicale ce que signifie le dépassement de la lettre et sa compréhension holistique, dans la phrase : « La lettre tue, mais l’Esprit donne la vie » (2 Co 3, 6). Et encore : « Là où est l’Esprit…, là est la liberté » (2 Co 3, 17). Toutefois, la grandeur et l’ampleur de cette perception de la Parole biblique ne peut se comprendre que si l’on écoute saint Paul jusqu’au bout, en apprenant que cet Esprit libérateur a un nom et que, de ce fait, la liberté a une mesure intérieure : « Le Seigneur, c’est l’Esprit, et là où l’Esprit du Seigneur est présent, là est la liberté » (2 Co 3, 17). L’Esprit qui rend libre ne se laisse pas réduire à l’idée ou à la vision personnelle de celui qui interprète. L’Esprit est Christ, et le Christ est le Seigneur qui nous montre le chemin. Avec cette parole sur l’Esprit et sur la liberté, un vaste horizon s’ouvre, mais en même temps, une limite claire est mise à l’arbitraire et à la subjectivité, limite qui oblige fortement l’individu tout comme la communauté et noue un lien supérieur à celui de la lettre du texte : le lien de l’intelligence et de l’amour. Cette tension entre le lien et la liberté, qui va bien au-delà du problème littéraire de l’interprétation de l’Écriture, a déterminé aussi la pensée et l’œuvre du monachisme et a profondément modelé la culture occidentale. Cette tension se présente à nouveau à notre génération comme un défi face aux deux pôles que sont, d’un côté, l’arbitraire subjectif, et de l’autre, le fanatisme fondamentaliste. Si la culture européenne d’aujourd’hui comprenait désormais la liberté comme l’absence totale de liens, cela serait fatal et favoriserait inévitablement le fanatisme et l’arbitraire. L’absence de liens et l’arbitraire ne sont pas la liberté, mais sa destruction.
En considérant « l’école du service du Seigneur » – comme Benoît appelait le monachisme -, nous avons jusque là porté notre attention prioritairement sur son orientation vers la parole, vers l’« ora ». Et, de fait, c’est à partir de là que se détermine l’ensemble de la vie monastique. Mais notre réflexion resterait incomplète, si nous ne fixions pas aussi notre regard, au moins brièvement, sur la deuxième composante du monachisme, désignée par le terme « labora ». Dans le monde grec, le travail physique était considéré comme l’œuvre des esclaves. Le sage, l’homme vraiment libre, se consacrait uniquement aux choses de l’esprit ; il abandonnait le travail physique, considéré comme une réalité inférieure, à ces hommes qui n’étaient pas supposés atteindre cette existence supérieure, celle de l’esprit. La tradition juive était très différente : tous les grands rabbins exerçaient parallèlement un métier artisanal. Paul, comme rabbi puis comme héraut de l’Évangile aux Gentils, était un fabricant de tentes et il gagnait sa vie par le travail de ses mains. Il n’était pas une exception, mais il se situait dans la tradition commune du rabbinisme. Le monachisme chrétien a accueilli cette tradition : le travail manuel en est un élément constitutif. Dans sa Regula, saint Benoît ne parle pas au sens strict de l’école, même si l’enseignement et l’apprentissage – comme nous l’avons vu – étaient acquis dans les faits ; en revanche, il parle explicitement, dans un chapitre de sa Règle, du travail (cf. chap. 48). Augustin avait fait de même en consacrant au travail des moines un livre particulier. Les chrétiens, s’inscrivant dans la tradition pratiquée depuis longtemps par le judaïsme, devaient, en outre, se sentir interpelés par la parole de Jésus dans l’Évangile de Jean, où il défendait son action le jour du shabbat : « Mon Père (…) est toujours à l’œuvre, et moi aussi je suis à l’œuvre » (5, 17). Le monde gréco-romain ne connaissait aucun Dieu Créateur. La divinité suprême selon leur vision ne pouvait pas, pour ainsi dire, se salir les mains par la création de la matière. « L’ordonnancement » du monde était le fait du démiurge, une divinité subordonnée. Le Dieu de la Bible est bien différent : Lui, l’Un, le Dieu vivant et vrai, est également le Créateur. Dieu travaille, il continue d’œuvrer dans et sur l’histoire des hommes. Et dans le Christ, il entre comme Personne dans l’enfantement laborieux de l’histoire. « Mon Père est toujours à l’œuvre et moi aussi je suis à l’œuvre ». Dieu Lui-même est le Créateur du monde, et la création n’est pas encore achevée. Dieu travaille, ergázetai ! C’est ainsi que le travail des hommes devait apparaître comme une expression particulière de leur ressemblance avec Dieu qui rend l’homme participant à l’œuvre créatrice de Dieu dans le monde. Sans cette culture du travail qui, avec la culture de la parole, constitue le monachisme, le développement de l’Europe, son ethos et sa conception du monde sont impensables. L’originalité de cet ethos devrait cependant faire comprendre que le travail et la détermination de l’histoire par l’homme sont une collaboration avec le Créateur, qui ont en Lui leur mesure. Là où cette mesure vient à manquer et là où l’homme s’élève lui-même au rang de créateur déiforme, la transformation du monde peut facilement aboutir à sa destruction.
