Friday, July 10, 2015

Calvary United Methodist Church, Pittsburgh

On Beech Avenue, which is my favorite street in the city, there stands the majestic old Calvary United Methodist Church.  Its ornate stone spires stand in keeping with the brownstone and brick townhouses on that leafy street.  I've always wanted to get inside, but the place is locked up tighter than a bank vault--perhaps with the exception of Sunday mornings.
 But today, when business called me to that part of town, I spied a side door standing open. Workmen were painting, or cleaning, or doing plaster work of some kind.  I don't really know what they were doing.  I was only interested in sneaking past them into the building to see a sight I thought I'd never see: the Tiffany Stained Glass Cathedral of the North Side.
 The workmen's boom box was screaming, "I want you to want me.  I need you to need me..." The ugly song from my childhood was sorely out of place in that darkly reverent space.  It was like taking a bite of a chocolate chip cookie and discovering that it's oatmeal raisin.  And yet, once inside, the grandeur of the old church seemed to envelope and muffle even the impious noise of the classic rock station.  The music was still rattling around in the big room, but I no longer heard it.  Cheap Trick's one and only hit could buzz like a fly in the background, but it could not finally threaten the sacred hush of the place.  (Ah, all our hurry, and all our noise, and all our fury passes!  All our passions and all our troubles will pass, as will all our turbulent days.  But eternity rolls forever forward--in perfect silence!)  
The Tiffany stained glass windows were glorious to behold, but of course, it takes something better than a cell phone to capture their beauty. They mostly depict triumphant scenes from the Jesus myth: resurrection and ascension.

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Bower Hill Presbyterian Church, Mt. Lebanon

         
         I actually could have a separate blog devoted specifically to religious architecture.  I love it so much.  All architecture interests me, but especially churches, synagogues, mosques, and temples.  I like the way they use space and light to evoke feelings of the Numinous.  But alas, I'd never have time for two blogs; I don't even have time for one.  Besides, I'd need a real camera for an architectural blog.  This is the Bower Hill Presbyterian Church in Mount Lebanon, one of the loveliest churches in a city that is filled with them.  I don't care what you believe about Ultimate Concerns--things like life, death, meaning, and goodness--you could become a calmer and a wiser person just by spending an hour each week surrounded by this kind of beauty.  Beauty is a healing balm in our lives, which are spent largely beneath the rude glare of fluorescent bulbs and in windowless cubicles.  Beauty can restore our spirits, us poor inhabitants of no-frills Suburbia.  We need far more trees, and parks, and poetry, and art, and high ceilings than we are getting...  
        Speaking of churches, we returned recently from a trip to the Great Smoky Mountains, where the Park Service has preserved a few Appalachian cabins and houses of worship. Here are some photos.  And did I ever publish photos of the Texas Hill Country, where I spent a week last November?  It just happens to have some churchiness about it, too.  Photos here.