T
TimothyH
Guest
A freestanding altar is actually a monastic altar, an ancient Benedictine tradition which flows out of the idea of the monastic enclosure. The monks are an enclosed group of brothers - family really - who gather around the altar as equals. The priest is only there to serve the sacramental needs of the monastic community but is otherwise an equal, a brother among brothers.I see that it says “The main altar should** preferably** be freestanding”. Doesn’t say anything about this being so important that ancient churches should be deformed to accommodate it. (I’d also like to see if “should preferably” is actually what the Latin says, but I can’t seem to find the original Inter Oecumenici anywhere sadly. So for the moment I’m going off of the EWTN translation.)
Didn’t even realize that I did that! Mea culpa. I was posting in the other thread the same time I was in this one.
If you go to Mass at a monastic abbey Church with this type of altar today you will probably see the monks gather around the altar as a family while you, who are not part of the enclosed monastic community, stay way back behind the choir stalls in the pew. The monks, priests and non priests, all gather around the altar, in the sanctuary during the consecration, as a community. It is part of the spirituality and theology of enclosure and of cloister.
People who want to talk about the patrimony of the high altar have to give the 1600 year old Benedictine tradition its due.
Others say that this was only for monks, and not for regular every day Catholics, but in many places it was the monastery where people went to Church. A significant number of European cities and universities started as nothing more than a monastery around which commerce and culture developed.
Some detached altars are horrendous. One at a Church near where I live looks like something out of Star Trek. I keep thinking that Spock is going to walk out in a deacon’s stole. But the same can be said of some high altars which are nothing more than a shelf. In general, when I see a detached altar, I see a 1600 year old monastic tradition, not a novelty. I see the Church getting back to her spiritual roots.
-Tim-