Tag Archive - worship

FeaturedArtist: Hannah Krohn…

There is something special, alluring about dance as a worship form… I grew up in a church that didn’t worship with dance, so the passages in the Old Testament that described the dances of Miriam or David or others were strange and mystical to me…

So, when I first saw Hannah dancing in the back of our church during our Sunday worship time, I was thrilled and awed… This is one of the roots of our worship: one of the oldest practices of worship in the Bible… And it is also a foundational art form, found in the most primitive cultures and honed into one of the most challenging modern performing arts…

Hannah just flat-out rocks it.

She and I have worked together to add dance to our Night in Bethlehem event at LVC… By “worked together” I mean she does the choreography, recruiting, costuming and leads rehearsals… and I put it in the program. It is, by far, my most favorite moment in the evening… The energy, mood and emotion that the dance adds is amazing. And unlike the drama, which is scripted, or the costumes and sets, which are contrived, the dance draws from ancient forms and ancient music to present one of the most authentic moments as well.

But Hannah’s involvement at NiB is just the tip of the iceberg… Her primary outlet for dance as worship is at the Celebration Ministry of the Arts (CMA) a dance school and performing group here in the Denver-metro area. Hannah teaches preschoolers and participates in the organization’s performing company, both locally and abroad.

Of particular interest to me is the group’s numerous trips to perform and minister in Japan… Hannah tells me:

“Dance is a good fit for ministry in Japan. The culture there has a very high respect for the arts… They also like Americans, which makes it easier too.”

But Japanese culture is also very intolerant of individuals who defect from traditional beliefs… Christian converts are often disowned by their families. This makes sharing the Gospel a particular challenge. The troupe travels through the country, performing at churches and occasionally in public venues…

They dance and they talk about Jesus…

“I only know of one occasion where there were actual conversions, mostly we just ‘sow seeds’ by sharing personal stories of what God has done in our lives…”

I mention to Hannah that many of the artists that I’ve talked are largely unactivated in their church… We’ve worked together at LVC, but only on the one project… She is sympathetic:

“I’m working on a dance workshop at the church that I’m attending now… It’s the first opportunity I’ve had to do that and it’s very exciting. But CMA was actually started by dancers who wanted to worship through dance but had no outlet for that in their churches…”

I can’t help but be disappointed that Hannah isn’t doing her workshop at LVC… I think that it’s also interesting to add that CMA has almost 500 dancers in four locations around Colorado…

As a parent, I’m curious about CMA and why parents would choose a “christian” dance school over the many that are scattered around… I sometimes have observed a disparity between the quality of arts inside and outside the church… And I wonder:

Can the “christian” alternative be as good?

So, I visit the CMA website and watch the videos… and I came across this little nugget about their performing troupe:

Our performing company consists of women who are technically trained in classical dance, but most importantly, have the hearts of passionate worshipers.

And I think that says it…

Because as artists who are christians, we ought to pursue training and practice to hone our technique… It is in our hearts, focused on God, committed to Jesus and full of passion, that we worship… No matter what our medium….

For more information about Celebration Ministry of the Arts, click here

I’ll be posting some video of Hannah, performing with CMA later this week…

FeaturedArtist: Mary Freeman…

What began as a woman’s own journey of God-discovery has spawned a ministry of reconciliation and healing for women…

Mary Freeman is a well-read, mom-of-three from Georgia, USA… I love people from the South: there is an frank realism and open-hearted truth about them. Mary did not disappoint… She shared with me about her art… About how God used it to heal her heart-wounds… About how she shares that with other women… About moving her youngest child off to college this year… About her own lingering insecurities over calling herself an “artist”…

I came away with over an hour of recorded interview and a sense that art really CAN change people… That artists really DO build the Kingdom of God… And most importantly, that God places great importance on what we do to touch the hearts of people in the way we practice our gifts.

Mary has always kept a journal… But a few year ago, with a desire to dig deeper into her own heart-wounds and invite God into those areas of hurt, she began experimenting with layering images, patterns and text into journal pages that captured words and feelings in a more coherent and impacting way.

As she shared this experience with her friends, the opportunities to share the technique with other women began to open… First, in a retreat setting…

“We were combining visual journaling with the practice of solitude… there were 80 women in the room and no one spoke for over an hour… It was amazing…”

Opportunities to combine journal demonstrations with small-group counseling followed and she is setting up now to begin teaching workshops in the church she attends…

Along the way, Mary started taking the mixed-media techniques that she used in her journals into larger formats…

“The painting has several layers because I would paint something and be totally unhappy with it, (then) cover it and begin again. The finished painting was really a happy accident…”

Undeterred, Mary created the image you see on the right… And more after it…

If you were to visit Mary’s photostream on Flickr, you’d see that her large-format work has evolved to include the top of her worktable.

“That project made me realize just how much fun the bigger (paintings) can be… Standing on a bench and splashing paint everywhere…”

Since being a Christian is at the core of Mary’s identity, she has no problem acknowledging that her gifts come straight from God and that her life (including her creativity and artistic work) has the ultimate goal of deepening her relationship with Jesus… She passes this transforming experience along every chance she gets.

“Being a Christian is someone I am, not something I do.”