Nous sommes partis de l’observation que, dans l’effondrement de l’ordre ancien et des antiques certitudes, l’attitude de fond des moines était le quaerere Deum – se mettre à la recherche de Dieu. C’est là , pourrions-nous dire, l’attitude vraiment philosophique : regarder au-delà des réalités pénultièmes et se mettre à la recherche des réalités ultimes qui sont vraies. Celui qui devenait moine, s’engageait sur un chemin élevé et long, il était néanmoins déjà en possession de la direction : la Parole de la Bible dans laquelle il écoutait Dieu parler. Dès lors, il devait s’efforcer de Le comprendre pour pouvoir aller à Lui. Ainsi, le cheminement des moines, tout en restant impossible à évaluer dans sa progression, s’effectuait au cÅ“ur de la Parole reçue. La quête des moines comprend déjà en soi, dans une certaine mesure, sa résolution. Pour que cette recherche soit possible, il est nécessaire qu’il existe dans un premier temps un mouvement intérieur qui suscite non seulement la volonté de chercher, mais qui rende aussi crédible le fait que dans cette Parole se trouve un chemin de vie, un chemin de vie sur lequel Dieu va à la rencontre de l’homme pour lui permettre de venir à Sa rencontre. En d’autres termes, l’annonce de la Parole est nécessaire. Elle s’adresse à l’homme et forge en lui une conviction qui peut devenir vie. Afin que s’ouvre un chemin au cÅ“ur de la parole biblique en tant que Parole de Dieu, cette même Parole doit d’abord être annoncée ouvertement. L’expression classique de la nécessité pour la foi chrétienne de se rendre communicable aux autres se résume dans une phrase de la Première Lettre de Pierre, que la théologie médiévale regardait comme le fondement biblique du travail des théologiens : « Vous devez toujours être prêts à vous expliquer devant tous ceux qui vous demandent de rendre compte (logos) de l’espérance qui est en vous » (3, 15). (Le Logos, la raison de l’espérance doit devenir apo-logie, doit devenir réponse). De fait, les chrétiens de l’Église naissante ne considéraient pas leur annonce missionnaire comme une propagande qui devait servir à augmenter l’importance de leur groupe, mais comme une nécessité intrinsèque qui dérivait de la nature de leur foi. Le Dieu en qui ils croyaient était le Dieu de tous, le Dieu Un et Vrai qui s’était fait connaître au cours de l’histoire d’Israël et, finalement, à travers son Fils, apportant ainsi la réponse qui concernait tous les hommes et, qu’au plus profond d’eux-mêmes, tous attendent. L’universalité de Dieu et l’universalité de la raison ouverte à Lui constituaient pour eux la motivation et, à la fois, le devoir de l’annonce. Pour eux, la foi ne dépendait pas des habitudes culturelles, qui sont diverses selon les peuples, mais relevait du domaine de la vérité qui concerne, de manière égale, tous les hommes.
Le schéma fondamental de l’annonce chrétienne ad extra – aux hommes qui, par leurs questionnements, sont en recherche – se dessine dans le discours de saint Paul à l’Aréopage. N’oublions pas qu’à cette époque, l’Aréopage n’était pas une sorte d’académie où les esprits les plus savants se rencontraient pour discuter sur les sujets les plus élevés, mais un tribunal qui était compétent en matière de religion et qui devait s’opposer à l’intrusion de religions étrangères. C’est précisément ce dont on accuse Paul : « On dirait un prêcheur de divinités étrangères » (Ac 17, 18). Ce à quoi Paul réplique : « J’ai trouvé chez vous un autel portant cette inscription : “Au dieu inconnu”. Or, ce que vous vénérez sans le connaître, je viens vous l’annoncer » (cf. 17, 23). Paul n’annonce pas des dieux inconnus. Il annonce Celui que les hommes ignorent et pourtant connaissent : l’Inconnu-Connu. C’est Celui qu’ils cherchent, et dont, au fond, ils ont connaissance et qui est cependant l’Inconnu et l’Inconnaissable. Au plus profond, la pensée et le sentiment humains savent de quelque manière que Dieu doit exister et qu’à l’origine de toutes choses, il doit y avoir non pas l’irrationalité, mais la Raison créatrice, non pas le hasard aveugle, mais la liberté. Toutefois, bien que tous les hommes le sachent d’une certaine façon – comme Paul le souligne dans la Lettre aux Romains (1, 21) – cette connaissance demeure ambigüe : un Dieu seulement pensé et élaboré par l’esprit humain n’est pas le vrai Dieu. Si Lui ne se montre pas, quoi que nous fassions, nous ne parvenons pas pleinement jusqu’à Lui. La nouveauté de l’annonce chrétienne c’est la possibilité de dire maintenant à tous les peuples : Il s’est montré, Lui personnellement. Et à présent, le chemin qui mène à Lui est ouvert. La nouveauté de l’annonce chrétienne ne réside pas dans une pensée, mais dans un fait : Dieu s’est révélé. Ce n’est pas un fait nu mais un fait qui, lui-même, est Logos – présence de la Raison éternelle dans notre chair. Verbum caro factum est (Jn 1, 14) : il en est vraiment ainsi en réalité, à présent, le Logos est là , le Logos est présent au milieu de nous. C’est un fait rationnel. Cependant, l’humilité de la raison sera toujours nécessaire pour pouvoir l’accueillir. Il faut l’humilité de l’homme pour répondre à l’humilité de Dieu.
Sous de nombreux aspects, la situation actuelle est différente de celle que Paul a rencontrée à Athènes, mais, tout en étant différente, elle est aussi, en de nombreux points, très analogue. Nos villes ne sont plus remplies d’autels et d’images représentant de multiples divinités. Pour beaucoup, Dieu est vraiment devenu le grand Inconnu. Malgré tout, comme jadis où derrière les nombreuses représentations des dieux était cachée et présente la question du Dieu inconnu, de même, aujourd’hui, l’actuelle absence de Dieu est aussi tacitement hantée par la question qui Le concerne. Quaerere Deum – chercher Dieu et se laisser trouver par Lui : cela n’est pas moins nécessaire aujourd’hui que par le passé. Une culture purement positiviste, qui renverrait dans le domaine subjectif, comme non scientifique, la question concernant Dieu, serait la capitulation de la raison, le renoncement à ses possibilités les plus élevées et donc un échec de l’humanisme, dont les conséquences ne pourraient être que graves. Ce qui a fondé la culture de l’Europe, la recherche de Dieu et la disponibilité à L’écouter, demeure aujourd’hui encore le fondement de toute culture véritable.
Merci beaucoup.
And here is an English translation:
September 13, 2008 at 9:18 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771933Praxiteles
ParticipantSt. Louis Cathedral, St Louis, Missouri
September 13, 2008 at 9:09 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771932Praxiteles
Participantreturning to he neo-Byzantine revival
The Cathedral of St. Louis, Missouri
http://cathedralstl.org/site/index.php?option=com_xegalleryxl&Itemid=47
September 12, 2008 at 5:42 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771931Praxiteles
ParticipantWell, I am delighted to see someone is reading Archieseek. Just scroll down here in the attached blogg and you will notice a number of photographs familiar to some of us:
http://thenewliturgicalmovement.blogspot.com/
Here is the article without the pictures:
Archi-Liturgical Culture Wars by Aidan Nichols OP
by LLThe following article appeared in the September 2008 issue of ‘New Blackfriars’, a journal edited by the English Dominicans. The text of the article is reproduced in full here for the NLM with kind permission from the author, Fr Aidan Nichols OP and the editor of the New Blackfriars, Fr Fergus Kerr OP. I have omitted the references which appeared in the original article and supplemented the text with photographs:
Introduction
Church architecture has joined the disputed issues of contemporary Western Catholicism. Indeed, one commentator, the American Michael Rose, does not scruple to speak about ‘architectural culture wars’ in progress today. That the same author can vary that phrase by introducing, in place of ‘architectural’, the neologism ‘archi-liturgical’ should alert us to a fairly obvious fact. The debate about architecture is as organically connected with dispute about the Liturgy as a Modernist church in the twentieth century International style is disconnected from the traditional modalities of Catholic worship.
