Antwerp's St Andrew's Church, a revelation.
The Venerable Chapel
Full of light and warmth, the south side symbolizes God’s reviving and permeating love. As such, the south sides of Gothic church buildings often hostA portion of bread made of unleavened wheat flour that, according to Roman Catholic belief, becomes the body of Christ during the Eucharist. devotions of Jesus’s sacrifice of love – like those of the Holy Cross, and of the Holy or Venerable (i.e. honourable) SacramentIn Christianity, this is a sacred act in which God comes to man. Sacraments mark important moments in human life. In the Catholic Church, there are seven sacraments: baptism, confession, Eucharist, confirmation, anointing of the sick, marriage and ordination.. This traditional symbolism has been upheld in the Venerable Chapel
A small church that is not a parish church. It may be part of a larger entity such as a hospital, school, or an alms-house, or it may stand alone.
An enclosed part of a church with its own altar.
as well. The chapel was only constructed after the reconstruction of choirIn a church with a cruciform floor plan, the part of the church that lies on the side of the nave opposite to the transept. The main altar is in the choir. and transeptThe transept forms, as it were, the crossbeam of the cruciform floor plan. The transept consists of two semi transepts, each of which protrudes from the nave on the left and right. in 1666-1683. The fraternity of the Holy Sacrament, the so-called ‘Venerable Chapel’, which took the initiative to build the chapel, existed already at the time of the church’s consecrationIn the Roman Catholic Church, the moment when, during the Eucharist, the bread and wine are transformed into the body and blood of Jesus, the so-called transubstantiation, by the pronouncement of the sacramental words. in 1529, and is still active today.
The Altar of the Holy Sacrament
Originally, the altarThe altar is the central piece of furniture used in the Eucharist. Originally, an altar used to be a sacrificial table. This fits in with the theological view that Jesus sacrificed himself, through his death on the cross, to redeem mankind, as symbolically depicted in the painting “The Adoration of the Lamb” by the Van Eyck brothers. In modern times the altar is often described as “the table of the Lord”. Here the altar refers to the table at which Jesus and his disciples were seated at the institution of the Eucharist during the Last Supper. Just as Jesus and his disciples did then, the priest and the faithful gather around this table with bread and wine. of the Holy Sacrament in the south aisleLengthwise the nave [in exceptional cases also the transept] of the church is divided into aisles. An aisle is the space between two series of pillars or between a series of pillars and the outer wall. Each aisle is divided into bays. was decorated with a traditional Last Supper triptych (ca. 1589-1596). The triptych was painted by Ambrosius I Francken , a parishioner of St Andrew’s. Once the Venerable Chapel had been completed, a fashionable portico altar was constructed. Instead of adapting the old retablePainted and/or carved back wall of an altar placed against a wall or pillar. Below the retable there is sometimes a predella., the triptych was sold to the chapel wardens of the Holy Sacrament in the nearby church of St George, who settled for this cheaper and less fashionable painting in keeping with their financial situation. The artwork was confiscated in 1794 and finally ended up in the stock of the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp.
The newly finished Venerable Chapel was completed with a painting of the same subject by Pieter Ykens (1687). This painting was done on canvas, and measured to fit the new altar frame in its dimensions, form and composition. Oddly enough, the painting stresses the announcement of the betrayal, rather than the institution of the EucharistThis is the ritual that is the kernel of Mass, recalling what Jesus did the day before he died on the cross. On the evening of that day, Jesus celebrated the Jewish Passover with his disciples. After the meal, he took bread, broke it and gave it to his disciples, saying, “Take and eat. This is my body.” Then he took the cup of wine, gave it to his disciples and said, “Drink from this. This is my blood.” Then Jesus said, “Do this in remembrance of me.” During the Eucharist, the priest repeats these words while breaking bread [in the form of a host] and holding up the chalice with wine. Through the connection between the broken bread and the “broken” Jesus on the cross, Jesus becomes tangibly present. At the same time, this event reminds us of the mission of every Christian: to be “broken bread” from which others can live.. Perhaps an allusion to the believer’s integrity, necessary to receive communionThe consumption of consecrated bread and wine. Usually this is limited to eating the consecrated host.?
