R
Rich_C
Guest
I meant plain in the modern way: “white washed” and not cruciform, almost like a Protestant church.I think I know what you mean, and I assume you would agree that even simple churches can have a beauty about them. At the moment, I’m trying to figure out why exactly I would call a simple Gothic monastic church beautiful, but not some of the modern buildings. Both would be “plain” in a sense, but there has to be some deciding factor.
I have been moved by the simple beauty of some old chapels in Europe, or even here in Maryland, too. In fact, I’ve visited a lot of old Spanish missions in California and they have that “good simple” feeling, too.
I think the distinction is that the old plain chapels/churches still make a very sharp distinction between the sanctuary and the nave, and more importantly in my mind, they are built with stone or the next most permanent material available, giving them a very solid, almost primordial presence, like all the years of the Sacrifice offered in them still echo in the solid rock/adobe/hardwood/brick.
This effect is hard to achieve with sheetrock and foam ceiling tiles. Simplicity badly done, IMO blurs the sanctuary and the nave and has a very emphemeral presence. Catholic theology doesn’t ooze out of the building like it does with a great church, even a small old chapel.
That’s just my two cents.