The ‘Jubilee Church’, erected by the Roman diocese in the year 2000 to a plan suggested by the New York architect Richard Meier, might be not the worst place to open an enquiry. That is owing to the high profile nature of this scheme, which was intended as a pilot for the third millennium of the Church’s story. An external view of the building must mention first its combination of rectangular and curved surfaces with no obvious symbolic resonance; the appropriate adjectives would be ‘analytical’ and ‘cubist’. Inside, the professor of fine arts at the American University in Rome found a stark interior, raw in its geometry, its furniture banal. The altar is an uncovered block of travertine, the ambo a box. No one had provided for the sanctuary either crucifix or image of the Mother of God, so a borrowed version of the one, from a neighbouring parish, and a repository version of the other took their place, the crucifix disconcertingly de-centred in regard to the altar. Though this observer praised the tabernacle for its colour and surface, she implies what a photograph soon confirms: it is a box—another one, if a golden one—with a circle inscribed on the side that opens. She admits that the aspiration of the building to austerity of form impresses, but doubts whether it adds up to a church, exactly—as distinct from a public building of some other kind. Her ascription of ‘iconoclastic tendencies’ to its architect, a secular Jew, would not necessarily be denied by their object. Meier argued that, had the diocese of Rome wanted a traditional church, they would not have invited him in particular to enter the competition to design it. That is a perfectly reasonable point. A defining feature of the Modern movement in architecture is to sever, of set purpose, all nostalgic ties with the past of a tradition.As the year 2000 came and went, so it happens, an English Jesuit was working on a comprehensive study of probably the greatest of the twentieth century’s liturgical architects, John Ninian Comper, whose vision and technique could hardly stand in sharper contrast to Meier’s. Father Anthony Symondson’s biography of Comper is still awaited, but his study of Comper’s approach to building a church has already appeared. It is not only a fastidiously researched, excellently written and superbly illustrated study (from black and white photographs, many of them early, of these buildings). It is also a declaration of war. For Symondson, architectural Modernism has resulted in a rash of mediocre churches and the ruination of many old ones which depress their congregations, starve them of transcendence in worship, and deprive them of a sense of place. The importance of Comper is that
more than any other English church architect of the twentieth century, [he] endeavoured with passionate conviction to penetrate to the very core of Western civilization by studying the church art and architecture of Europe to find there spiritual values applicable to his own time.The ‘ideological impasse in which modern church architecture sleeps’, could be overcome with no compromise of liturgical principle if Comper’s understanding not only of the ‘indispensability of beauty’ but, more specifically, of the ‘legacy of Christian tradition’ were renewed. If I say that the overall effect of text and photographs in this book comes as a revelation, I shall also be declaring an interest. What follows in this essay is an attempt to second Father Symondson’s plea, notably by bringing into consort some voices harmonious with his, mainly—but not exclusively—from the United States.
The ground of my partisanship lies in the history of the subject— namely, sacred space as envisaged in Church tradition. Any visit to that history, with a view to drawing out pertinent principles, will prove hard to reconcile with those radically innovatory twentieth century buildings that reject both structure and content as found in pre-twentieth century use.
Some principles
We can note first the importance of the church building for traditional Christendom. It is hardly to be overestimated. Vera Shevzov writes of Russian Christian attitudes:
Given the meanings ascribed to the temple [i.e. church building], it is not surprising that Orthodox writers and preachers considered it an essential aspect of the Christian life. Without the temple, they main¬tained, there could be no salvation, since only it could facilitate the formation of the inner spiritual temple. Insofar as believers strove toward union and communion with God, by their nature they needed the structure and stimulus of matter. The church building provided the primary source of nourishment and healing for the human soul in its journey toward God.That tells us of the vital place of the church building, albeit in an idiom somewhat uncertainly positioned between religious rhetoric and social anthropology. Shevzov’s statement needs supplementing by a more theological definition of what a church is. For any reality, after all, ontology underlies function. Preferably, such a definition should draw on both Western and Eastern emphases since although our interest, like the problem, is Occidental, the Church here as elsewhere cannot be healthful unless she also breathes with her Oriental ‘lung’.Writing as an Anglo-Catholic with Rome-ward inclinations, Comper comes obligingly to our aid. His prose has late Edwardian lushness but the saturated quality of this particular passage turns on its richness of allusion to Bible and Tradition.
[A church] is a building which enshrines the altar of Him who dwelleth not in temples made with hands and who yet has made there His Covenanted Presence on earth. It is the centre of Worship in every community of men who recognize Christ as the Pantokrator, the Almighty, the Ruler and Creator of all things: at its altar is pleaded the daily Sacrifice in complete union with the Church Triumphant in Heaven, of which He is the one and only Head, the High Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedech.Comper goes on to emphasise the catholic—that is, the ecclesial and cosmic—character of the church building, to the point of arguing that ‘a Protestant church’ (as distinct from meeting-house for preaching) is a contradiction in terms. Only a high doctrine of the ecclesial mystery can explain the existence of the historic church building of traditional Christendom and the attention paid it by the community.
A church built with hands …is the outward expression here on earth of that spiritual Church built of living stones, the Bride of Christ, Urbs beata Jerusalem, which stretches back to the foundation of the world and onwards to all eternity. With her Lord she lays claim to the whole of His Creation …And so the temple here on earth, in different lands and in different shapes, in the East and in the West, has developed or added to itself fresh forms of beauty and, though it has suffered from iconoclasts and destroyers both within and without, …it has never broken with the past, it has never renounced its claims to continuity.
