| Our Catholic Architectural Heritage |
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| Sunday, 08 January 2006 | |||||||||
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Why does St. John Neumann Parish have a church that looks like this? This article helps to explain its architecture by placing it within the context of our Catholic history.
Over the past twenty centuries the Catholic Church has experienced and expressed its worship in various ritual forms that, while retaining its essential elements, has seen its expression evolve in a dynamic way. Alongside this healthy, organic environment has been a corresponding development in the architectural forms whose purpose is to visibly express the celebration of these mysteries in relation to the sanctification of the Church and the world.
From Sunday Evening Meal to Sunday Morning Worship
In the early Church, Catholics first met in homes to celebrate the Eucharist (Acts 20:7-12), the memorial of Christ's Passover. Initially, this sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving was actually coupled with a meal (1 Cor. 11:17-31/Acts 2:42; 2:46). Later, scripture readings replaced this ordinary meal held prior to the memorial meal described in Scripture as "the breaking of bread" (Acts 20:7; 11). This was an accomplished fact by the beginning of the second century. Once the Eucharistic sacrifice was separated from the regular meal, the Christian community began to celebrate the Eucharist in the early Sunday morning hours as opposed to Sunday evening. This was a reminder that the Lord had risen in the early hours of the first day of the week.
Bonding the Faithful and the Community of Saints
During periods of intense persecution large numbers of the faithful celebrated the Eucharist on the feast days of martyrs in the various catacombs in and around Rome. It was common to use sarcophagi (stone coffins) for altars during these Christian services. A relic of our patron Saint John Neumann is placed in the mensa (altar top). According to Antonio Baruffo, author of The Catacombs of Saint Callixtus, "the catacombs can be regarded as the cradle of Christianity and the archives of the primitive Church. Their paintings, sculptures and inscriptions provide the most valuable material for illustrating the usage and customs of early Christians and the history of the persecution they suffered. Moreover they enable us to show how identical was the faith lived in the first centuries with the Act of Faith, or Credo, that we profess today. This has great value for us because these monuments, the catacombs, belong to the first centuries of Christianity. It is undeniable that Christian archeology can give, for some truths of the Catholic faith, proofs in the proper sense, for instance, judgment and reward after death, the communion of saints, the efficacy of prayer of the living for the dead and vise versa, the existence of purgatory, the cult of the holy martyrs, the coming of Saint Peter to Rome and his pre-eminence in the Church, and the very ancient use of the sacraments, such as Baptism and the Eucharist." Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2000
Making More Room
As early as the fifth century, church architecture changed from the classical Roman style to the Byzantine style, with its beautiful iconography, decorated domes, marble columns, pendentives, and mosiacs.
Since the Byzantine era these various architectural styles all had one thing in common - they were built in the *shape of a cross. Soon after World War II, however, this cruciform shape gave way to a modern architecture style which did not concern itself with any of the traditional ecclesiastical architectural components. Whatever the rationale for such a dramatic shift, there is no question that this modern architectural style was not consistent with the organic development which permeated previous architectural designs.
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