Throughout history, many souls have been attracted to the Catholic faith by the beauty of her magnificent churches. As the Pontifical Council for Culture stated in 2006: "The via pulchritudinis [‘way of beauty’] can open the pathway for the search for God." The document goes on to ask: "Do not the cathedrals and churches of the West and East reach a summit of splendor when a liturgy streaming with beauty is celebrated by a gathered crowd?" The document bemoans "the ugliness of some churches and their decoration, their desacralization," which it ascribes to the modern "divorce" between religion and art.
The Archbishop's comments may provide a clue as to why the Traditional Latin Mass tends to result in beautiful renovations of the churches where it is celebrated-- indeed, even when it is celebrated in gymnasiums. And why the Novus Ordo Missae is so often associated with the ugly "wreckovations" that have occurred since the Second Vatican Council. In large part, it will be the unquenchable longing for beauty in the human soul that leads us back to tradition.