In his keynote essay ‘The Atmosphere of a Church’ from which I have been quoting, Comper infers from such a conception that ‘it must …reduce to folly the terms ‘self-expression’ and ‘the expression of the age’, and most notably so when they are ‘used to cover such incapacity and ugliness as every age has in turn rejected’. And he inquires, pointedly, ‘Is there such a supremacy of goodness, beauty and truth in the present age as to mark it as distinct from the past, and demand that we invent a new expression of it?’ A saint or mystic may pass directly to God without any need for the outward beauties of art, or nature for that matter. Most people cannot. Comper stresses the eschatological setting of worship.The note of a church should be, not that of novelty, but of eternity. Like the Liturgy celebrated within it, the measure of its greatness will be the measure in which it succeeds in eliminating time and producing the atmosphere of heavenly worship. This is the characteristic of the earliest art of the Church, in liturgy, in architecture and in plastic decoration, and it is the tradition of all subsequent ages.This need exclude no genuinely ‘beautiful style’. But the basic layout must be ‘in accord with the requirements of the liturgy and the pastoral needs of those who worship within it’, while ‘the imagery [found within it] must express the balanced measure of the faith’. For these purposes it is necessary to ‘look to tradition’. It is no more satisfactory to suppose, so Comper argues, that one can properly interpret these needs without reference to tradition than were we to neglect tradition in interpreting the New Testament or the Creeds of the Church. Anti-traditionalists are, generally speaking, consistent since ‘modernism in art is the natural expression of modernism in doctrine, and it is quite true they are both the expression of the age, but of one side of it only’. And Comper goes on with frightening prescience: ‘Rome has condemned modernist doctrine, but has not yet condemned its expression in art. The attraction of the modernistic is still too strong’.
Contemporary difficulties
It would be hard to imagine a manifesto in more brutal contradiction to Comper’s principles than the United States Bishops’ Conference Committee on the Liturgy document Environment and Art in Catholic Worship, produced exactly thirty years after he wrote. The 1978 text declared the assembly of believers the most important ‘symbol with which the liturgy deals’. The document thus relegates all other elements of Catholic worship, not only the ordained ministry but the rites themselves, and so, inevitably, their artistic and architectural elaboration, to a secondary status. In due course, this text stimulated a robust counter-reaction in the American church.
Thus, for instance, the liturgical theologian Francis Mannion found behind its extraordinary choice of controlling option an attitude he called theological ‘experiential-expressivism’. That is his term for a situation where liturgical forms serve chiefly to express the inspirations of a group. The role of art in exploring, after the manner (we might add) of Comper, the ‘Christologically founded rites’ of the Church’s ‘sacramental order’ can only have the most precarious future, so Mannion opined, if such a view of the Church’s worship should come to prevail.
The most frequent visual embodiment of ‘experiential expressivism’, at least in North America, is probably the domestication of church interiors. The only ‘model’ appeal to group self-expression can readily find in the paradigm contemporary Western culture turns out to be the living room or, more institutionally, the doctor’s waiting room or, yet again, the hotel foyer. Comfortable or plush, these have it in common that they are always tame. Such accommodation to secular space is hardly unknown in Britain either. In the words of one English commentator (like Comper, an Anglo-Catholic, at least at the time of writing): ‘The sanctuary became less a place to worship God than the apotheosis of 1960s man’s homage to G-Plan furnishing and his own immanence’. Mannion’s critique was equally severe, if more soberly expressed.
The kind of hospitality appropriate to worship is not psychological intimacy in the ordinary cultural sense: it is theological intimacy, that is, the bonding of persons of all degrees of relationship by their par¬ticipation in the trinitarian life of God through sacramental initiation. By the same token, transcendence does not mean divine remoteness from the communal, but the embodiment of divine glory in communal events.An alternative organisation of space to the domestic could bear a closer resemblance to the garage. But, as the closing sentence of this citation indicates, the Bauhaus style of stripped down simplicity is scarcely more helpful than Biedermeier cosiness. In total if unwitting conformity with Comper’s essay, Mannion comments: ‘there exists considerable difficulty in reconciling the principles of aesthetic modernism and those of the sacramental tradition of Catholicism’.
That is the artifice of under-statement. How can they possibly be reconciled if architectural Modernism seeks, as it does, to expunge symbolism and memory whereas the sacramental sensibility of Catholicism is founded on precisely these things? Helpfully, Mannion points for guidance to the post-Conciliar rite for the Dedication of a Church and Altar and the relevant sections of the 1992 Catechism of the Catholic Church. Given the Second Vatican Council’s movement of ressourcement in matters of early Christian Liturgy, it was certainly extraordinary that the bishops and periti expressed so little interest in the recovery of the forms of ancient Christian architecture and art, forms which are the matrix of all the subsequently developed styles the Church has known. In the post-Conciliar period, some assistance was granted, however, to the recovery of sanity by these ceremonial and catechetical documents.
In the year 2000 the National Conference of Catholic Bishops in the United States approved a replacement set of guidelines for Environment and Art in Catholic Worship. Built of Living Stones, for such was its title, represents a considerable advance on its predecessor. It does so by conceiving the church building as chiefly in function of the Church’s rites. But there is a price to be paid in terms of devotional purposes, as distinct from liturgical goals strictly so defined. For the document did not do justice to a swingeing—but not wholly unjustified—judgment passed by the Swiss dogmatician Hans Urs von Balthasar on how we live now.
Only in an age when man gives up his personal prayer and contents himself with being simply a communal animal in the church can one design churches which are determined purely functionally by the services of the congregation.
The need for re-iconisation
Steven Schloeder is an American architect who takes as his points of reference the dedication rites and the Catechism, as well as texts from the Second Vatican Council and Pope John Paul II. What he terms Modernist ‘whitewashed barns’—examples such as the Fronleichnamkirche at Aachen, date from so early as the late 1920s—proved, he reports, influential models for re-ordered, as well as newly built, churches in the post-Conciliar epoch. The emphasis of the Modernist movement on ‘universal space’ tallied only too well with the anti-hierarchical communitarianism which was a temptation of the mid-twentieth century liturgical movement, just as aesthetic reductivism dovetailed into notions of liturgical simplicity. The ruling maxim became ‘assembly is all’. Emphasis on the meal-aspect of the Eucharist at the expense of its more primordial sacrificial dimension—the ‘meal’ is enjoyment of the fruits of the sacrifice— followed naturally. In their worst, i.e. their most consistent, examples, writes Schloeder:
[The Modernists’] buildings have been incapable of addressing the deeper, mystical knowledge of the faith, much less the human soul’s yearning for the mystery of transcendent beauty. Rather they have fallen into a reductionist mentality, stripping the churches of those elements, symbols, and images that speak to the human heart. Their buildings speak only of the immanent—even as their liturgies studiously avoid the transcendent to dwell on the ‘gathered assembly’—and thus have departed from the theological and anthropological underpinnings of the traditional understandin of Catholic church architecture.
