K
katherine2
Guest
you need to tell Mother Angelica that.Question:
I thought the faithful was not supposed to be seated behind the celebrating Priest?
you need to tell Mother Angelica that.Question:
I thought the faithful was not supposed to be seated behind the celebrating Priest?
Heh, what about everybody sitting behind the celebrating priest?Question:
I thought the faithful was not supposed to be seated behind the celebrating Priest?
I think I am going to be sick… http://pages.prodigy.net/rogerlori1/emoticons/puke1.gif
This is one thing I’m adamant about… I like to see a crucifix or at the very least a cross that is the focal point of the sanctuary, in scale with the body of the building – a huge space ought to have a huge crucifix. The tabernacle and altar ought to be of human scale, even in a large church, but still given proper prominence.I don’t remember if there was either a cross or a crucifix; if there was, it didn’t stand out much.
Ahhh. So a grill makes it okay. gotcha. :whacky:QUOTE=katherine2]you need to tell Mother Angelica that.
There’s a grille which separates the singing brothers (before it was the nuns) from the altar. If my memory serves me right, the grille is suppose to be to the right or to the left of the altar. This is not the same as the Beast Cathedral with the open space and no grille.
Where did I say it made it ok?Ahhh. So a grill makes it okay. gotcha. :whacky:
This is just a model, im sure the priest along with the parishoners will adorn the church and make it a great place of worship.This is one thing I’m adamant about… I like to see a crucifix or at the very least a cross that is the focal point of the sanctuary, in scale with the body of the building – a huge space ought to have a huge crucifix. The tabernacle and altar ought to be of human scale, even in a large church, but still given proper prominence.
On the subject of crucifixes… I used to not like “Risen Christ” crosses as the focal point of sanctuaries. Then I went to St. Anthony’s, the church for St. Anthony’s Village, a nursing and retirement home, besides some other things. Lots of wheelchairs and oxygen tanks at Mass. They have a crucifix on the altar, but a huge Risen Christ over the sanctuary. It is perfect.
Yep definitely a guy thing! When I buy furniture for our office I gravitate to the walnut desks and the plush leather chairs. The men are all over the chrome and glass and black lacquer! Honestly it might be fine once built and filled with the faithful. The schematic drawings are rather skeletal and probably do notI do not care for modern art at all either! BLB may have something, though.It might partially be a “chick thing” as you say. I’m a fairly conservative guy working in banking and a part-time farmer, but tools, steel, machinery, are pretty neat IMO.
It will definitely be worth visiting once it’s done!If you happen to come to visit northern California in 2008, drop me a line and our family will meet you at the new cathedral to see what you think!![]()
cathgal said:"Regardless, what once was dispised by many is now widely accepted as a masterpiece. "
I disagree. Something that was once despised can always be despised…
You’re scaring me! I don’t like chrome, glass, and black lacquer furniture either. My favorite chair is my leather recliner! Oak or walnut furniture is fine for me! My last piece of woodworking was a set of oak bookshelves. I do like nice steel tools, though!Yep definitely a guy thing! When I buy furniture for our office I gravitate to the walnut desks and the plush leather chairs. The men are all over the chrome and glass and black lacquer! Honestly it might be fine once built and filled with the faithful. The schematic drawings are rather skeletal and probably do not
give a full view.
Lisa N
The point is that SOME structures that were previously found to be unattractive are later viewed as being unattractive. Some that were once thought to be attractive, also are now considered unattractive.Ok, so I missed the ‘David’ thingy but “The point is that somethings that are not popular now will be later.” imply the same thing. This structure is not the first to be unpopular. For the last 3 decades, there been other ugly ones and they’re still considered ugly today. Do we need to give it more time to become popular…I doubt it. People still prefer the traditional church to one such as this. Also, with this kind of modern structure with no glorification to God, it tells us alot about the kind of world we live in today, secularism. Just look at Europe of centuries past, people were more religious. It showed in all the churches. Maybe if we bring back those precious traditional church building , we would all be better off in our spiritual journey.