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Interview with the Author: Anne Rice

 

I’ve asked I AM SECOND to clarify whether how this fits together with the other footage out there of her saying she ‘quits Christianity’…watch her here and watch this space for an update when I hear back from I AM SECOND.

The necessity of an extravagant creation?

My friend, Jenny Ihn, has written about

The necessity of an extravagant creation?.

It is a review article of The Biennial Conference in Philosophy, Religion and Culture, held in Sydney in late 2010. The theme was ‘Creation, Nature and the Built Environment’.

Platonic philosophy is dehumanizing, precisely because it does not correspond to the way we experience our world.

read more at the Centre for Public Christianity Website: CPX

The life of a musician… Dan Ford

5 years ago, what was the biggest dream of your heart?
5 years ago I was playing in a Heavy Metal band, and all I wanted to do was become a rock star and tour the world.

Is that the current dream for Dan Ford?
Most definitely not. The current dream is live a life worth of the calling I have received, as someone redeemed by Christ’s death and resurrection, and tell others the Good News!

Why did you form the band ‘Dan Ford & the Goods’?
Initially I formed the band because I had a bunch of songs that were centered around God, and I wanted to play them with other Christians. But as I grew in knowledge of God and of our reason for being here, I realised that in everything we do we should be making the most of the situation to spread the gospel. So Dan Ford and The Goods became a platform for ministry. If the band ever ventures away from that then it’ll be time to call it quits.

Do you think Christians should pursue a career in music?

Hmm.. That’s a hard one. It’s something I’ve had to think about a lot. There is definitely a huge opportunity for muso’s to share the gospel with HEAPS of people. If you’re playing sold out gigs every night then you could possibly be bringing the message to hundreds of different people every week.

I think it depends on the individuals and their outlook on music. If music is your main ministry and there’s no other form of ministry you could be doing more effectively, then yeah you have grounds to pursue it as a career. If you’re not using music for ministry, then don’t pursue it.

A big problem is that if it becomes your career then it could possibly drag you away from church quite a lot. That’s definitely something to consider…

Have you ever thought that writing congregational worship music would be a better use of your time and talent?
Worship is definitely the most important type of music. At first I couldn’t write congregational music. It was too hard for me. I found I had to limit myself and simplify phrases to make it easier for a congregation to sing. But I have written a couple of songs now. I wish I had the talent to write congregational music more, lucky for me there’s some really talented people at my church who spit ‘em out like no tomorrow! But having said that I believe there needs to be more music which appeals to secular audiences, with lyrics that challenge people and create opportunities for the gospel to be explained. Both sides of Christian music are needed.

The arts for God’s glory and the spread of his fame

All artworks have a worldview or belief that the artist believes, is exploring or challanging and often the value of an artwork is derived from how well this message or voice is communicated. We prize certain artworks because they say something to us, and if that moves us personally we prize the artwork even more because of what it has communicated to us. This is where subjectivity comes into play. Some artworks speak with great motion and clarity to some people, while remaining silent to others. Regardless, the artworks still offer communication to us, and it is this communication that opens doors of dialogue in the art world.

As Christians we can take advantage of this by encouraging our brethren artists and creatives to continue developing their God-given gifts bringing themes of depravity, grace, redemption, glory into the discourse of the art world as well as sharing the toil and joy of the Christian experience. We can’t keep letting the world have the best art and dominating the ears of our culture with the voice of this age. The art world is a realm where philosophy and humanity are freely discussed. We need a Christian voice to inform this realm and engage the culture that is of beauty and truth.

The life of a Performer… part 2

GUEST POST by Christy Tennant, International Arts Movement (Part 2 of 2)
Christy serves the movement as Director of Public Relations: Global Community | Musician | Actor | Writer

In the summer of 2005, I was selected to teach English as a Foreign Language at a university in China, and one of the reasons they selected me was because I had a background in theater. They wanted me to stage a play for the students I would be teaching. I laughed privately at the irony that I had given up theater in order to serve God as a missionary, and what he wanted me to do as a missionary depended on my expertise in theater arts. After that summer, I came back to the United States and continued to prepare to go overseas, not quite getting that God still had a plan for my artistic passion. But over the next two years, my path continued to cross with people working in the arts who were also devoted Christians. They were both excellent at their crafts, whether painters or writers or dancers or actors, as well as devout in their faith.