Mary speaks a “heart-language” that is very familiar to me… So, I asked her about her favorite author… I smiled as she began to rattle-off a list of who’s who in Christian counseling: Brennan Manning, John Eldredge, Larry Crabb… writers with differing methodologies but the similar theme:

Your heart matters to God and wholeness is possible…

Mary’s creativity and work echo that truth… and the key: God rewrote the text of my life when I opened the book of my heart to His eyes…

If you haven’t checked it out yet, go take a look… Mary also has an inspiring blog that combines her work with story-telling and personal meditations…

FlickrFriday: Worshipers…

One of my own this week…

Film-capture of a welded, steel sculpture in Southfield, MI…

How many P’s in worshipers?

FlickrFriday features images from the WorshipOnPurpose group at Flickr.com. If you photoshare on Flickr, join us and post up to 3 images to the group each day.

A Short Definition of “Worship”…

Is this guy worshipping

As I work on my book (which btw now has a working title: Reigniting Renaissance), I’m trying to develop a “short definition” of what worship is… apart from how it is expressed…

I think that the distinction is important for several reasons:

1. The expression of worship varies between different traditions and denominations of Christ-followers… A Pentecostal expression, just for example, will be radically different from a Catholic expression… We might be able to find some “common ground” but I’m looking for something more foundational… I want to be able to use the term “worship” and have it mean something specific to my readers, rather than have it mean 10 different things to ten different people…

2. Not to keep beating this drum, but the expression of worship in most traditions is still largely dominated by music… If we say our church is “traditional” or “contemporary” or “blended,” we are talking about musical style more than anything else… If artists in any medium are going to “worship” through their dance, drama, painting or photography, then the meaning of worship has to be broader than this…

Now, a definition of worship has to be based on what the Bible says about worship… Which, for the record, is mostly anecdotal… Paul didn’t give us an easy theological foundation and Jesus just said that “true worshippers will worship in spirit and truth.” (John 4: 23-24)

There are a few definitions out there that I like:

According to Worship.com, “worship” is:

Everything you think, everything you say, and everything you do, revealing that which you treasure and value most in life.
-Homepage, Worship.com

This is obviously a definition of “lifestyle worship” or the idea that an authentic, Jesus-following lifestyle is what Jesus was talking about in John 4.

In terms of a more specific “act” of worship, Vineyard worship leader, David Ruis, says that

…it’s just giving God all of your attention…
-David Ruis, Winds of Worship 3

I thought you guys might have something else good to add… or maybe a good way of combining the practice of lifestyle worship with the act of worshipping…

FeaturedArtist Encore: Kathie Luther…

Rise Up On Eagle's Wings by Kathie Luther
“They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength… they shall rise up on eagle’s wings.” -Isaiah 40:31

Almost a year ago, I started to feature artists who use their gifts in ministry and worship. As I am beginning to work on my book, I’ve decided it’s time to bring that back.

When I first spoke to Kathie Luther, I was really energized by her story, her conviction and the way she described her ministry.  As I continued to follow her photos and get to know her in the year since, I’ve also developed a deep respect for her as a woman of insight and wisdom. Here’s the original post:

Kathie is a mixed-media artist up in northern Michigan, with a broad scope of skill that covers painting, sculpting, textiles and photography. If you visit her photostream on Flickr.com, you’ll see examples of the many artistic interests and skills that Kathie has honed in her years teaching art to children, teens and adults.

Kathie first discovered a love of art in her high school biology class, where assignments required her to draw specimens. This, combined with her love of nature, inspired her decision to study biology and art at Northern Michigan University. She soon chose art as her major area of study and eventually received a degree in art with emphasis in sculpting, casting and pottery.

After college and making time to become a wife and mom, Kathie found herself teaching art in a K-12 Christian school and later began holding classes for children and adults in her home. As with many gifted teachers, Kathie is also a perennial student and through the years picked up painting, photography and digital media.

Her painting always tended to be inspirational in nature, but began to take on a more prophetic tone about five years ago. At that time, her themes and imagery began to trend toward symbolism and eschatology (related to the end times). You see a lot of that in the images that we’ve been featuring on the site.

For the record, I grew up and studied theology in a non-charismatic tradition, so I know that some of you can’t help but raise an eyebrow when I use the word “prophetic,” but what we’re talking about, simply put, is the idea that God still speaks. It doesn’t seem like a big stretch, in our media driven culture, that He would chose to speak visually.

Kathie told me that she doesn’t have a formula for creating a painting. Sometimes she wakes up and paints the images from a dream. Other times, she will trace the shadows created by imperfections on the canvas until an image coalesces. She has even done some of her painting during worship while the musical people in the room were singing.

And that is the kind of thing we love to hear.

Kathie continues to paint and create works in other media and teaches summer classes in the art center adjacent to her home. She holds summer art shows where she talks to the patrons who visit about the reality of God’s love and the ways that He still speaks. She reminded me of a prayer that King David prayed long ago:

Show me your ways, O Lord, teach me your paths;
guide me in your truth and teach me, for you are God my Savior,
and my hope is in you all day long.
- Psalm 25:4-5

Kathie still prays that prayer. After talking with her, I do too.

You can check out Kathie’s art on Flickr. She also has prints, postcards and some original paintings for sale at her eBay store.

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