06 17 22 Vol. 43 No. 41

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THELEAVEN.ORG | VOL. 43, NO. 41 | JUNE 17, 2022

BUILDING THE KINGDOM

LEAVEN PHOTO BY JAY SOLDNER

Luke Trausch, a sophomore at St. Marys Junior-Senior High, works on a wood altar as a school shop project for the new eucharistic adoration chapel at Immaculate Conception Parish.

High schooler crafts lasting legacy to parish in shop class By Joe Bollig joe.bollig@theleaven.org

S

T. MARYS — If Dostoevsky was right and “Beauty will save the world,” then one shop student here has already played his part. Luke Trausch, a 16-year-old sophomore at St. Marys Junior-Senior High, built a wood altar as a school shop project for the new eucharistic adoration chapel at Immaculate Conception Parish. But this was no ordinary shop project. Trausch wanted to make something challenging, something unique. “It’s a little bit more special than building a chest of drawers,” said Trausch. “It’s a bigger accomplishment building this [rather] than a coat rack or something way smaller.” His shop instructor agreed. If it’s not the most ambitious wood project he’s ever seen done at the school, it ranks among them,

LEAVEN PHOTO BY JAY SOLDNER

Keith Aubert, woods technology teacher at St. Marys Junior-Senior High and member of Immaculate Conception Parish, helps Luke Trausch with his altar project. said Keith Aubert, woods technology teacher at the high school and member of Immaculate Conception Parish. “It’s right up there,” he said. “It’s pretty advanced.”

The altar, which has a “traditional” design echoing a style once common in many Catholic churches, is made of red oak. It’s seven feet high (84 inches), a bit over 5 feet wide (68 inches) and a little more

than two feet deep (32 inches). It has a cinnamon stain to match the chapel. A monstrance will occupy the central niche at the top. Below the niche is a rectangular space with the words “Ecce Agnus Dei” (Latin for “Behold the Lamb of God”). On the face of the altar, below, are the letters “IHS,” the Greek monogram for the name “Jesus.” When Father Justin Hamilton arrived at Trausch’s church, Immaculate Conception, in July 2020, there had been a lot of preparation for the construction of a new parish hall, new grotto and new eucharistic adoration chapel. “The building committee brought me up to speed,” said Father Hamilton. “I discovered that there hadn’t been a whole lot of thought about what the interior of the chapel would look like. Things were up in the air about the furnishings, altar, lighting, pews and painting.” This, decided Father Hamilton, >> See “YEARLONG” on page 4


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06 17 22 Vol. 43 No. 41 by The Leaven - Issuu