Throughout the past two thousand years, people have met in a variety of structures once a week to fellowship, study and pray to God. Some buildings have been more conducive to humble adoration while others are distracting. We here at Not Questions have done at least three minutes of intense Twitter scrolling and determined the four most spiritual types of walls.
Skulls — The author vaguely remembers hearing that sometimes the early church would hide away in crypts when persecution was at its worst. Hymns were sung and prayers lifted up among the bones and skulls of the dead. One wonders what the acoustics were like.
Frescos — If one is anti-icons, walls of images representing Bible stories are anathema. For those who can't read, however, they act as reminders of what God has done through history. Like help George kill a dragon or something.
Whatever the Sagrada Familia uses — I mean, that place is amazing. And don't get me started on Anton Gaudi, we'll be here all day.
Shiplap — It's affordable and pleasantly neutral, and makes a nice a backdrop for the worship leader's skinny jeans as well as the pastor's ironic hoodie.
Yes, thorough research reveals that skulls, frescos, whatever the Sagrada Familia is made of, and shiplap are the four most spiritual types of wall. Ultimately, the wall doesn't matter as much as the message. As long as the gospel is being preached, the building doesn't matter. A good place to start is the
Four Spiritual Laws.