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I’d like to see more elaboration how to build again. Building is a brick by brick project–we can’t simply time-travel back to a previous era.There is only one thing to do: for the future of the Church, we must build again, drawing on those cultural accomplishments that are timeless, in the service of Christ, who is the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow, in saecula saeculorum.
I’m not seeing your point here.Effete? Banal? I work in publishing as a book editor. Such words are uncommon except among certain classes of people.
Case in point:A vile article, filled with uncharitable assumptions and a lot of “it’s all about me” attitude.
But you are wrong. I happen to believe we should not be building churches as if they were designed 200 years ago. I believe that a modern Church of Noble simplicity can be built and be beautiful, there have been several built in our diocese the last 10-15 years which accomplished that quite nicely. But the Churches built in the 70s, 80s, or early 90s almost all failed, miserably. There is nothing simple or beautiful about many of them.But what you and the author see as “horrible “ architecture, for example, someone else sees as the beauty of simplicity.
No, not wrong, just a different opinion.But you are wrong
Actually, no. If he presented it in a rational way, maybe it would have been a valid piece. But his overload of snark, and making fun of everyone and everything, makes it not worth consideration.Every criticism he makes is valid.
The poster was wrong in the assumption she made about my tastes in Church architecture. That was what I meant. Sorry about not being clear.No, not wrong, just a different opinion.