By the early 1960s, some commentators were resigned to soulless churches as all that a supposedly inescapable architectural modernity could provide. ‘Apart from the community which gathers in these churches’, wrote R. Kevin Seasoltz with seeming equanimity, ‘the buildings have little meaning’.
For Schloeder, in striking contrast, the church building is an icon of the spiritual reality of the Church. Here he has, I believe, rightly identified the nodal issue. Schloeder outlines briefly how in East and West this ‘iconic’ character of the church-building worked out. Given the authoritative role of Church tradition in these matters, this is in fact an indispensable exercise.
For the East: drawing on such Fathers as Theodore of Mopsuestia, Maximus Confessor and Germanus of Constantinople as well as later divines like Nicholas of Andida, Nicholas Cabasilas and Symeon of Thessalonica, Schloeder produces an overall identikit Byzantine interpretation of the church building. At the church entrance, the narthex signifies the unredeemed world: here in early times the catechumens and penitents foregathered. By contrast, the naos or central space represents the redeemed world crowned by a dome whose primary task is to recall the heavens, where Christ the Pantokrator, figured there, sits in his risen humanity at the Father’s right, holding all things together in heaven and on earth. But, writes Schloeder:
the dome also gives a sense of immanence, and suggests that the naos is also the Womb of the Virgin, as well as the Holy Cave of Bethlehem and the Holy Cave of the Sepulchre. Thus the building evokes many images of places where the Spirit vivifies the Church, which is born into the world, and redeemed into the Glory of the Lord.
Continuing his analysis, Schloeder describes the developed icon screen of late medieval and modern Byzantine-Slav churches as veiling the sanctuary which is ‘the fulfilment of the Mercy Seat of the Mosaic tabernacle, …the perfection of [the] Holy of Holies, and …even the sacramental representation of the very Throne of God’. The multiple ‘layeredness’ or rich complexity of such symbolic interpretation of the church building, even at a comparatively early stage of Greek Christian reflection, is shown in Schloeder’s summary of three chapters from the Mystagogia of the seventh century doctor St Maximus:
The entire church is an image of the Universe, of the visible world, and of man; within it, the chancel represents man’s soul, the altar his spirit, the naos his body. The bishop’s Entrance into the church symbolizes Christ’s coming into the flesh, his Entrance into the bema [the sanctuary] Christ’s Ascension to heaven.
Turning now to the West, such high mediaeval treatises as the canon regular Hugh of St Victor’s Speculum de mysteriis Ecclesiae, the black monk Abbot Suger’s Libellus de consecratione Ecclesiae sancti Dionysii, and bishop William Durandus’s Rationale divinorum officiorum furnish an analogical treatment to that found further east. The themes of the Body of Christ and the Heavenly City bespeak divine order in its integrity and fullness, which buildings shaped for the celebration of the Liturgy should reflect.
As Schloeder points out, the most common schema in the Western Middle Ages is the cruciform church as representation of the Lord’s own body on the Cross. In, for example, a mediaeval English cathedral with a black monk chapter:
Christ’s Head is at the apse which is the seat of governance represented by the bishop’s cathedra; the choir is his throat from which the chants of the monks issue forth the praise of God; the transepts are his extended arms; his torso and legs form the nave since the gathered faithful are his body; the narthex represents his feet, where the faithful enter the church; and at the crossing is the altar, which is the heart of the church.
That is not without a biblical basis. St Paul had called Christ the cornerstone (Ephesians 2: 20), and Christians members of his body (Romans 12: 5; I Corinthians 12: 12), so it was natural for Christians to see the church building as an expression of the body of the Lord. There was here a kind of Gospel transfiguration of the ancient conviction, classically expressed in Vitruvius’s De architectura, that the wonderful proportions of the human body—confirming in the microcosm the macrocosmic harmony of nature—are architecture’s proper measure. On such an understanding, nothing is more natural than to cover church walls with frescoes of the saints, or punctuate them with statues, since these remind the faithful how they are indeed part of Christ’s ‘mystical’ body. A church is, in Schloeder’s phrase, ‘built theology’.
Post-medieval churches continued to be designed to markedly symbolic plans. So Schloeder reminds us how Francesco Borromini, when remodelling the nave of St John Lateran, set up the twelve apostles in monumental statuary with the consecration crosses by their side, to bespeak the city of the Apocalypse which ‘stood on twelve foundation stones, each one of which bore the name of the one of the twelve apostles of the Lamb’ (Apocalypse 21: 4). Although St Charles Borromeo’s influential treatise Instructiones Fabricae et Supellectilis Ecclesiasticae which sought to summarise Catholic traditions of Church design shows a markedly practical bent, Borromeo began his work with the words:
This only has been our principle: that we have shown that the norm and form of building, ornamentation and ecclesiastical furnishing are precise and in agreement with the thinking of the Fathers … That could not but ratify patristic (and post-patristic) theological symbolism—not least for Borromini. The Instructiones were re-printed, largely unchanged, on at least nineteen occasions between 1577 and 1952.36 They remain pertinent to post-Conciliar Catholicism, since, in a passage from the Constitution on the Liturgy of the Second Vatican Council highlighted by Schloeder,
in any aspect of liturgical life: care must be taken that any new forms adopted should in some way grow organically from forms already existing.
That passage furnishes the leit-motif of his comprehensive 1998 study Architecture as Communion, just as it does for a more general study of liturgical principles which appeared a few years later, Alcuin Reid’s The Organic Development of the Liturgy.Schloeder’s exposition itself indicates that the tradition of symbolic interpretation was not uniform. It had variants, stemming from differences in both architectural style and theological background. Comper had increasingly sought to maximise the advantages of such pluralism by a policy of ‘unity by inclusion’: Gothic and Classical styles, for instance, are not, in Christian use, opposites. Enough is in common to call this, in broad terms, the Tradition (of iconic interpretation of architecture, q.v.).
