The Nature, Aim, and
Typology of the Church Museum
2.1. The Nature
2.1.1. Preservation
in an ecclesial sense
In order to understand
the nature of an ecclesiastical museum one should underline the fact that the
presentation of the cultural heritage of the Church must take place first and
foremost in the Christian cultural context. The art-historical patrimony of the
Church was not made for a museum function but in order to express worship,
catechesis, culture and charity. However, in the course of time as pastoral
needs and people's tastes change, many artefacts became obsolete. Therefore,
the problem of their conservation arose in order to guarantee their survival
due to their art-historical value. The actual conservation and safeguarding
from illicit acts sometimes imposes drastic solutions because the risks of
dispersion are increasing even in an indirect way. Likewise the urgency of
constituting ecclesiastical museums becomes evident in order to gather the
witness of Christian history and its artistic-cultural expressions in adequate
places, and to make them visible to the public after having organized them
properly according to specific criteria.
Ecclesiastical museums
are therefore strictly connected to particular churches, and, within these, to
the community they serve. They are "not storehouses for inanimate finds,
but enduring nurseries in which the genius and spirituality of the community of
believers is handed on" (John Paul II, Message to the participants of
the Second Plenary Assembly of the Pontifical Commission for the Cultural
Heritage of the Church, September 25, 1997, n. 2 [L'Osservatore Romano, September
28, 1997, p. 7]). Consequently, the ecclesiastical museum is not simply a
collection of objects in disuse. It becomes entirely part of the group of
institutions of pastoral activity because it protects and enhances that
cultural patrimony once "placed at the service of the Church's
mission" and now significant from an art-historical point of view (John
Paul II, Address, October 12, 1995, note n. 3). It becomes an instrument
of Christian evangelization, of spiritual elevation, of dialogue with those
"outside", of cultural formation, of artistic enjoyment, and of
historical knowledge. It is therefore a place of knowledge, enjoyment,
catechesis, and spirituality. Thus, "the importance of parochial,
diocesan and regional ecclesiastical museums and of literary, musical,
theatrical or cultural works of religious inspiration in general must be
stressed, to give a concrete and beneficial appearance to the historical memory
of Christianity" (ibid., Message of September 25, 1997, note n.
3) and therefore make visible the pastoral action of the Church in a given
territory.
The ecclesiastical
museum is to be considered an integral and interactive part of other
institutions existing in each particular church. In organizing it, it should
not represent a separate institution, but it should be connected to and placed
in a territory in order to make visible the unity and inseparability of its
entire art-historical patrimony, its continuity and development in time, its
fruition now in the Church environment. Since it is intimately connected with
the mission of the Church, its content should not lose its intrinsic aim and
destination in terms of the use for which it was created.
The ecclesiastical
museum, therefore, is not a static structure but a dynamic one that finds full
promotion through the coordination of museum artefacts with those still in
place. One should guarantee on a juridical and practical level the eventual
temporary re-use of museum artefacts, both for strictly pastoral and liturgical
reasons as well as for social and cultural ones. Initiatives of cultural
promotion and dialogue should be launched for the sake of the study, enjoyment
and use of museum treasures. In fact, through museums, exhibits, conventions,
sacred plays, performances and other events as well, one should be able to read
once more organically and relive spiritually the history of a specific Church
community that still exists.
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