Saturday, December 29, 2018

God does not need a fancy temple, but we do. . .

Before Renovation. . .
Some, even some commenters on this blog, have complained that the cost of beauty is too great, that we cannot afford to build beautiful churches anymore.  Others have lamented that the money spent on beautiful buildings is wasted when there are more urgent and more important needs -- from missions to mercy work on behalf of the poor and needy.  Still others insist that this is nothing less than idolatry and complain that we are attempting to worship stone and wood instead of the God who cannot be contained in a mere building.  Perhaps there is some truth to all of these positions.  Beauty does cost and yet the value of an investment in beautiful buildings cannot be simply be judged on the basis of initial cost.

After renovation.
God does not need beautiful buildings.  He was in a tent long after the rest of Israel had built more permanent structures and resisted King David's plea to let him build the Lord a fitting house.  But the Lord did not simply relent and allow King Solomon to build the Temple -- He designed the structure down to the smallest detail and commanded that it be built as He commanded without concern to the cost of such an elaborate structure.  Amazingly, the people and their king were glad to be allowed to build for the Lord such a house -- despite its cost.  God does not need a fancy temple, but He knows that we do.  So for generation after generation the Temple stood as the beating heart of Israel's faith, life, and identity.  When desecrated, it was rebuilt.  When its worship faltered, it was renewed.  Prophets came and went but the sacrifices of the Temple remained.

Jesus never disdained the Temple or what was supposed to go on within its courts.  He did, of course, both lament and critique the stewardship of those who were to keep the Temple as a beacon of faith and light that was to point to Him.  He spared no words of condemnation and upturned the tables of those who had forgotten the purpose of the Temple.  He honored the synagogue with His presence and never once suggested that the golf course or fishing boat or a darkened bedroom were sufficient substitutes for the place where the Word was preached and the sacrifices offered.  Somehow or other we have forgotten this and made Jesus an enemy of beauty or at least no friend to it.  We offer the Lord and the Lord's people warehouses devoid of holy things for the holy people who worship therein.  We think that we are being good stewards but we tear down the flawed and cheap buildings of our past with the same pace as we level retail and commercial establishments in order to keep pace with current trend or because they cost more to keep than to destroy.  Then we wonder why there is so little appreciation for or desire to be in the holy places where the Lord makes His presence in the Word and Sacrament.  God does not need eloquent spaces but we do.

Building of beautiful churches makes a significant statement about who we think we are, who we think God is, and how much we value the Lord and His gifts.  Within the stone and steel, brick mortar, wood and glass something is said about God and about us -- perhaps something we do not like to admit.  We spare few dollars on our comforts (a cool place in summer and a warm one in winter, easy chairs, fine technology, and lots of other things) but we won't waste money on things that testify in art and music what God has done.  Sadly, most Lutheran churches do not even have a choir or a building or an organ sufficient for the music of our greatest musician -- Bach.  We are not alone.  Beauty is not a high priority for us.

Beautiful church buildings are not so much monuments to us as they are places where we experience in the eye the vision of the Revelation of St. John and anticipate the heavenly liturgy.  While they need not be overly extravagant in cost, they need to have the integrity that flows from what happens within that space and express in some sort of way the awe of those who regularly receive within these walls the inestimable gifts of God.  Beauty and form are not ends but means and the heavenly liturgy of eternity which we anticipate and even rehearse here on earth is, according to Scripture, not devoid of art and music that befits this majestic experience.  More importantly, beauty identifies this as sacred space, space defined not by what we do but by what God has done and still does and has promised to do for us, among us, and in us.

Once the church in a given community was both centrally located and was the most prominent building in that community.  Imposing, perhaps, but inspiring most of all as it attempted to make fit for the eye what the Word of God says and does.  By the the time of Luther, other buildings competed for this prominence and began to draw the eye away from the House of God and to palaces and government buildings that instead testify to mortal greatness. Today we live in a world of huge steel and glass houses and they testify less to the prominence of God in our midst than to the temples of finance, retail and commerce, government, and, most especially, our penchant for leisure and pleasure.  Here I think of the great stadiums for the sports teams and their power is revealed by how much people will pay for naming rights and for the privilege of signage on their walls.  To those who say buildings do not matter, I challenge them to look at these monuments and say they are silent about our beliefs, priorities, and values!

No, it may be a comfortable lie we tell ourselves but it is still a lie that beauty is too extravagant a thing for churches.  God does not need fancy temples, but we surely do.


8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Nothing proves how earnestly the LCMS wanted to "fit into" American protestant culture than the fact that many LCMS congregations ripped out their beautiful altars, crucifixes and statues of Jesus and the Apostles and replaced it all with generically bland, bare wooden tables and pulpits, and little else in the chancel. Far too many LCMS Lutherans were raised to believe that the crucifix was "Catholic" and that Lutherans "use the bare cross." Face palm!

Joanne said...

May I suggest you begin your exploration of Lutheran worship space with the St. Ann's Church at Augsburg. What Fuggar money and taste did there is truly remarkable and closely connected with Luther. He stayed in a related cloister nearby when he was at Augsburg to meet with Cajetan. The German version of Wikipedia (along with www.kirchbau.de) has an article with pictures of almost every church in Germany.
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Anna_(Augsburg)

Carl Vehse said...

How many of those beautiful church buildings in northern Europe and Scandinavia are filled with confessional Lutherans every Sunday?

Anonymous said...

The disdain for beauty, for elegance, for meaning, and for timelessness in modern architecture says a lot about the debauchery of our ruling classes.

It was Solomon, after all, who gradually allowed the high places of the pagan gods to have equal prominence with the temple.

Anonymous said...

The churches aren't empty because they are beautiful, they are empty because of ugly hearts that refuse their Christian heritage.

Kelly Klages said...

I recently wrote a similar article for the Canadian Lutheran. http://www.canadianlutheran.ca/a-defense-of-beauty-lutherans-and-church-art/

Padre Dave Poedel said...

The images in the YOUTUBE video are very familiar to me, as the churches of my youth in Milwaukee show. St Josephat’s Bascillica in Milwaukee rivals any church I have seen in Italy, Germany or Poland. I have never seen a Lutheran Church that I consider beautiful, even in Germany. When a well delivered Liturgy of Word and Sacrament (Divine Service) in most parts of our Synod, there will be comments about “chancel prancing”, or “too Catholic”. I have given up and crossed over to the other side as I now routinely preach and preside in street clothes....I don’t see how it is any more inviting, but I am now old and I value getting the Word and Sacrament to the folks more than what I am vested, or even whether I am vested.

None of you here know me, and if you knew what this change has done for me, you too would be amazed. Yet, in today’s Synod, inviting is more important than devotion or Tradition.

I have a few chasubles for sale cheap if anyone wants a set, just shoot me a note at padredave1@cox.net and I will get you fixed up. I will never have the privilege of vesting in this way again, so they would be better in your sacristy than my spare room closet.

Anonymous said...

If you use the Apple App store for your ministry, then no amount of renovation will fix this:

https://www.faithwire.com/2018/12/28/apple-bans-texas-ministrys-app-over-biblical-view-of-marriage/