It is a tradition which requires reinstatement in our own time, above all through the construction of buildings that actually call for a reading along some such lines. Indeed, the post-Conciliar rite of Dedication of a Church and Altar demands it, explicitly calling the church building a representation of the heavenly Jerusalem. If that rite bears any authority, then the shapes and volumes of sacred space need relating to ecclesial functions within an organic composition, and both massing and decoration allowed to recover their full symbolic valency. This in turn will permit the personal, devotional inhabiting of space as well as its corporate liturgical equivalent.
Architecture and devotion
Mannion, writing in 1999, shortly after Schloeder, and on the eve both of Built of Living Stones and Meier’s Jubilee church, was not especially sanguine as to prospects. In the secular realm, architectural Postmodernism and New Classicism were in full-scale reaction against the shortcomings of the twentieth century Modernist movement, and not least, its canonising of its own practices over against all earlier historical models. Among ‘liturgical-architectural theorists’, however, and by implication the practitioners who drew on their writings in constructing or ‘re-ordering’ church buildings, there seemed no lessening in the ‘hostility toward the past and the radical distance from traditional church styles sought by architects and designers after Vatican II’. The minimalism and chilling frugality of iconography in most modern or recently re-ordered Western Catholic churches was impossible to square with the sort of historically accurate rules-of-thumb Comper had laid down. The largely aniconic interiors of Modernist Latin-rite churches were increasingly out of kilter with the major place still given to images in domestic Catholic life and devotion. In his courageous editiorial Mannion wrote:
The functionalist principles of modern architecture and their inability to handle the ambiguity and polyvalence of Catholic devotionalism have conspired to render church architecture since Vatican II exceedingly anti-devotional. Many have lamented the removal from Catholic churches of popularly revered elements, as well as the disappearance of important conditions for the devotional life. The alienation from modern church architecture that exists on the part of many ordinary Catholic worshipers derives in great part from the rejection by the newer styles of traditional elements conducive to the devotional.
That has reference to a wide variety of devotional objects, as well as to the overall ‘atmosphere of a church’ (Comper’s phrase). The most important issues it raises are, however, those of altar and tabernacle, for which a comparatively full treatment seems, consequently, justified.(i) The altar
In particular, the chief devotional focus of the Church gathered for the Holy Sacrifice, its principal rite, is, as Comper so forcefully realised, the altar, which is the symbol of Christ and the place where his paschal sacrifice is renewed. The altar is also the place from which, in holy Communion, the faithful are fed by the Bread of his body and the Wine of his precious blood. In a wider symbolic cosmology, the altar holds a central place as well. Their name coming from the word altus, a high place, the altar-steps bring to mind the ascent to the Temple of Jerusalem, the climb up the sacred mountain on which Zion was built. As the holy ‘mountain’, the altar remains the heart of the church. This makes treatment of the altar especially crucial.
First of all, there is the issue of orientation. In traditional usage, the altar is where possible placed at the east, on the solar axis. Facing the altar, one faces the rising sun, which overcomes cosmic darkness as Christ’s Resurrection and Ascension overcame spiritual. Orientation is a particularly neuralgic topic in contemporary Catholicism. The now widespread desire for a general return to versus apsidem celebration for the Liturgy of the Sacrifice (as distinct from that of the Word) constitutes an inescapable ‘head-on’ challenge to ‘Modernism’—understanding by that term a stance that is at once architectural, liturgical, ecclesial, sacramental and—by implication at least—eschatological.
‘The custom of orientation is biblical and it expresses the eschaton.’ This simple statement sums it up. In a more complex presentation of the Judaic and early patristic materials, the Oratorian scholar Uwe Michael Lang has shown that sacred direction—specifically to the East—was the most important spatial consideration in early Christian prayer. Its significance was primarily eschatological (the East was the direction of the Christ of the Parousia, cf especially Matthew 24: 27 and 30) and, naturally, it applied to all the faithful, including their ministers. Archaeological evidence shows the great majority of ancient churches to have an oriented apse. Granted that the altar was the most honoured object in such buildings, the only safe inference is that the celebrant stood at the people’s side, facing East, for the Anaphora. In the minority of buildings (notably at Rome and in North Africa) that have, by contrast, an oriented entrance, the position is less clear, but Lang argues persuasively that the celebrant in such a case prayed facing the doors (and thus the people) but did so with hands and eyes alike raised to the ceiling of the apse or arch where the decorative schemes of early Christian art are focussed. For Lang—who stresses that even when ‘orientation’ is not the geographical East but only a conventional ‘liturgical East’—common direction is theologically important. Celebration versus populum in the modern (eyeball-to-eyeball) sense was unknown to Christian antiquity. Not for them the situation where:
The sight-lines stop at [the celebrant], centre on his person, competence, visage, voice, mannerisms, personality—uplifting or unbearable alike. At its most objectionable, such a practice ‘elevates the priest above the Sacrament, the servant above the Master, the man above the Messiah’. The late Louis Bouyer remarked with disarming frankness:
Either you look at somebody doing something for you, instead of you, or you do it with him. You can’t do both at the same time.
The historian of the Western Liturgy Klaus Gamber put it more theologically:The person who is doing the offering is facing the one who is receiving the offering; thus he stands before the altar, positioned ad Dominum, facing the Lord.
From the English experience Lang makes the powerful point that the adoption of the eastward position by the Oxford Movement clergy was key to their efforts to give a Catholic character to the Church of England, precisely because that position was taken (by opponents as well as allies) to express the sacrificial nature of the Eucharistic rite as a Godward act.To the issue of the oriented altar may be added the issue of veiling which covers such topics as not only veils of fabric, as in the side-curtains of the ‘English’ or ‘Sarum’ altar revived by Anglo-Catholics like Comper in the early twentieth century, but also, in paint, wood, and stone, the iconostasis of the East and the rood screen and cancelli or communion rails of the West. The Writer to the Hebrews addresses his readers:
Therefore, brethren, since we have confidence to enter the sanctuary by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way which he opened for us through the curtain [veil], that is, through his flesh, and since we have a great high priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a true heart. (10: 19–22)
The American Dominican Michael Carey, recalling how cancelli or ‘rails’ where the faithful receive the Lord’s body and blood have historically given this access to the sanctuary architectural expression, comments:If the sanctuary [of the church building] is that sacred place which holds in a special way the Real Presence of the Lord on the altar and in the tabernacle; and if the veil or veiling structure around the sanctuary represents the humanity of Christ, as the Epistle to the Hebrews teaches; and, further, if we can only enter into God’s Presence through the humanity of Christ: then, that veiling structure is necessary …Some veiling structure, then, continues to be of utmost importance for a proper liturgical spirituality. Its removal would symbolically eliminate the necessity of Christ’s Humanity, as if we could enter into the presence of the Divinity without it.
