Love the Gothic (but not the Goth so much)

I’m often amused by what church leaders anxious about numbers and attendance assume about non-church-goers. A lot of loopy and unfortunate ideas get foisted on “prospects” in an effort to entice them into the church front doors—especially the 20-somethings and young adults. More often than not, it seems to me, those efforts tend to do their best to make church more palatable, friendlier, “inviting,” and “less threatening” only resulting in stripping the Church of all the distinctiveness it offers as something “set apart” from culture. I often imagine prospective seekers asking, “If there’s no difference, then what’s the difference?” Here’s another item from the June 12, 2008 issue of the Christian Century, this one on sacred space and architecture.

OUT WITH THE NEW: By a ratio of almost 2 to 1, unchurched Americans prefer churches that look more like medieval cathedrals than the modern, utilitarian church facilities that currently are being constructed. This preference for the Gothic, found among both unchurched Catholics and unchurched Protestants, is even more pronounced among people between the ages of 25 and 34. “I don’t like modern churches, they seem cold,” said one survey respondent. “I like the smell of candles burning, stained-glass windows [and] an intimacy that’s transcendent” (survey by LifeWay Research) (p. 9).

As a self-confessed EpiscoBaptist I could not agree more. While I appreciate the reality that the Church is the people, I find no aesthetic pleasure in churches housed in stadiums, auditoriums, or gymnasiums. There’s something about dedicated sacred space that prods the mind and spirit toward the holy and the transcendent. There’s something iconic, intuitive, and archetypal about sacred space—we recognize it when we see it, and respond accordingly.

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About igalindo

Israel Galindo is Professor and Associate Dean for Lifelong Learning at Columbia Theological Seminary.
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