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After the installation of four saintly statutes and completion of the sanctuary in Our Mother of Perpetual Help Chapel last May, minor renovations continued throughout this past semester. By the time students departed the New England campus for Christmas vacation, they could see the fruits of behind-the-scenes work in the sacristies, as well as the completion of the Chapel鈥檚 shrine to Our Mother Perpetual Help and new ornamentation in the building鈥檚 ceiling.

Sanctuary closetsThe newly reconstructed chaplain鈥檚 sacristy has been furnished with elegant cabinets and drawers designed to match the Chapel鈥檚 altar rails. These cabinets were specifically constructed to include spacious closets for hanging long copes, albs, and gothic chasubles, as well as drawers to lay out the chaplains鈥 roman chasubles. The acolytes鈥 sacristy sits to the right of the high altar, accoutered with the same style cabinets and complete with a walk-in closet holding the altar servers鈥 cassocks and surplices.

Before the completion of the sacristy, Head Chaplain Rev. Greg Markey made use of a makeshift sacristy in the Chapel鈥檚 basement. The completion of the permanent sacristy now aids in the unity of the liturgy and the connection between the priest and the servers. 鈥淔or the past two and a half years, we were down in the basement that stored our vestments and sacred vessels,鈥 says Fr. Markey. 鈥淭he newly completed sacristy helps with the entire flow of the liturgy.鈥

Our Mother of Perpetual Help shrineThe work on the sacristy is part of a three-year project to transform the erstwhile Sage Chapel 鈥 built more than 100 years ago on the campus of what was then a Protestant boarding School 鈥 for Catholic worship. Among the other recent renovations was the installation of a side shrine to the Chapel鈥檚 patroness, Our Mother of Perpetual Help, a replica of whose has hung for the last two years just outside the Chapel鈥檚 sanctuary.

In a unifying manner, carpenters framed the shrine in a similar manner as that found in the alcove of the saintly statues on the high altar. The arching pattern remains the same, but the shrine鈥檚 space is rounded to accommodate Our Lady鈥檚 icon. 鈥淲e have a beautiful blend of two art styles,鈥 says Fr. Markey, 鈥渁n Eastern-style icon placed into the context of a neo-gothic frame.鈥

Next painters will adorn the woodwork with exquisite gold leaf and blue hues, similar to those in the high altar. In due time, the College also plans to replace the replica icon with an original, written by a cloistered nun from the Monastic Sisters of Bethlehem in Bethlehem, New York.

Meanwhile, scaffolding has returned once more to the Chapel nave, as painters bedeck the Chapel鈥檚 ceiling with a resplendent azure blue coat complemented by detailed stencils. 鈥淲e have plenty of work left,鈥 said Fr. Markey. 鈥淏ut everything is in place to be completed before the dedication of the Chapel in March.鈥