Jesus and the disciples are gathered around the table. Jesus (far left) is conspicuously dressed in traditional red (originally imperial purple); therefore, and by exception, John (to Jesus’ left) is dressed in a blue tunic. The artist has painted John, with his head on Jesus’s shoulder, sitting up instead of lying close to the breast of Jesus, as stated in the Bible (Jn 13:23). When Jesus had dipped a morsel of bread in wine, he offered it to Judas with both hands, thus singling out his traitor: “It is he to whom I shall give this morsel when I have dipped it.” (Jn 13:26a) Seated in the middle of the foreground in front of Jesus, the traitor is depicted with a (full) red purse (Jn 13:29) and dressed in his characteristic yellow coat. He looks up in astonishment, and underlines his sanctimonious question with a gesture: “Is it I, Master?” (Matt 26:25) The disciples look on in silence; tensions are high. Three floating angels are holding the cross, as a sign of things to come and, at the same time, as a triumphal sign of faith. A beam sprouts from a golden triangle containing the Hebrew tetragram for God – not as a source of light, but as a sign of divine Providence.
The construction of the altar has been attributed to Lodewijk Willemssens (after 1679 – before 1687). Sitting on a throne in the altar crowning, God the FatherPriest who is a member of a religious order. holds a sceptre in his right hand while leaning on a globe. After all, Jesus’s love was ‘begotten of the Father’ (according to the Creed), and this inexhaustible love is made tangible in the sign of broken bread, during the sacrament of the Eucharist. This Holy Sacrament is held up into the air by each of the figures seated at both ends of the altar crowning. The left figure triumphantly displays the consecrated host above the chaliceGilded metal cup, usually on a base, which the priest uses for the wine during the Eucharist., thus showing the sacrament as it is experienced during the Eucharist. The figure on the right shows us a large consecrated host as an object of veneration, held in a monstranceA decorated glass holder on a base, in which a consecrated host can be placed for worship. In general, there are two types of monstrances: the ray monstrance and the tower monstrance, with the name referring to the shape of the object. The tower monstrance is very similar to the reliquary, which was very popular before the adoration of the Blessed Sacrament became widespread.. From the CouncilA large meeting of ecclesiastical office holders, mainly bishops, presided by the pope, to make decisions concerning faith, church customs, etc. A council is usually named after the place where it was held. Examples: the Council of Trent [1645-1653] and the Second Vatican Council [1962-1965], which is also the last council for the time being. of Trent (1545-1563) up until the 1960’s, the Benediction of the Blessed SacramentThe consecrated host, in which the presence of Jesus Christ is acknowledged. A synonym is ‘the Venerable’. In larger churches a chapel is dedicated to it, usually on the south side of the church. was practiced on Sunday afternoons, and on the afternoons of other festive days.
Hidden behind the nineteenth-century tabernacleA small cupboard in the choir or in a specially designated chapel in which the consecrated hosts are kept., the predellaThe base of an altarpiece. Like the altarpiece, the predella may be painted or sculpted. area displays a scene set in marble, depicting the first miracle of ‘Feeding the Multitude’. In ‘Feeding the Five Thousand’, featuring five loaves of bread and two fish, a young man kneels before Jesus and offers him a plate with two fish. The sculptor has chosen to adhere to John’s gospelOne of the four books of the Bible that focus on Jesus’s actions and sayings, his death and resurrection. The four evangelists are Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. ‘Gospel’ is the Old English translation of the Greek evangeleon, which literally means ‘Good News’. This term refers to the core message of these books. narrative (Jn 6:1-15), in which two disciples come forward. Jesus tests the first disciple, Philip, with the question: How are we to buy bread, so that these people may eat? (v. 5) The disciple Andrew, who has brought the young man to Jesus, is standing in the centre behind the seated Jesus. The grand gesture made by the church’s patron saintThis is a title that the Church bestows on a deceased person who has lived a particularly righteous and faithful life. In the Roman Catholic and Orthodox Church, saints may be venerated (not worshipped). Several saints are also martyrs. renders him even more conspicuous. This movement demonstrates either Andrew’s feelings of powerlessness – what are these (five barley loaves and two fish) for so many? (v. 9) – or Jesus’s order to distribute the loaves and fish (v. 11). Some of the disciples distribute the bread. The men who sat down (v. 11), among whom are mothers and children, take the bread and eat it. As this altar of the Holy Sacrament underlines the bread’s sacramental significance, the twelve baskets of leftovers that were collected afterwards have not been depicted here.
