T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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77.1 | Resurrection needed | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Haven't enuf pagans been burned? | Sat Oct 20 1990 21:41 | 38 |
| > What kind of relationship is there or should there be between
> Christianity and the arts?
The relationship between the arts and Christianity today is, imo,
pallid and anemic. The creative expression of our experience of
God and life that once flowed effortlessly out of the core of
humanity's being, has been systematically supressed for centuries,
particularly with the rise of the Industrial Revolution and the
Newtonian idea that the universe is one big machine.
Just look around and see what is cut first in our schools -- the arts:
music, dance, painting, drawing, sculpting... We don't see the value
of our children exploring their right brain, heck, we don't encourage
it in ourselves. The emphasis is on developing left brain analytical
thinking, of regurgitating facts and figures and theorums. (As you
can tell I've got a little 'charge' around this issue.)
What should the relationship be between Christianity and the arts? It
should be alive and vibrant! We need to encourage our children, we
need to encourage ourselves to express our awe and wonder of God and of
life through the arts. Words fail miserably at expressing our experiences
of the divine. The arts, our images are what begins to fill the gaps.
So what if no one gets what you're trying to express? The point is you
expressed it! God gets it!
If God touches you, paint, dance, or sing the experience! Find a way
to celebrate it. The arts can enliven our relationship with God. Us
white folk, especially, need to "get down with God", for heaven's sake!
:-) Allow the Holy Spirit to move our bodies, and more importantly, our
imaginations in praise and worship, to dance the scriptures, to sculpt
them, to paint them. To pray and express God with our whole beings.
Art is prayer. Art is communion. Without a healthy, vibrant
realtionship with the arts Christianity is simply a head-trip.
Without the arts God is as good as dead.
Karen
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77.2 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | Ancient Mother I hear Your song | Sat Oct 20 1990 21:46 | 7 |
|
Tell it, Kb!!!!!!!!! ;^)
Til we dance and drum together again,
cf ;^)!
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77.3 | It won't be soon enough cf!! :-) | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Haven't enuf pagans been burned? | Sat Oct 20 1990 22:16 | 1 |
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77.4 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Note while you vibrate | Sun Oct 21 1990 03:01 | 14 |
| Coincidentally, Carol and Karen, I am just now reading through the
section on the Via Creativa in Matthew Fox's book "Original Blessing".
Fox's view on art as meditation, and the importance of creativity, is
very interesting reading. I especially like this comment:
Our reason for trusting our images is that we ourselves are trusted
images. We are God's images, and God trusts us with that divine
power of imagination. We have been entrusted by God with our
capacity to imagine and to birth. If we are truly "God's work of
art," as Paul says we are, if we are truly God's extrovert
meditation, then surely we have no excuse for not trusting the
creative powers within us.
-- Mike
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77.5 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | Ancient Mother I hear Your song | Sun Oct 21 1990 14:27 | 12 |
|
RE: .4 Mike
YES!!!!!! :^)
Carole
P.S. Great personal name Mike. Makes for great creative images!
;^)
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77.6 | This my Quest | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Extended family | Thu May 09 1991 00:31 | 5 |
| I saw "Man of La Mancha" for the first time last weekend. Am
I alone or do others see parallels between Don Quixote de la Mancha,
Knight of the Woeful Countenance, and Jesus Christ?
Richard
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77.7 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Thu May 09 1991 09:07 | 1 |
| I think that was intentional ;-)
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77.8 | deliberate? | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Extended family | Fri May 10 1991 00:10 | 6 |
| Re: .7
Tell me more. I take it you know something? Or have done some
study?
Richard
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77.9 | Rant, Rave, and Ramble... .-) | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Tue Jul 16 1991 12:08 | 54 |
| I was just DIRing around and refound this topic...
A couple of weeks ago I caught a discussion on federal funding of the arts.
That's NOT the topic I want to discuss, but in the course of the show, of
course, the topic of Serano's photograph _Piss Christ_ came up.
What they mentioned was that the photograph is only half of the piece. The
other half is an essay, expressing the opinion that if Chirst were to return
today, He would not be pleased with much of what the church has done in His
name. The church has soiled Christ's work.
While many people have been offended by the apparently sacreligious title of
the photo, the work of art itself, which includes the essay, is radically
pro-Christian.
I have seen the photograph and find it a lovely image. Unaware of the title,
one sees a large format photograph of a crucifix surrounded by a golden halo.
Does anyone know the full text of the essay?
Peace,
Jim
p.s. re: previous replies.
Amen to the support of art education. I once had a wonderful conversation
with Elizabeth Busch, a Maine artist and member of the Govenor's board of art
education or some such organization. (I have several quilts by her so it was
a real thrill to speak and share art with her.) Art is currently in the same
catagory as recess, something you do to pass time till you get out of grade
school. She would like to see art education at the same level as English or
math. Plus an art therapist in every school district. Many children cannot
speak of the problems they have, but much can come out through their artistic
expression. (See Barbra Streisand's movie _Nuts_...)