In 2007, I reconnected with Laurie Horvath, who was hosting wine and cheese gatherings for female NYC-based singer/songwriters. Her husband, Bryan, had become the Executive Director of International Arts Movement. Over the course of several months, with meals at their home and Starbucks meetings with Bryan and Mako Fujimura, I had a moment that I call my “Signs” moment. At the end of the movie “Signs,” many seemingly unrelated things come together for one great purpose. That was how I felt after those months of meetings. I realized that my passion for the arts, married to my passion for making the world a better place by serving people, could be the very best way for me to serve both God and humanity. I accepted a position on staff with IAM and have been growing consistently in my own artistic career ever since, even as I devote much of my time each day to building up a movement of artists and creative catalysts around the globe.

In 2009, I began noticing that I had a desire to act again. I started to pray periodically about how that might look in the bigger picture of my role at IAM and the work I do there. Then, a few projects literally came to me – a new stage musical, which turned into a recording project; a short film shot in D.C.; a 48-hour film challenge. After several years off-stage and off-set, it felt wonderful to be back in front of the camera, going through my lines and hitting my marks. I rejoined the actors unions and got new headshots, and am now very excited about what the future holds, both in my role at IAM as the host of IAM Conversations, as well as possible future roles on stage that are yet to be determined.

I think the thing I have continued to marvel at over and over is that God loves the arts. He loves creativity, and he honors those who long to serve him vocationally as artists. I feel God’s pleasure when I sing, when I dance, when I act. There is incredible joy and freedom in realizing that God actually appoints some people to be artists, and that being the best artist they can be is their holy act of worship.

That is my hope in everything I do: that the fragrance that rises from my life, both on stage and off, is a pleasing offering to the God I love.

The story that needs to be told…

As a prolific writer, I sometimes challenge myself by asking the question “does this story need to be told?” More often than not, I find that when I really think hard about it, it does not seem so.  And thus, I often resolve myself to thinking that I just do not have enough good stories to tell and have not seen the world well enough to capture it in words– whether written or spoken.  But, here is the thing: no one sees the world quite as I do, and by not telling stories because I am afraid that mine are not needed, I may be robbing the world of a story deeper than those I wish I had the capacity to tell……

“We turn to stories and pictures and music because they show us who and what and why we are, and what our relationship is to life and death, what is essential and what, despite the arbitrariness of falling beams, will not burn.” We tell stories because they help us remember who we are, and what in the world we are doing here. Sometimes a story is a tool that helps an author remember who he or she is….

Here, stories become needed, not because the author felt that they were needed but instead because there is a deep human longing for truth, meaning, and relationship that extends beyond material need. Good stories scratch the itch that lies just below the surface of things, churning up just enough dust to make others curious. Needed?

Read the rest of  Rebecca Horton‘s article at the Curator Magazine blog.

The Life of a Performer… part 1

GUEST POST by Christy Tennant, International Arts Movement (Part 1 of 2)
Christy serves the movement as Director of Public Relations: Global Community | Musician | Actor | Writer


The legend around my home is that I could plunk out recognizable melodies on the piano before I could walk, so I guess it’s safe to say my journey as a performing artist goes back to the very beginning – at least, my beginning. I was six years old the first time I held a microphone and sang the “special music” at my church. My grandfather cried, and I knew I had a gift. I knew that I loved to stir people by singing or, later, acting and dancing for them.

