
WHICH the parish of St. Sebastian worships.
This Sunday we will be celebrating as a Universal Church the
Dedication of the Lateran Basilica, the mother Church building of Church
buildings. I will grant you that if some
crazed lunatic bombed the place to smithereens (thanks spell check, I don’t
know that I ever spelled that word before) the Church will still exist fully
intact though perhaps a little ticked off.
But the fact that we have this celebration means we are kind of
blushing, shuffling our feet, head hanging a little with a smirk on our faces
saying, “Well, yeah, buildings do kinda, sorta mean something to us even though
theologically we could completely do without them.”
One of my favorite quotes:
“God does not need cathedrals.
But we do.”
So I took Sebastian on a walk through my home town the other
day. I wrote about doing this a couple
of summers ago. The point of this
particular walk was to see God’s Magic City Church. This was formally Sts. Cyril and Methodius
Roman Catholic Church founded primarily for the Slovak community. It was absolutely built in the WRONG place
- a flood plain and was regularly
flooded. But the building was a little
gem though the renovations after Vatican II were less than stellar. It is (was) a tiny Romanesque building and
would have made some kind of great shrine or some other use if it weren’t built
where Wolf Creek enjoys overflowing its banks.
Anyway, on our way there we passed the former-former Sacred
Heart Church which is now a non-denominational church. This is the building in which I cut my
teeth. It is mostly in pretty good shape
(though they removed the tile roof and replaced it with a shingle roof which
robbed it of much of its character.) So
the congregation there must be doing relatively alright.
I just found this video that showcases the organ from my home parish that I tried to obtain but at the time the current owners did not want to sell. Now some church in Texas will have it. Tears at my heart . . .
I just found this video that showcases the organ from my home parish that I tried to obtain but at the time the current owners did not want to sell. Now some church in Texas will have it. Tears at my heart . . .

Then there is God’s Magic City Church. There was a fire there recently. The area where the sacristy was is completely
gutted. There is no roof or windows
left, just a brick shell. The nave of
the main church is burnt through and the cross seems to stand miraculously
though precariously on the charred main beam of the roof. I know it’s just a building but something
about it make me feel incredibly sad.
It’s more than it just having been a beautiful building worth keeping
around. It is sad to see a place that
roofed so much good so savagely devastated.
Like spilled milk, seeing something that represents such goodness so
utterly wasted is somehow disturbing.
Is the “Church” less for having lost a building? No.
But we have lost a symbol of our mission. A touchstone that reminds us to keep on
track. Another relic resigned to the
memory of the current generation.
No big deal.