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Church|Mon, Feb. 25 2008 11:35 AM EST

Churches Urged to be More Artist-Friendly, Transform Culture

By Michelle A. Vu|Christian Post Reporter

Hundreds of pastors, church leaders and artists will gather for the first Church and the Arts conference to learn how the Church can reach out to artists and encourage them to transform culture in a biblical way.

“Transforming Culture: A Vision for the Church and the Arts” stems from the sense that too often pastors do not know how to connect with artists or nurture their talents to advance the kingdom of God.

“A journalist name Steve Turner noted that when Time magazine compiled a list of the 100 most significant people in the twentieth-century for art and entertainment, there were only five who have shown any public sign of the Christian faith,” co-organizer David Taylor, arts pastor at Hope Chapel in Austin, Texas, highlighted to The Christian Post.

Taylor said the lack of Christian artists in mainstream society and his realization that pastors were not invited to discussions about art and culture sparked the idea for the conference.

“Our overriding desire is to inspire a movement among pastors and artists to lay hold of God’s great purposes for the church,” conference organizers stated. “We wish to encourage a more theologically informed, biblically grounded, liturgically sensitive, artistically alive and missionally shrewd vision for the arts.”

The symposium, which is being held Apr. 1-3 in Austin, Texas, seeks to be a platform where pastors and artists can have an opportunity to learn and to be in conversation with each other. The three areas of concerns are: art and worship of the church; art and the community of the church; art and the mission of the church.

“It is not an option for the church to ignore the arts or the effects the arts and the media are having upon people,” Taylor said. “It is shaping our imagination and the way we see, the way we understand truth, the way we perceive what is beautiful, and the way we see our relationship with one another.”

“If the church doesn’t have a presence – an intelligent, thoughtful, winsome, gracious and even prophetic voice – then people are getting shaped in all kinds of wacky ways,” he added.

Congregants are not neutral minds waiting to be shaped by the pastor, he noted, but their minds are already shaped by the media.

According to the Center for Screen Time Awareness, the number of 30-second commercials that the average child views in one year is 20,000. Moreover, a recent Barna study found that the average American spends 20 times more hours with the media than in religious activities.

“So we as the church, we need to release our communities, including the artists in our communities, to be agents of grace and transformation in the culture of all arts,” Taylor urged.

He observed that pastors generally are not given any training on how to care for artists, and that the majority of artists do not feel at home in most churches.

“I think we as pastors need to listen and ask ourselves what does it mean for us to care for this flock of sheep,” said Hope Chapel’s arts pastor. “Pastors are gatekeepers – they let things in and keep things out. If we inspire a pastor for aesthetic renewal it can open doors not only for a new kind of artistic activity in the church, but also the kind of discipleship that artists need to become mature agents of grace in the culture.” Continue >>

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  • Wed Apr 02, 2008 10:30 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    As an artist and a Christian minister, I'm very interested in this conference. I'm unable to attend this one, but if you have any in the future, please let me know. Thank you. Ann Post

  • Wed Feb 27, 2008 4:06 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I think this is a wonderful. As an artist myself-I have looked toward God and Church for inspiration. Artist are usually misunderstood when we really just want you to see us for who we are. I think this will help to bring us together. Thank you for this article.

  • Tue Feb 26, 2008 10:12 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    great story ! a currently living example of this can be found at www.eagledove.com
    also note a word from last year @ www.hopereeder.com/pages.asp?pageid=66719
    yes- we are all called to transform the culture we live in by holding up the Light of Jesus in as many places as we can...I'm sure many lives have been changed by finding out the story behind a particular piece of art that had "spoken" and tugged on the heart...

  • Tue Feb 26, 2008 9:20 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Thank you for this story. I agree that when someone expresses their form of art it does touch a person's soul. I have been writing inspirational poetry by the grace of God and I have had numerous people tell me to publish it to share it with others. They say it lifts them up and encourages them, or one man said that after reading one poem he realized he needs to find a church to attend, another said it is exactly what they needed to hear or one said that it is God. The more scripture I read and the closer relationship I have with our Lord creates within me a joy and love that I must share as we are asked to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ with others. Many souls are lost and weary and feel abandoned. God gives us so abundantly and I love to share His love from within with others....to let them know of His light and comforting love. Art in various forms does touch the depths of a person's soul...let us edify one another with it and shine the light of Jesus from within us outward with all glory to God! Peace to you dear brethren. Sincerely, Carol Ann Aguilar

  • Tue Feb 26, 2008 5:23 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    As an artist who has been allowed to paint during worship in our church since June of last year 2007, I think there is a aspect of the arts that is being missed. God has brought forth some pretty awesome art that on my own I could never paint. I am just as awed at what I paint as well as the congregation.
    Art adds another level of dimention to the worship and much of the time a picture comes forth depicting the message brought forth by the speaker. Many times some one or more of the congregation will come to me afterward to tell me the painting was a picture God gave them during prayer before service or sometime during the week.
    My suggestion is don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. After all what you think won't work is proving it does work and people are effected along with the word.
    here is a link to my work. Judge for yourself.

    http://www.freewebs.com/pirategirlgifts/lauriespropheticart.htm

  • Tue Feb 26, 2008 5:07 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Yes - Online4Him, "more artist friendly!" Not to the exclusion of anyone else, but the Church needs to reach out to artists as it would to any other group and value their gifting. Are they not part of the body?

    Can they not be a part of "transforming culture? I'm not sure what you are afraid of...

    Hal

  • Tue Feb 26, 2008 4:12 pm Agree: 4   Disagree: 0

    Churches Urged to be More Artist-Friendly, Transform Culture????????

    How about preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ? This is the only instrument that we need to transform anyone.

    “Transforming Culture: A Vision for the Church and the Arts” stems from the sense that too often pastors do not know how to connect with artists or nurture their talents to advance the kingdom of God."

    Sounds like another "Oxford Movement" that undermined the Anglican Church. We do not need "art"; we need Jesus - period.

  • Mon Feb 25, 2008 11:44 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Um, here's a question- If Time Magazine says only five Christians were among the most significant artists and entertainers of the 20th century, then would that not serve as an example of a) where that particular magazines ideaology lay and b) just how breathtaking a Christian artist/ entertainer had to be to crack the list?

  • Mon Feb 25, 2008 1:37 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    Quote from story :
    "“A journalist name Steve Turner noted that when Time magazine compiled a list of the 100 most significant people in the twentieth-century for art and entertainment, there were only five who have shown any public sign of the Christian faith,” co-organizer David Taylor, arts pastor at Hope Chapel in Austin, Texas, highlighted to The Christian Post."

    Why does the church really want recognition from TIME magazine? At the very least, the world's tastes need to be transformed before they will even acknowledge truly God-honoring art. And for art to "transform {the} culture in a biblical way" or "advance the kingdom of God" is a little like expecting someone's reflection in a mirror to actually change the way they really look.

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