I was twelve when I did my first show in a real theater, and I was sixteen when I started getting paid for it. By the time I was nineteen, I was spending my days and nights traveling around the United States as part of a professional theater company, staying in hotels for weeks on end, performing on some of the most endearing stages in the country, including the historic Tivoli (Chattanooga), Andy Griffith Playhouse (Mt. Airy, NC), and the Grand Ol’ Opry (Nashville). That touring experience was one of the most educational times of my life, as I spent time listening to actors who were much older and more seasoned, and who took great delight in getting me to drink margaritas. I became a better actor, but I also began losing sight of who I had been taught I was. My childhood faith in Jesus Christ began to disappear in the glare of the stage lights, and a chasm grew between my faith and my career.

By the time I was twenty-four, I had added many more roles to my resume, on stage and screen. I was well on my way to a successful performing career, when a series of conversations and events, including a boyfriend who followed and Indian guru, caused me to revisit my own faith. I knew that my lifestyle and the faith I claimed to have did not jive. I was professing Jesus with my lips, but denying him with my actions, and that became a real problem for me.

One day, confronted by the passage from Revelation 3:15-16, I knew that it was time for the rubber to meet the road in my life; I knew that I needed to decide whether I was a Christian or not. I chose Christ and began following him with all my heart practically overnight. Unfortunately, I did not have a paradigm at that time to understand how my vocation as an actress fit in with my new commitment to Christ. So, after a couple of years in my new faith, I quit auditioning and began preparing for a life as a missionary overseas. (To be continued…)

Why Art?

Why Art?
God created the universe. God created us. Because we were created in His image, we have inherited the creative impulse from our heavenly Father. We all express that God-given creativity in wildly diverse ways, but certainly visual art is one of them. Our humble attempts to form art, like anything else we do throughout our days, should be offered in a God-ward trajectory of worship and should be offered to other people as acts of love. We believe the cultivation of smart, skilled, conceptually rich and beautiful art, coming from gospel-centered Christians, will result in a healthier, more beautiful church and more livable cities.

from Sojourn Church – Visual Arts Ministry

When mission looks like a cupcake…

Physically, on the ground our week long mission looks like art exhibition and prize, accompanied with a prize night for the entrants, Fair Trade markets with cupcakes and coffee, live music at night, kids art workshop, playtime under the bridge and more! There is pretty much something for everyone!

BUT Spiritually, it is all about MISSION!

As much as I love art, cupcakes, coffee, balloons, bbq’s, and having our face painted I love Jesus more and am convinced He is worthy of all creations worship. I want to see more worshipers around the throne, worshiping the lamb, not just because I know the benefits they will receive in doing so, but more importantly because Jesus deserves their worship. He is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. All the outreach ministries of our church aim to glorify Jesus by gathering more and more worshipers of him.

I want to create places for smiling faces, where people can meet Christians, gain exposure to gospel community and hopefully encounter Jesus. As one of my favourite pastors John Piper, says “mission exists because worship doesn’t. And so with I ♥ Kirribilli, it only exists because worship doesn’t.

It might not look like a normal evangelistic mission… Its a week long program with only two spots where the gospel is shared formally – the prize night and the kids art workshop. We don’t have an the charismatic evangelist, Billy-Graham-type speaking to the masses. We aren’t going doorknocking, and there isn’t a youth rally.

Instead of just bringing in the ‘professional evangelists’ or thinking there just needs to be a formal preaching opportunity – the evangelism during this week is going to be done by each of you. We each have the treasure of the gospel and the power to share it. Sitting on the door of church welcoming people to the exhibition, giving them a peoples choice response slip, offering a free cupcake, sample of fair trade coffee gives you reason to be chatting and sharing your lives with people.

In many ways it is door knocking / walk up evangelism handed to us on a silver platter. It’s a lot less threatening for all involved, its natural, and its what church should be doing… gospelling people we meet.

We estimated 1000 people wandered through the church during the week, last year.  This is just the opportunity we have with the many unchurched neighbours and friends who enter or view the exhibition. We get the opportunity to plant little gospel seeds into people’s lives, and perhaps see others or ourselves water, and God give these seeds the growth.

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