
Lutheran writer and humorous church historian Luke T. Harrington writes about the history of church pews.
In Lutherโs day and before, everyone stood or kneeled sometimes in church. ย The pews were invented first as private boxes that allowed the nobility to avoid mixing with the vulgar masses. ย Then they kept evolving.
Read what happened, including a cultural study of sitting, after the jump.
From Luke T. Harrington,ย The History of Pews Is Just as Terrible and Embarrassing as Youโd Imagine โ Christ and Pop Culture:
Is there anything more reassuringย than a church pew?
Simple. Humble. Sturdy. Two rough-hewn planks, fastened with a handful of nails, permanently fixed to the floorโand open to all. Occasionally padded, often not; not comfortable, exactly, but comforting.ย An invitation to the weary traveler to sit and hear the Word of God proclaimed; a simple reminder that we follow a humble, crucified carpenter; the perfect symbol that all are equal at the foot of the cross. From the greatest king to the poorest pauper, from the holiest saint to the most desperate sinner, all have sat in these pewsย before us, pondering their failingsย and begging for mercy. Despite the advent of stadium-style seating and auditorium-likeย worship halls, the simple, ancient pew enduresโand no wonder, because it is, and always has been, the perfect metaphor for the faith.
Seating in churches didnโt really become a thing until parishioners got bored enough to wish they were sitting downโthat is, about the time of the Protestant Reformation.
Exceptโnothing I just said is even remotely true. In fact, itโs pretty much the exact opposite of all that. Would you like to know the true story of the pew? Okay, thenโbuckle up. (But not actually, though, because pews donโt have seatbelts.)
It turns out that thereโs no evidence of churches having seating of any kind for at least the first 1,400 years or so of Christianity. In other words, Augustine, Athanasius, Jerome, Thomas Aquinas, Martin Luther, John Calvinโall those guys very likely livedย their whole lives attendingย churches that were standing-room-only. During ancient Christian worship, parishioners could stand, kneel, or even mill about the nave if they so chose.ย Thereโs no record of whether they engaged in stage dives and crowd surfing, so weโre forced to assumeย they did.