For Carey this is crucial to, in the title of Comper’s essay, ‘the atmosphere of a church’. The sense of, in Romano Guardini’s words, ‘the altar as threshold’, sets up an isomorphism between the movement of the Incarnation and the spatial inter-relation of sanctuary and nave. In both cases God stoops down to encounter us, from there to assist us, not without difficulty, across the barrier into his own realm of burning holiness and light. Here, as with the Byzantine icon-screen, threshold is not only borderline. It is also crossing over.In that Byzantine tradition, indeed, the earlier low railed screen of the cancelli into which occasional images might be fixed, had developed by the sixteenth century into the full, floor to ceiling, wall-like iconostasis of first Russian and subsequently Greek and other churches. The role of the iconostasis is subtle, as the early twentieth century Russian Orthodox philosopher Pavel Florensky explains.
[T]he iconostasis is a boundary between the visible and invisible worlds, and it functions as a boundary by being an obstacle to our seeing the altar, thereby making it accessible to our consciousness by means of its unified row of saints (i.e. by its cloud of witnesses) that surround the altar where God is, the sphere where heavenly glory dwells, thus proclaiming the Mystery. Iconostasis is vision.
In other words, veiling at one level permits unveiling at another. The iconostasis does not only carry images of the saints but evokes the inter-related mysteries of Incarnation and Atonement. As a sympathetic English interpreter explains:In front of the altar, the Royal Gates with Gabriel’s message and the Virgin’s answer open the way to God’s historical gift of Himself, still present with us. And on the two sides of the gates the double significance of Bethlehem and Olivet is revealed: on the north, the Virgin and the Child; on the south, Christ Pantokrator – the All-Emperor: the kenosis is answered by the Kingdom. Behind the veil, the altar speaks of Calvary, but Easter at once is all around us. The altar is also the life-bringing Tomb, the Fountain of the Resurrection.
The Western rood screen performs the same function of theologically significant veiling, with its painted or carved saints running along the line demarcating nave and sanctuary, surmounted by the Cross of the Lord. It does not represent an obscuring of the altar but its visibility through a ‘window’ framed by the saints and other motifs of Catholic doctrine. It is strange that, although the 1970 General Instruction of the Roman Missal deemed that the sanctuary should be ‘marked off from the nave either by a higher floor level or by a distinctive structure and decor’, its promulgation was followed by a rash of ‘removalitis’: the demolition of screens and even communion rails in many—if not most—Latin-rite church-buildings. For Durandus, the rail between altar and choir had taught specifically ‘the separation of things celestial from things terrestrial’. Awaiting communion kneeling at the rail encourages a moment of concentrated recollection before the altar which is less easy to reproduce when standing behind other communicants in a line.Can one regard the addition of a ciborium (civory) or tester (painted canopy) as veiling? Though altars with civories—a columned structure above the altar made in stone, wood, or metal—often had curtains enabling the altar itself to be veiled between the beginning of the Preface and the end of the priest’s communion (missals from the first half of the sixteenth century still refer to this), the civory’s function was, rather, to honour the altar. They were favoured features of Comper’s buildings. The Anglican liturgist Bishop David Stancliffe writes:
To give [the altar] emphasis, and to combine physical proximity with a sense of transcendence, a ciborium adds dignity and colour. It also gives it a defined place within the undefined space of the church. Comper is familiar with the early Roman basilicas, and uses their syntax, if not their vocabulary.
The ‘tester’ is an alternative way of making the same gracious point. A feature of Comper’s earlier work, and presuming the ‘English’ altar, this canopy, suspended from the ceiling, was a lighter structure than the civory. Characteristically, Comper decorated the tester with a painted Christ in majesty comparable – he hoped—to the great mediaeval Sicilian mosaic majesties of Cefalu and Monreale. From the civory or tester would hang (if Comper could persuade the patrons) the reserved Sacrament in a pyx, of which Stancliffe remarks:
Where this has been done, there is a remarkable sense of the presence of Christ filling the building – something the more locked-away methods of reservation fail to communicate.
(ii) The tabernacleThe question of the the Eucharistic tabernacle (the normal Roman Rite equivalent to Comper’s hanging pyx), and its adornment and placing, is inescapable here. The history of tabernacle design is more interesting than cupboards like the box at the Roman Jubilee church might lead once to suspect. In early modern Catholicism, Eucharistic tabernacles were most frequently constructed on the model of the Ark of the Covenant in the Solomonic Temple: that is why they were veiled with a fabric covering usually changed according to the liturgical colour of the season or day. Fairly commonly, adoring angels appear in the iconography on tabernacle doors or adjacent areas, again evoking the Israelite Ark which had its own figures of attendant cherubim (Exodus 25: 18–22). In earlier epochs, animals, fruits or flowers could be incorporated into tabernacle design, to signify how the entire world is en route to transfiguration via the Eucharistic Lord. Tabernacles have also been designed as churches in miniature, since the Eucharistic sacrament which they house ‘unifies the person of Christ and his living body, the Church’. Again, the tabernacle has taken the form of a treasure-chest, because the entire spiritual treasury of salvation is present in Christ, or, in another format, of a tower reaching up toward heaven: an obvious symbolism for the earthly tabernacle qua prefiguring the heavenly. So much iconological effort implies the existence of a powerful theological rationale.
The sense of distance that Catholics have traditionally kept from the Eucharistic tabernacle, often venerating it from afar, is not so much a pagan devotional remnant, but rather a statement that the earthly worshipper remain at some distance from the heavenly tabernacle. The Eucharist will only be received in all its fullness in the eternal banquet of heaven, while on earth the fullness of Eucharistic reality remains literally and spiritually ‘reserved’ for the future.