Four semi-elevated white reliefs with small angels stand out against the black marble frame provided by the two column bases. Each of these angels personifies one of the three theological virtues, here connected with the sacrament of the Eucharist. Exceptionally, the angels’ biblical order is respected, thus denying Love its traditional place of honour. Two of the angels have been given butterfly wings instead of bird feathers.
- Christian Faith is represented by the cross, which is decorated with a large host for the ‘Body of Christ’ and a chalice for the ‘Blood of Christ’. The censerA liturgical object consisting of a bowl suspended from three chains. On the bowl is a lid that is also hanging on a chain. In the bowl, grains of incense are placed on glowing coals, so that they begin to smell. By swinging the censer, the fire is stirred up and the incense fragrance can spread further. The censer is used to honour certain people (the priest, the bishop, the faithful, etc.) or certain objects (a cross, the Bible, the Blessed Sacrament, etc.). could be interpreted as an attribute of Devotion or Religiosity.
- Side panel: grapes, grain and maize are the ingredients of Eucharistic bread and wine.
- With an anchor as its attribute, Hope keeps looking at the heavens, thanks to Jesus’s presence in the Eucharist.
- Love is symbolized by the little angel with a burning heart and accompanied by a peace dove, which carries an olive branch in its beak. Indeed, the sacrament of the Eucharist is meaningless when it isn’t preceded by being ‘reconciled to your brother’ (see Matt 5:24). Note the angel’s delicate butterfly wing.
- Side panel: the composition with grapes, grain and maize functions as the counterpart of the left side panel.
- An angel carries the book with the seven seals (Rev 5:1) upon which the papal tiaraA triple crown: a headgear consisting of three crowns placed one above the other. It was worn by popes at official, non-liturgical ceremonies from the beginning of the 14 century until 1964, when Pope Paul VI renounced his tiara in order to sell it in favour of development aid. rests. At the same time, the angel holds both keys of ‘the kingdom of heaven’, symbols of the Church’s teaching authority with regards to the Bible.
The tabernacle
The tabernacle was made by the brothers Wattlé in 1881. On its massive door, a chalice with a host encircled by an aureole indicates that, consecrated hosts are being kept here as a tangible presence of Christ. Guards of honour are displayed on both sides: Old TestamentPart of the Bible with texts from before the birth of Jesus. prefigurations of Christian, and more particularly Catholic points of faith. From left to right:
- Moses holds his (miraculous) shepherd’s staff (Exod 4:2.17). Lifting his eyes to the heavens, and his left hand to shield them, he illustrates the account of his calling at the burning bush: Abscondit Moyses / faciem suam; / non enim audebat / aspicere / contra Deum. / Exod. III:6 (Moses hid his face, for he was afraid to look at God.) To Catholic believers, this was familiar territory: at the Benediction of the BlessedUsed of a person who has been beatified. Beatification precedes canonisation and means likewise that the Church recognises that this deceased person has lived a particularly righteous and faithful life. Like a saint, he/she may be venerated (not worshipped). Some beatified people are never canonised, usually because they have only a local significance. Sacrament, believers habitually kept their eyes modestly closed. Only occasionally they would look up at the consecrated host, set in a monstrance displayed upon an exposition throne on top of the tabernacle.
- Melchizedek offers two loaves of bread: Melchisedech / rex Salem, / proferens panem / et vinum / erat enim sacerdos / Dei Altissimi. / Gen XIV:18 (And Melchizedek king of Salem [= Jerusalem] brought out bread and wine [for Abraham]; he was priestIn the Roman Catholic Church, the priest is an unmarried man ordained as a priest by the bishop, which gives him the right to administer the six other sacraments: baptism, confirmation, confession, Eucharist, marriage, and the anointing of the sick. of God Most High.) Having blessed Abraham, Melchizedek is considered to be a priest of higher rank than Aaron. Hence, the Messiah is called ‘a priest … after the order of Melchiz′edek’. (Ps 110:4) The priestly offer of love fulfilled by Jesus is perpetually repeated during the Eucharist, in the form of bread.
- Originally, Aaron carried his traditional attribute, a censer. The caption reads as follows: Separatusque est Aäron / ut ministraret in / Sancto sanctorum, / ipse et filii ejus in / sempiternum, et adoleret / incensum Domino. / I Paralip. XXIII, 13 (Aaron was set apart to consecrate the most holy things, that he and his sons for ever should burn incense before the Lord, and minister to him and pronounce blessings in his name for ever.) Aaron symbolises the Catholic priest honouring the Holy Sacrament during Benediction with a ritual censing.
