My wife and I were
traveling. Which gave us an opportunity to
participate in Mass at at a small wood-frame country church typical
of a rural parish. It had been recently renovated and expanded.
including a fresh coat of some pastel, off-white color on all four
walls.
This is a photo of a
different church, but it shares the same beige interior.
As I knelt, praying
after Communion, contemplating the Blessed Sacrament in the
tabernacle; the crucifix hung above it on a vast expanse of
identically bland wall rising up to the high peaked ceiling. Something was missing. Plain monochrome interiors may represent
the authentic original style of country churches. Perhaps so. But the simplicity of early American churches was
more a reflection of scarce resources at the time than of preference. When Catholics have had the means, they have turned to color. As soon as Americans could afford it, they built
beautiful, ornate churches, like St. Alphonsus in Baltimore.
Even those gigantic gray structures of the medieval Gothic cathedrals once burst with colors.
Cathédrale Notre-Dame d’Amiens |
They were drained of their vibrancy during the Protestant revolts and the French Revolution, but researchers and restorations are bringing the colors back.
Eastern and Southern churches never lost their colors.