|
|
History
The San Antonio Missions are four colonial-era churches that were established
throughout the 18th century as an outreach of the Spanish/Mexican Catholic Church. The missions' Franciscan Fathers ministered to the needs of the native people and at the same time spread their religious message. The missions also became
economic centers of trade, agriculture and crop irrigation, as well as livestock and cattle ranching. However, after
secularization in 1824, the four missions were largely neglected. In the early 1900's the Catholic Church once again assumed responsibility and have since worked towards preserving their structural, historical and spiritual
significance.
Click on any of the
photographs of the missions
above,
or these links, to read more
about
Mission Espada,
Mission
San José,
Mission San Juan,
or Mission Concepción.
Las Misiones Campaign Goal
The goal of this project is to restore the church buildings to their original
vitality by funding and partially endowing (1) the regular and scientific
care of the native limestone walls and structures, and (2) the aesthetic and
liturgical enhancement of the worship spaces inside the churches. All of
this is to be accomplished while respecting the historic integrity of the
interiors and exteriors of the churches.
Today, as the San Antonio Missions near the 300th anniversary of their
founding, they continue to serve as parish churches. As churches of the
Archdiocese of San Antonio, the Missions continue to serve stable
communities of parishioners and numbers of visitors each year.
To provide for their enduring care, the churches were organized under
the umbrella non-profit organization, Old San Antonio Missions, Inc.
The four churches at the heart of the Old Spanish Missions, or
Las Misiones, are first and foremost vital places of worship with
tremendous historical, religious, and cultural significance. For nearly
300 years, Missions Espada, San Juan, San José, and Concepción have
served as places of worship and education while being centers of
communal and cultural life among the Native Americans, religious orders,
early colonists, settlers and traders who peopled the area now known as
San Antonio, Texas.
Today, these Missions are no longer residential communities but remain
active and vibrant parochial communities and centers of tourism. No less
than the historic churches of Rome, Paris, or Mexico City, these Mission
churches draw people from around the world to see and experience the
wonder of this continuing celebration of life and divine goodness. At the
same time, people of every faith and no faith who are interested in the
historical, anthropological, and archeological significance of these churches
and their Mission grounds are drawn to these historic sites.
|