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In My Solitude
By: Kenyon Adams It is arguable that the most important time in which an artist may invest is not in networking meetings or collaborative workshops but rather in time spent alone. I am not necessarily speaking of studio time or the practice room either, but of true, unencumbered, undistracted solitude. I realize that I am addressing urban dwellers so let me explain wha...
June 29, 2012 -
Being Displays Itself
By: Maria Fee We are people of the Word but our beloved text points to gathered sounds that ultimately utter God’s actions. From burning bush to a son nailed onto a tree—we hear activity. The whole biblical narrative from creation, fall, alienation to reconciliation exhibits, as von Balthasar relates, God’s “genuine unfolding of himself in the worl...
May 11, 2012 -
Whenever Our Hearts Condemn Us
By: Kenyon Adams This then is how we know that we belong to the truth, and how we set our hearts at rest in his presence whenever our hearts condemn us. For God is greater than our hearts, and he knows everything. Dear friends, if our hearts do not condemn us, we have confidence before God and receive from him anything we ask, because we obey his comman...
February 24, 2012 -
Body Life
By: Maria Fee Kenyon and I have written various times on this arts blog concerning the artist’s role towards undoing the mind-body separation evident in our society. We happen to believe that the aesthetics can mobilize and connect Christian being and doing. This is why the programming at InterArts Fellowship relies just as much on its artis...
January 13, 2012 -
Body Life
By: Kenyon Adams My wife Emily is a person who genuinely loves life. She is apt to make faces at babies on the subway and gasp with joy at the first appearance of spring in Central Park. Historically, I’ve been suspicious of such optimism, but I am finding myself challenged to further examine the source of this hopeful outlook. The more I seek the more I find t...
January 5, 2012 -
Graceful Citizenship
The era of the religious right is waning and the younger Christian generation is searching for a new model of political engagement. Yet, no one is quite sure what that model should be. Michael Gerson and Gideon Strauss wrestle with precisely this issue. Gerson, a senior official in the George W. Bush administration surveys the successes and failures of the religi...
September 26, 2011 -
Four E's of Faith and Work
Kenny Jhang A broad movement to integrate social, economic, and religious factors has gained momentum in our culture according to David Miller, founding Director of the Princeton University Faith & Work Initiative, Associate Research Scholar in CSR and Lecturer in the Department of Religion. In his book, God at Work: The History and Promise of the Faith at Work ...
July 9, 2011 -
Culture as Liturgy
Christians engaged in cultural renewal need to be cognizant of how cultural practices viscerally shape our desires. We are not disembodied brains who view the world with a detached intellectualism. We are shaped by the cultural spaces we inhabit and the cultural habits we practice. Unless we realize what subliminal messages these cultural liturgies are send...
May 22, 2011 -
Challenging the Darkness
As we discuss how the church can engage an increasingly post-Christian culture in the west, it is helpful to take a step back from our own times and historically examine how Christianity has dealt with cultures that seemed implacably opposed to it. Christianity was never expected to convert the Roman empire; nor was it expected to convert the barbarian tribes after Rom...
April 17, 2011 -
Challenging the Darkness Q & A
As we discuss how the church can engage an increasingly post-Christian culture in the west, it is helpful to take a step back from our own times and historically examine how Christianity has dealt with cultures that seemed implacably opposed to it. Christianity was never expected to convert the Roman empire; nor was it expected to convert the barbarian tribes after Rom...
April 11, 2011