good. It was cheap, available, and industrial but it did not encourage the eye to the heavens nor did it give to what took place within the sense of nobility that liturgy deserved.
So it was with some interest I read of a Roman Catholic congregation in Plattsburg, MO, which was in the process of getting past its own round worship space in pursuit of a form more historic and certainly more friendly to what was taking place within its walls. They, too, decided that the round building was not salvageable as a worship space and so they constructed a space suitable for its liturgical purpose even though they knew it would be a journey and that the process as not going to happen overnight. So they put themselves to work and this is the outcome.
Their old building was certainly a building set in its time but did not age well. They certainly sought the options available to rehab the old space into something more usable but undoubtedly found that the cost of such an endeavor was greater than building something new. Perhaps they turned the old into a fellowship space. Who knows? But at least this space with its minimalism, horizontal focus, and art that was also its bare bones gave way to a rather traditional space. It was undoubtedly costly. The cost of our mistakes is rarely inexpensive. This is particularly true of buildings that are with us longer than those who design them. In any case, they have embarked on a road not simply to remake but restore.
My plea here is to the architect who receives the commission of the congregation as an invitation for his or her own self-expression. Don't be stupid. This congregation looked to you to provide them something that would service the purpose and the need and you gave them something that not only wasted their money but was a disservice to its purpose. Do the research. Find out what happens within the space you are called to design. Honor the purpose even if it might mean dissuading the people of a dream built more upon a whim than its more ancient and laudable purpose as a House of God.
And to the building committees and pastors of these congregations, think twice about novelty. Learn from the past. As Churchill noted, we shape our buildings and then they shape us for generations. Take time to learn what happens within the Divine Service before you ask for preliminary design concepts and took the structures near you that have excelled in their purpose as a place for the people of God to gather around the Word and Table of the Lord. Beauty is not an enemy of worship but a tool employed in service to the Gospel and to the people who have come to be nourished and transformed by that Word of God. Unless the eye is drawn upward, the heart and mind won't be either. In our own age as in other epochs of the history of Christianity, we suffer more when we forget this than when we dare to construct buildings that point us to God.