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a conference for pastors, architects,
building committees, artists, liturgical consultants and all interested in
the beauty of the Catholic artistic heritage
Supported in part by a grant from
the Bricks and Mortar Foundation. |
Heaven On Earth: The Theology and Design of
Catholic Church Buildings
In the great tradition, the Church has
understood that a church building is an “earthly heaven.” This sacramental
building which makes present the realities described by St. John in the Book
of Revelation, where the Angel of the Temple gives a tour of heaven,
revealing its golden, jewel-covered walls and angels and saints singing the
praises of the Trinity (Rv 21:15). Always more than a meeting house, church
buildings use art and architecture to make this hoped-for vision of our
heavenly destiny knowable to the senses, filling churches with the “signs and
symbols of heavenly realities” (Sacrosanctum Concilium, 123). When
architects and artists have failed to understand this sacramental vision,
the result has been bland and uninspiring, leading people to conclude that a
building does not “look like” a church. The Liturgical Institute invites you
to connect again with this sacramental understanding of liturgical
architecture in a conference which is theoretical, practical and prayerful.
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