The Oratorio and Casa de Loreto -- San Miguel de Allende

Guanajuato, Mexico

Visited December 2007

Oratorio


The temple above is not a parish church but rather an Oratory, a special church devoted to preaching.  Greatly expanded in 1712, today the Oratorio of San Filipe Neri it is San Miguel's most active house of worship.[35]     

The secularist

Probably St. Philip Neri3In front of the Oratorio stands this statue, most likely of Saint Philip Romolo Neri who lived ascetically through 80 years of 16th century  Italy, founding a most unusual congregation. Most religious orders required members to take vows including that of poverty, where all property would be held by the congregation in common.  The antithesis of the organizational man, Philip went the other way: priests would remain secular; not only would they be able to hold property, but they would be required to pay for their meals  at the common table by a monthly contribution. They could leave the Congregation or the Oratory anytime they wanted.  Groups spun out from his were to remain autonomous and he even refused to write up the rules of his group (but his followers did after his death).  

His priests were secular and devoted to preaching.  They conducted services in a hall called an oratorio.  Originally their services called for four long sermons, but these were soon shortened to  a half-hour each.  When a bell rang, the priest shut up. Then the music started and these special compositions became known as Oratorios.  (Yes, that Messiah thing.)  Priests were discouraged from the "fire and brimstone" approaches and told to talk of love, sneaking in corrective actions rather than dwelling on their congregations sins.  As in America's mega-churches of today, this "theology lite" took off.   Oratories spread throughout Europe.  (Today there are still 70 -- still with no central authority.  Philip was not an organizational man; each community was to be pretty much autonomous.)

The Jesuits took the opposite tack with a traditional religious order  controlled from a central authority, often called the Black Pope.  Both Philip's and Ignatius's followers found success in battling the Protestant Reformation, at least until the Jesuits were disbanded.  Philip's Oratories stayed including this one in San Miguel even after the Spanish King expelled the Jesuits in the 18th century.

The stolen church

The facade resembles somewhat that of the Cathedral of Zacatecas with columns decorated with fungus on the top story and wrapped leaves below.

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Note the "new" facade typical of the second stage of Mexican baroque.  

San Miguel created its Oratorio in 1712 when it invited a famous preacher from the town of Patzcuaro to deliver a series of Lenten sermons.  Don Juan Antonio Perez de Espinoza did such a good job that the Miguelinos invited him to stay.  They picked this site; unfortunately there was already a church here -- one built by the mulattoes, descendants of the African slaves brought from the West Indies to this area to man the mines -- the local indigenous people refused to do that work.   The mulattoes called their chapel "Ecce Homo."[221] 

The mulattoes objected, of course.   But when they came to court to protest, the scroll upon which they had outlined their case turned out to be blank when  unrolled!  This miracle of omission was taken as a sign that the Oratorio was to take over their humble church.[37] 

Below is a close-up of the upper stories.  The tower repairs are paid for by the Mexican government (since it owns the outside of the churches after nationalizing  church exteriors and land in the 1860s.)
Oratorio



The facade is constructed of rose quarry stone.[234]   At right is the statue in the east alcove.  This saint carries both scripture and saber.
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The Mulatto Church

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Above and below are photos of the old (east) facade of the Mulatto church (Hermandad de Mulatos --Brotherhood of the Mulattos [234]); this was their entrance until the Oratorio expanded the building and added the larger south facade.  While not unadorned, the stone carving is simpler.  The angel below is thought to have an indigenous nose. 
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To some extent, the poor have taken this church back while the rich have moved on to the  church of San Francisco (click here to get there).  

The spires and domes of the Oratorio

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The Oratorio has a lot of vertical activity but little architectural consistency on the outside.   The checkerboard paint reduces the monotony of the lower spire but does steal some of the impact from its neo-classical top.  At left and below:  The dome over the Casa de Loreto (which we will discuss later).

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Oratorio interior

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Inside 33 oil paintings depict scenes from the life of St. Philip Neri.  However, we found most intriguing this confessional (above) with separate sides for men and women.  The Canals, the town's richest family, once wanted to establish a convent next door but the Spanish king refused as it was too near the priests quarters.  He was afraid they might get into bad habits.  Eventually the Canal's oldest daughter started an order of nuns and joined as their head when she was 16.  The order still functions several blocks away at Las Monjas, click to go there.


Santa Casa de Loreto

2007_12_09_San_Miguel_de_Allende -26_Jardin_Lauretano_Casa_de_Loreto 12-8-2007 11-47-59 PM.JPGSurprisingly, the most elegant interior among the hundreds of houses of worship in San Miguel is locked behind these simple doors. We found an indigenous senior citizen with a key who opened its riches to us but discouraged  picture taking, otherwise this chapel would have its own pages.

The chapel is a 1735 replica of the Santa Casa (holy house) where Mary, the mother of Jesus, lived in the holy land.  The Loreto refers to the Italian town which houses the 400 square foot house where Mary was born and raised.  The house itself was razed in 1291 when Angels grew sick of the Saracen atrocities committed inside of it. They flew the Santa Casa from Nazareth, alighting first in the Balkans and finally at Loreto in Italy where a large basilica now shelters this mobile home and Our Lady of Loreto is now the patron saint of pilots.  (Do house movers get a patron saint? How about the air freight folks?)  At any rate, the faithful and numerous popes believe the place to be miraculous, giving a new meaning to Papal Bull.

Scholars point out that common people doing uncommonly good works were called (as is sometimes the case today) angels and the structure most likely was transported by sea.  The materials of Loreto's Santa Casa are those found in Palestine and not typical of that part of Italy.  But this more mundane version was probably not of interest to the wealthy Manuel Tomas de la Canal who built this replica to honor the family's patron saint, the Virgin of Loreto.[38]     

Below is our lone photo of the interior.  The dimensions are exact but the furnishings are a little more gilded than what the Holy Family lived in.  This part of the chapel is octagonal under the dome seen above.  Somehow these riches were preserved during the various revolutions when the interiors of many rich churches were gutted.  To defend this place, priests stretched a rope across its entrance and tied a rosary to it.  Somehow the attackers would not cross that religious barrier.[40]      
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Jardin Lauretano


The Oratorio and Casa Sacra frame an atrium called the Jardin Lauretano, after the Laurel grove that gave the Italian shrine of Loreto its name.  The ornaments here suggest that the garden was landscaped and furnished in 2002.  We found it to be a restful and nearly empty oasis near the busy markets.  During festivals, the poor camp  here -- near the richest public interior in town.
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Below the traditional fountain in the Jardin  Lauretano:

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A statue to the Virgin of Loreto(?) stands below modern lighting and above traditional wrought iron and ceramic furnishings:

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