This paper explores the production of sacred architecture as a profound intersection between a human innovation and transcendent truth. Religious communities talk about ‘the sacred’ as eternal and transcendent. Religion, the content, values, and teachings, are taken to be eternally unchanging, yet, religions are practiced by humans who exist in history. Furthermore, humans encounter and communicate their religious experiences, values, and identities through cultural forms: religious architecture, music texts, and ritual activities that are beatified into religions cannon. This paper revelas how religious actors have approached the intersection between human innovation and claims of transcendent truth, particularly in relation to architecture and the production of space. Through design, spatial organization, symbolism, and technology this paper examines how architectural innovation becomes a vessel for expressing transcendent truths across traditions. Exploring potential distinctions between Protesant and Catholic traditions, a case study reveals various sacred and cultural meanings expressed in architecture. Sacred architecture is not simply a reflection of belief, but an active agent in shaping human encounters with the sacred. Examining how human innovation, cultural forms, and claims of religion transcendent truth produce the space/place, an emphasis is placed on how religious spaces are places in motion effected by culture and religion. The power of sacred architectural lies in its capacity to mediate between the finite and the infinite, making the invisible visible through build form.
Sarah M. Angne Alfaro (Thu,) studied this question.
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