- The prophet Elijah is accompanied by a raven holding a loaf of bread in its beak; for some time, indeed, Elijah was given bread by ravens (1 Kgs 17:1-6). Text: Et ecce Dominus transit. / Et spiritus grandis et / fortis subvertens montes. / Quod cum audisset / Elias, operuit / vultum suum pallio. / III Reg XIX, 11 en 13 (And behold, the Lord passed by, and a great and strong wind rent the mountains, and broke in pieces the rocks before the Lord. … And when Elijah heard it, he wrapped his face in his mantle. I Kgs 19:11-13). This is the gesture Elijah is about to make. During Benediction, spiritual help is transformed into a tactile presence in the form of bread, and the faithful close their eyes in awe.
The Painted Predella Panels
Most likely, the beautiful pair of small, horizontal panels by Frans Francken the Younger (ca. 1640) set against the chapel’s choir wall, were in fact the former altar’s predella pieces. Abram Blessed by Melchizedek (Gen 14:11-24) and The Bread from Heaven (Ex 16:4-35) are common Old Testament prefigurations of the Eucharistic meal, during which Jesus offers himself as the living bread.
The Altar Wall
It is unclear why the statues of both St Johns have been placed here, or whether they may have been added here later on. Both statues were sculpted in High Baroque style and are, incidentally, of equally high quality. As a matter of fact, St John the Evangelist (to the left) did illustrate the Last Supper and the significance of Jesus as ‘living bread’ to an extent unparalleled by any other gospel writer. Meanwhile, St John the Baptist (to the right) proclaimed Jesus to be the ‘Lamb of God’ (Jn 1:29.36), the title with which Jesus is addressed during communion.
The fully carved doors left and right in the altar wall may have come from elsewhere. These doors attest to the Late Baroque love of theatrics. The chapel’s devotion is definitely reflected in the doors’ theme: Jesus’ sacrifice of love until his suffering and death. An angel on the left carries the crown of thorns; originally, the angel also carried three nails, but these have broken off. The cross with a large host on top refers to the Corpus Christi (the body of Christ), as the host is referred to during the distribution of communion. While grapes are being pressed into a chalice above, a weeping angel on the right carries the VeilHeadgear worn by female religious. Until the Second Vatican Council, all nuns wore wimples, which covered the entire hair and neck. Nowadays, the veil is usually worn on the hair. of Veronica. At the bottom, horns of plenty lie among grain and grapes.
The Communion Rail
After the French Revolutionary Rule, a communion railA low enclosure of the choir or a chapel in the form of a long kneeling pew. Before the Second Vatican Council, it was customary to receive communion kneeling on at this pew. in white marble was transported here from the Carmelite monasteryComplex of buildings in which members of a religious order live together. They follow the rule of their founder. The oldest monastic orders are the Carthusians, Dominicans, Franciscans, and Augustinians [and their female counterparts]. Note: Benedictines, Premonstratensians, and Cistercians [and their female counterparts] live in abbeys; Jesuits in houses. in Meir. In 1893, the rail was rebuilt and given a frame of black marble. Allusions to the Eucharist follow in rapid succession from left to right. Large horizontal panels alternate with small vertical pillars. From left to right:
- As popular religion would have it, the pelican ripped open its own breast during a famine to feed its chicks with its own entrails, thus symbolising Jesus, who gave himself until death.
- The two stone tables signify the Old Covenant between God and the Jewish people, which had to make place for the New Covenant in Christ Jesus.
- Together, two angels haul on their shoulders a huge bunch of grapes on a stalk: the miraculous bunch of grapes from Canaan. For the Jews, this symbolized the finding of the promised land; Augustine interpreted this as Jesus hanging from the wooden cross;
- Hosts in a basket. These represent, amongst others the ‘omen of manna, placed before the Lord’ (Exod 16:33).
The panels of the doors have disappeared.