Whatever sculptural form the tabernacle takes, both popular feeling and the general Tendenz of Roman documents since the immediate aftermath of the post-Conciliar reform militate against the marginalisation it has suffered in many new or re-ordered churches. The 1967 Instruction Eucharisticum Mysterium of the Congregation of Rites appeared to lack a proper theology of the distinct but inter-related modes of relation to the Paschal Mystery of Christ enjoyed by the tabernacle on the one hand, the consecrated Elements on the altar on the other. Yielding to a pervasive contemporary temptation, it foreshortened the eschatological orientation which was itself the main theological advance, vis-a-vis earlier magisterial statements on the Liturgy, of Vatican II’s Sacrosanctum Concilium. Once again, it is an American voice that sounds the alert.As permanent signs of Christ and His Pasch, the reserved Eucharist and the Church do not conflict with the unfolding of the paschal sacrifice in the liturgy when they are present prior to the consecration, rather they are signs formed in previous liturgies which draw us back to the eternal Pasch present anew in the contemporary celebrations …Because the consecration, the Host on the altar, the assembled Church, and the tabernacle have distinct relations to the Pasch, they do not detract from each other when simultaneously present.
By 1980, when John Paul II’s Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine Worship issued its Instruction Inaestimabile donum, it seemed plain that ‘problems had arisen with a diminution of devotion to the Eucharist, not disassociated from inadequate attention to the place of reservation in new or renovated churches’. Hence the Instruction’s insistence that the tabernacle be located in ‘a distinguished place …, conspicuous, suitably adorned and conducive to prayer’. The same note is struck in Benedict XVI’s Post-Synodal Exhortation Sacramentum caritatis. Without a prominent tabernacle (or hanging pyx – why not?) there is no possibility – special supernatural graces aside—of what Stancliffe terms a sense of the presence of Christ filling a building. In The Spirit of the Liturgy Joseph Ratzinger maintained:The Eucharistic Presence in the tabernacle does not set another view of the Eucharist alongside or against the Eucharistic celebration, but simply signifies its complete fulfilment. For this Presence has the effect, of course, of keeping the Eucharist forever in church. The church never becomes a lifeless space but is always filled with the presence of the Lord, which comes out of the celebration, leads us into it, and always makes us participants in the cosmic Eucharist. [And he asks rhetorically,] ‘What man of faith has not experienced this?’
ConclusionFrancis Mannion relaxed his characteristic iron discipline of understatement when he wrote:
[A] future generation of historians will make a stronger connection than we do today between the early iconoclastic movement, the Reformation ‘stripping of altars’, and the post-Vatican II treatment of the historic heritage of Catholic art.
Three years previously, in the unlikely context of the London Tablet, the stained glass artist Patrick Reyntiens had entered a similar plea.t begins to become more and more obvious that the exact ambience and cultural context of the visible elements in the interiors of modern churches should be thought out and acted upon in far greater seriousness and depth than hitherto … [T]he sacred space has been violated since Vatican II very much as it was first at the time of the Reformation, and this must be rectified for the health of the Church.And so, Quo vadis? As if with prophetic insight into the ravages of architectural Modernism, the American Neo-Gothic builder Ralph Adams Cram wrote in the opening year of the twentieth century:
We must return for the fire of life to other centuries, since a night intervened between our fathers’ time and ours wherein the light was not.
That was Comper’s message too, but in his case, it came to entail a comprehensive openness to all the great stylistic epochs of the Church as builder. That was possible owing to both the ontological character of beauty as a transcendental determination of being and the fundamental internal coherence or organicity of the Church’s tradition. The unifying element in any particular building comes from the architect’s contribution. A church must be not only a rationally designed liturgical space but a unified work of art.John Henry Newman, in the nineteenth of the Parochial and Plain Sermons took as his text Psalm 78: 69, which in the Authorised Version reads, ‘He built His sanctuary like high palaces, like the earth which He hath established for ever’. Newman used the homiletic opportunity to argue against the opinion that Jesus’s prediction to the Woman of Samaria—future worshippers ‘shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth’ (John 4: 23)—nullifies the psalm in question (and in so doing renders trivial the topic of this essay).
Our Saviour did not say to the Samaritan woman that there should be no places and buildings for worship under the Gospel, because He has not brought it to pass, because such ever have been, at all times and in all countries, and amid all differences of faith. And the same reasons which lead us to believe that religious edifices are a Christian ordinance, though so very little is said about them in Scripture, will also show that it is right and pious to make them enduring, and stately, and magnificent, and ornamental; so that our Saviour’s declaration, when He foretold the destruction of the Temple at Jerusalem, was not that there should never be any other house built to His honour, but rather that there should be many houses; that they should be built, not merely at Jerusalem, or at Gerizim, but every where; what was under the Law a local ordinance, being henceforth a Catholic privilege, allowed not here and there, but wherever was the Spirit and the Truth. The glory of the Gospel is not the abolition of rites, but their dissemination; not their absence, but their living and efficacious presence through the grace of Christ.A church-building, says Newman, represents
the beauty, the loftiness, the calmness, the mystery, and the sanctity of religion …and that in many ways; still, I will say, more than all these, it represents to us its eternity. It is the witness of Him who is the first and the last; it is the token and emblem of ‘Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today, and for ever’ …That is why they are: happy …who, when they enter within their holy limits, enter in heart into the court of heaven. And most unhappy, who, while they have eyes to admire, admire them only for their beauty’s sake, and the skill they exhibit; who regard them as works of art, not fruits of grace; bow down before their material forms, instead of worshipping ‘in spirit and in truth’; count their stones, and measure their spaces, but discern in them no tokens of the invisible, no canons of truth, no lessons of wisdom, to guide them forward in the way heavenward!
We enter these iconic buildings aright if, as we do so, we contemplate the mystery of the Church and, through the Church, the Kingdom. Go to the greatest of Comper’s churches – to St Mary’s Wellingborough (Northamptonshire), or St Cyprian’s, Clarence Gate (London)—and you will learn how.Labels: Architecture
September 9, 2008 at 3:12 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771929Praxiteles
ParticipantIndeed!!!
September 6, 2008 at 6:25 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771927Praxiteles
ParticipantThe neo-Byzantine revival
Some information and a virual tour of the Basilica, built by John McShain, the last occupant of Killarney House who gave the Killarney House estate to the Irish nation.
http://www.nationalshrine.com/site/pp.asp?c=etITK6OTG&b=107985
And just to give an idea of the scale of the apse mosaic:
September 6, 2008 at 6:17 pm in reply to: reorganisation and destruction of irish catholic churches #771926Praxiteles
ParticipantNeo Byzantine Revival in the United States
The Basilica Shrine of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Washington DC
The apse mosaic.
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