Just think of the great basilicas of our continent: in Mexico City, Washington, Montreal, St. Paul, Webster.
Webster?
Yeah, Webster. Some basilicas are not huge churches in great cities. One is in Webster, Mass., so I went to see it.
St. Joseph Basilica: official site
my photos from today
Category: Art & Architecture
Well, one good side-effect from closing a parish
Up in Manchester, New Hampshire, the closing of one church made it possible for an Eastern Catholic congregation to buy it and move in from their overcrowded former church a few blocks away. So far they’re making a good start with it. Nicely enough, their iconostasis from the old church fit perfectly in the sanctuary of the new one! Here are a few quick photos from my visit there today.
Update: I modified the link to work around a limitation in the MSIE browser.
Dresden: the Frauenkirche is rededicated
For 44 years after World War II, the Communist authorities of East Germany forbade the rebuilding of Dresden’s Church of our Lady, destroyed by Allied bombers. In 1989, though, the boot was lifted from that country, and the people and the Church in Dresden knew what they wanted to accomplish: a restored Frauenkirche.
Art as “a concrete catechesis”
Jem Sullivan spoke with OSV last year about the catechetical effect of art and how we need to recover its role in the Church:
One of the ironies of the past 40 years is this: As American culture becomes increasingly focused on the visual image through television, the Internet, and advertising, our churches are being stripped of images.
Here’s the interview.
Come to think of it, Catholics were here first
I’m in Mobile, Alabama for a few days, where most of my mother’s family lives, so I attended Mass Saturday afternoon at the stately Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception.
The congregation was under 50 people, as the downtown area was practically empty on a steamy Saturday afternoon. (You know it’s humid when you step out of an air-conditioned store into the parking lot and your glasses fog instantly!)
An enjoyable aspect to the Mass was that the priest and servers took the time to make the processions move calmly and slowly, giving us time to sing three or even four verses of the hymns. (Efficiency of motion is not the goal, men!) The hurried clergy up North need to learn something from these guys. The choices of music were OK: the hymns were “Be Thou My Vision” and “O God our Help in Ages Past”, and the Mass Ordinary music was from the Mass in honor of Pope Paul VI and the Danish Amen Mass.
Mobile’s definitely a Baptist town, but the Church was here first when the city was settled by the Spanish and French, and I’m glad to see her continuing growth here.
[Some pictures of the Basilica’s very nice windows are on-line at stainedglass.org.]