- grapes (as counterpart to the hosts);
- a large crown above the Arc of the Covenant underlines the latter’s dignity. The contents of the chest are shown in front of it: the two stone tables and a flowering branch. For the Jews, the stone tables are the sign of the covenant between God and themselves, ‘the chosen people’. In the old Tantum Ergo, the ultimate Eucharistic song of praise, the ‘ancient forms’ of the old, legal covenant are departed from, and ‘newer rites of grace prevail’ – the New Covenant of love is made tangible in the sacrament of the Eucharist. More accurately expressed, Christians see the old sign as fulfilled by the New Covenant. The snipped branch is Aaron’s staff, placed in the arc by divine command where it miraculously began to yield blossoms (Num 17:8). This is seen as a typological prefiguration of the Virgin Mary giving birth to Jesus;
- (vertical) three loaves of shewbread from the temple;
- the Lamb of God stands on the Book (of Revelation) that is closed with seven seals. The Lamb eats out of the hand of the angel on the right. A lovely scene indeed!
The Stained Glass Windows
At first sight, the two large stained glass windows by the studio of Stalins-Janssens (1897) in the south wall bear little connection to the Holy Sacrament. And yet, with thorough observation and reflection, connections to both forms of Jesus’s Eucharistic presence can be found. The left window shows Jesus in agony on the Mount of Olives. An angel holds up a chalice to Him – His blood – thus expressing Jesus’s supplication ‘Let this cup pass from me’ (Matt 26:39.42).
The other window shows a peaceful ChristmasThe feast commemorating the birth of Jesus. It is always celebrated on December 25. scene: Jesus lying in a manger. But the straw of the crib is made up of actual stalks of grain, an old allusion to Jesus as the bread of life (Jn 6:35) and as the bread which came down from heaven (Jn 6:41). The name of Jesus’s birthplace, Bethlehem, literally means ‘house of bread’.
Paintings
The same allusion can be found in the painting The Birth or Mary and Joseph at the Manger by Erasmus Quellinus the Younger (1607-1678), who was also churchwardenA lay person who is a member of the fabric committee. In this position, he/she is co-responsible for the material and financial management of the building and all the church’s property. of St Andrew’s and contributed financially to the building of the transept. His son, Jan Erasmus Quellinus (1634-1715), is accredited with the painting The Supper at Emmaus. The story depicted, in which two disciples recognize the resurrected Jesus at the breaking of the bread, is a New TestamentPart of the Bible with texts from after the birth of Jesus. This volume holds 4 gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, 14 letters of Paul, 7 apostolic letters and the Book of Revelation (or Apocalypse). allusion to the Eucharist. The disciple’s astonishment is depicted with great realism: one of them leaps up, the other spreads his arms and hands in a broad gesture. Their home is a true Baroque palace, complete with a fountain niche and a sofa with a motive of masks. A servant brings a warm dish (with a ventilation cover).
Inspired by the Holy Sacrament devotion, a lay community was founded in this chapel in 1676: the Brotherhood of the Solemn Fortnightly Anointing, a group of laymen who, at regular(Adj.) This is said of a priest who is a member of a religious order and therefore submits to the rule of this order and owes obedience to the superior of his (monastic) community. intervals, brought communion to the sick in procession. Their patron saint was Charles Borromeo, the archbishopThe bishop in charge of the archdiocese. In actual practice, this also means that he is the head of the church province. of Milan (16th century) who took communion to the sick and to plague sufferers. The anonymous painting St Charles Borromeo, which now hangs in the tabard room, originally hung between the chapel’s windows.
The red velvet procession banner of the Chapel of the Holy Sacrament, with a monstrance in relief golden embroidery, was made by the studio of Louis Van Mooch (1865).
The chapel wardens’ pew is set against the south wall, with a table of names integrated in the panelling: ‘cataloge / der cappel / meesters // [die] / sedert het jaer / 1589 / gedient / hebben’ (catalogue of the chapel wardens who served since the year 1589).
The two sculpted angels in the offertory-box’s crown rattle their purses, hoping that you may do likewise.
- Saint Andrew’s Church
- History and description
- Introduction
- The historical context
- Building history
- The patron saint
- The outbuildings
- The tower
- Spatial effect
- Saint Andrew’s identity card
- Saint Andrew in Art
- Saint Andrew in ‘his’ church
- The ancient high altar
- The current high altar
- Choir and chancel
- The choir stalls
- The celebration altar
- The Venerable Chapel
- The Mary Chapel
- The Minters’ Altar
- What is Truth?
- Holy Cross Altar
- Saint Anne’s Altar
- The pulpit
- The confessionals
- The organ
- Stained glass – southern aisle
- Stained glass – northern aisle
- The Way of the Cross
- Funeraria
- The treasury
- Bibliography