Drumming. Gosh, every where I turn I see drumming. Here, and a friend of
mine has been taking African Drumming classes. Mickey Hart of the Grateful
Dead has written a book (I don't have it...yet.-) There are some amazing
spiritual aspects to music of all kinds, and drumming can be especially
powerful.
Support Live Music!
Oh, and everyone in the Boston area is invited to the Hatch Memorial Shell
8:00 Saturday evening, 3-August. The Harvard University Summer Pops Band will
be playing. It is a large (184 musicians at the first rehersal this season)
band open to the community. Playing is free, and so is the concert. I'll be
in the trombone section. .->======================:.
,,================================''
(( || || ,'|
Peace, ``============< |
`.|
Jim `
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77.10 | Up with the Arts! | CARTUN::BERGGREN | playing between shadow and light | Tue Jul 16 1991 12:43 | 7 |
| Jim,
I can attest to the spiritual experience drumming evokes.
;-) :-)
Karen
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77.11 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | I'm part of you/you're part of me | Tue Jul 16 1991 14:23 | 5 |
|
Ditto what Karen said! And Jim, I think you will enjoy Mickey's
book!
Carole
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77.12 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Glasnote. | Mon Sep 30 1991 16:39 | 55 |
| Recently I have become interested in art as a medium of philosophical
expression. In particular, my interest has focused on certain
"philosophical novels", such as Camus's "The Stranger" and Dostoyesvky's
"The Brothers Karamazov". What I find interesting about these novels
is that they address certain fundamental questions about the meaning of
life, questions that are important to me; and yet, unlike non-fictional
philosophical treatises, they can bypass any purely intellectual filters
and thus speak directly to the reader at a different, perhaps deeper
level.
Myths and stories often serve a valuable purpose in that way, as Joseph
Campbell aficionados would no doubt remind us. There is something
magical about the way a great novel speaks to the soul. So perhaps we
can find philosophical value not just in the more overtly
"philosophical" works of fiction, but in much of great art. But then
this raises all sorts of questions in my own mind. I have not
studied the philosophy of art, so my understanding is no doubt limited
on this topic.
Can we say that art speaks to us at a certain, perhaps non-verbal
level? If so, what does this say, if anything, about the notion of
"art for art's sake"? For how can we apply our "left brains" to a
rational, linear, and verbal analysis of art that nevertheless speaks
to our "right brains" at a non-verbal level? Does this point the way
the inadequacies of purely rational analysis, and suggest that holistic
modes of understanding are also important?
Do certain kinds of philosophy more lend themselves to artistic
expression than others? Is it a coincidence that existentialist
philosophers are often drawn to expressing themselves through novels
and plays?
Looking at the Bible, we see many works of poetry; much of the books of
the Hebrew prophets, for example, contained poetry. The Song of Songs
was a wonderful book of love poems. Many interpreters felt the need to
superimpose an allegory onto its meaning, suggesting that it "really"
had a theological meaning (e.g., the love between Christ and his
Church). I think that such an interpretation is unnecessary. To me,
the book speaks directly to, and celebrates, an aspect of human
experience, and does so through artistic expression rather than
literally expounding on the point; no rational, "right brain" ordering
of the story into a neat theological category is required. Similarly,
the fictional stories of Job, Ruth, and Jonah make their point through
art, evoking the emotions of pathos, joy, and humor. A similar point
could also be made about the two creation myths in Genesis, which
express the notion of God as creator.
None of this means that the historic elements of the Christian religion
are irrelevant. Far from it. Christianity and Judaism both server as
historical religions, that view God as acting through history. But the
artistic side of religion should not be ignored either, and I think
that is an important point--that religion can be both rational and
artistic.
-- Mike
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77.13 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Truth bears its own witness | Tue Oct 01 1991 09:48 | 21 |
| I think there has been a general de-valuing of the arts over the last
few centuries and an over-valuing of rationality. Both are sourced
through the respective parts of our brains, right and left hemispheres,
and any experience we have can be further enhanced, further understood
if both sides of our brain are given full opportunity to partake in it.
Last year I participated in a 5 day workshop called "Praying with the
Aramaic Jesus." It was extremely powerful. What made it so, was that
not only did we learn prayers in the Aramaic language, we also learned
some of the customs where you sing and dance the prayers, simultaneously.
This is the first time I experienced praying with my entire being.
Also, simply meditating on symbols, such as the Cross, or Star of David,
or Circle can be a profound experience, especially when you create them
yourself and bring them into different environments, (like nature) and
just be with them in silence and let them move you as they will.
*Thanks* for your thoughts Mike; this is a subject, (including the power
of myth and story) that is near and dear to my heart.
Karen
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