“The second feature of many communities both in the postindustrial West and in many of the poorer parts of the world is ugliness. True, some communities manage to sustain levels of art and music, often rooted in folk culture, which brings a richness even to the most poverty-stricken areas. But the shoulder-shrugging functionalism of postwar architecture, coupled with the passivity born of decades of television, has meant that for many people the world appears to offer little but bleak urban landscapes, on the one hand, and tawdry entertainment, on the other. And when people cease to be surrounded by beauty, they cease to hope. They internalize the message of their eyes and ears, the message that whispers that they are not worth very much, that they are in effect less than fully human.
To communities in danger of going that route, the message of new creation, of the beauty of the world that is yet to be- with part of that beauty being precisely the healing of the present anguish- comes as a surprising hope. Part of the role of the church in the past was- and could and should be again- to foster and sustain lives or beauty and aesthetic meaning at every level, from music making in the village pub to drama in the local primary school, from artists’ and photographers’ workshops to still-life painting classes, from symphony concerts to driftwood sculptures. The church, because it is the family that believes in hope for new creation, should be the place in every town and village where new creativity bursts forth for the whole community, pointing to the hope that, like all beauty, always comes as a surprise.”
1 comment:
good stuff. it's hard to go wrong with wright.
i'm curious. what would you say it means for people in tulsa at large, for the people you lead and for yourself if each were to take NT (and Jesus) seriously on the issues raised here?
feel free to email me if you want. i'm really curious about your response.
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