Aesthetic beauty, which we find in the sacred art and architecture of the synagogue, the church, and the mosque, demonstrates a genre of correspondence. Borrowing from John Ruskin's Seven Lamps of Architecture, I will refer to this genre of correspondences as the seven lamps (" lamps" meaning that which illuminates the mind or soul) of sacred architecture. They are: sacrifice, truth, power, beauty, life, memory, and obedience; and when combined, they enhance devout practice and provide spiritual vitality in the sacred spaces they fill. Ruskin first proposed the seven lamps of sacred architecture in 1848 when he carefully examined the essence of Gothic architecture in Europe. It was Ruskin who first argued that these seven lamps sustain the essential character of religious architecture.
Year
              2002
          Language
              English
          Abstract
              
      
        English
        
ISSN/ISBN
               0011-1952
          No. of Pages
              328-341
          Number
              3
          Volume
              52
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          CIS Program Old
          
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              No
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              No
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