One of my favorite ways to record choirs is utilizing the MS technique. It can be easily de-coded by most audio software. By virtue of the way it works, you only need to set up a pair of centered microphones. You can adjust the stereo width electronically, which is pretty cool. It also offers zero phasing problems because of the process used. It is also 100% mono compatible. Meaning that if your stereo signal is collapsed to mono, there will be no cancellation of signals due to phasing anomalies. In fact, the side to side microphone electronically disappears when the signal is collapsed to mono. Only the centered mono microphone is then heard. This is cool stuff and I dig it!! Can you dig it?? (This modern terminology may be too modern for you?)
Looking at your microphone list I would utilize the AKG414 in figure of 8 mode, which will face the side left and right opposing walls and is considered the "S" or side microphone of the MS pair. The "M" microphone is your middle microphone and its capsule must be mounted as close to the figure of 8 capsule as possible but at a 90° perpendicular position i.e. facing forward. There are numerous commercial stereo microphone brackets but none that really feature MS oriented placement that are easy to find. So you have to get imaginative with microphone mounting hardware to make it work if you are not using an already created single point MS stereo microphone, like the Shure 88 MS stereo condenser microphone.
So if I were you, I would utilize the Neumann TLM103 as the center or middle microphone, facing the choir as the director does. Usually around 6 to 8 feet behind the conductor and positioned from half as high to slightly above the choir.
Without an on-site transformer or operational amplifier decoder, monitoring is somewhat peculiar since you will be listening to a mono middle microphone (most likely in your left channel) and a mono-side to side microphone (most likely in your right channel). As long as your meters are moving and you hear no extraneous overload, distortion or other interference, you are good. Some software offers real-time VST style plug-ins which can allow your computer to decode the MS signal in real-time, such as Wave Lab from Steinberg for monitoring purposes but most can't do that.
For a real kick, try the above with an XY or ORTF pair utilizing the Shure SM 81's into a second pair of inputs and compare the 2! I think you will really enjoy the MS style?
Why do you think I'm called "MS Remy Ann David"?