The Dossier

When I was in college a few friends and I made a short student film. It wasnt much but it got us the uber-prestigious Geneva Student Choice Award, and $500 bucks.

Carboard Testimonies

I found this video on the plow.

Tim Challies on God in Planet Earth

Tim Challies wrote a great piece about seeing God in the BBC/Discovery series Planet Earth. If he had not written it so well I might need to take a stab at writing about this subject.
If you have not seen Planet Earth, you need to see it. It is an amazing series probably the best nature documentary ever.

Read the 9 Things Tim Challies Learned About God from “Planet Earth”

Death, Life and Brokeness:Dialoguing with “The Fountain”

Tom
Last night my wife and I watched Darren Aronofsky’s The Fountain. The film started Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz. The visual mood set by the film was simply beautiful. The plot of the film revolves around Jackman and Weisz as they are played out in three time periods set hundreds of years apart, 1500’s, 2000’s and sometime in the distant future. I found the film enjoyable, and fortunately it had the right pacing, and was only about an hour and forty minutes in length. What struck me the most about the film was what it was saying about the human experience.
–Spoiler Alert–
The film revolves around Jackmen’s, quest to save his beloved, Weisz. At the film’s heart is one man’s war against death itself, for the Astronaut, it is reaching the center of a decaying star, for the scientist it is finding a cure for his wife’s tumor, and for the conquistador it is finding the fountain of youth. As the film develops we find out that the conquistador’s story is actually being written by Izzi as she is dying of a brain tumor, while Tom the scientist and Tom the Astronaut turn out to be the same man, Tom has found a way to prevent death but not before it has taken his wife. As the three storylines intertwine what I was left with was a sense of loss and confusion surrounding death. Aronofsky, either coincidentally or intentionally, seems to be drawing attention to the wrongness of death in our reality. In fact the only real antagonist of the film is death itself, Tom at one point speaks of death as a disease, which he will stop.
Watching this film from a Christian perspective, I could not help but relate and root for Tom to try and defeat death, yet all the while knowing that he would be unsucessful. As a christian I hate death. Death is a constant reminder that something is wrong with the world, and the universal notion that we fight against death simply verifies that an animosity towards death is not something reserved only for Christians.
As I said before, I can sympathize with the despair that Tom experiences as he watched his wife’s life slip away. Yet, as a Christian I believe that death is not some cosmic happen-stance, but a result of the sin of one man. Death is not something that tells us that God is unfair, on the contrary the Bible clearly states that God shares the same hatred of death as we do. ((2 Peter 3:9))

As I watched Tom’s fight against death become more and more futile, I began to pity him. Tom was a man who spends hundreds of years searching for a way to defeat death, and ultimately fails. At the climax of the film he comes so close and yet cannot do it.

I related so much to Tom because if I had not had a radical encounter with Jesus, my life would ultimately be a less flashy, less climactic telling of the same story–Man loves woman, man looses woman, man dies trying to regain that woman. Tom is not powerful enough to overcome death, and neither am I. Fortunately I do not have to try and fight against death, the way that Tom did. I do not have to try because someone has already overcome death in my place. Jesus did what neither I nor Tom could do, he overcame death. He did this because he loved me and knew that I could never do it, on my own.
What really struck me at the end of the film as the credits rolled and Clint Mansell’s stirring soundtrack filled the room, was the fact that there are millions of real people today, like Tom. People who are, as I type, fighting against death like the Character Tom, and all of them are coming to the same end that he came to, minus the hollywood frills.
Death is a bitter thing. It should dig at us. It should outrage us. It should stir those seeking answers to ask questions. And, it should, motivate christians, in the face of death, to cry out: “There is hope. Death is not God’s pattern, it is our mistake! Yet Jesus has done what a thousand Tom’s could never do, he has defeated death itself.”

Leo’s Song on Vimeo

I just came across this video over at vimeo.com
Please check it out and share, its wonderful.


Leo’s Song from impactist on Vimeo.

Great Art Site

I came across Nucleus Gallery today. Jo and I are always looking for cool original art for our house, maybe we will be ordering some from this site.

Stay on Target

930My finals are finished, and I have just a bit of reading and a few pages to write.
So here is what I’m planning for the next week, or so, at thedesocios.com:

1. I recently heard a lecture by Darren Patrick about the History of the Emergent Church, and I’m hoping to write a response.
I’d especially like to focus on the nature of missions– Is it from the church or from God.

2. I’m heading down to Louisville this week to take Michael up on his offer to visit the 930 Art Center, and Sojourn Community Church. Sojourn is an Acts 29 Church, so I’m pretty excited. It will be great to see what these guys are doing and maybe it will give me some ideas for Pittsburgh, if we stay. I’m hoping to at the least take some good photo from the trip, maybe Ill bring my video camera. So next Monday night or Tuesday I’ll post about our trip down to the 930.

Jesus with the Painters and the Poets

Studio Space
How does your church interact with people in the Arts?
I think that many people say “well, we don’t.” Some might even argue that a church that has values or encourages visual artists are in danger of breaking, the Second Commandment.

Yet if we take a closer look at the Old Testament we can’t help but realize that God instructed the people of Israel to be very creative. God cares a great deal, about the way things look. In Exodus 25 and following he lays does instructions about how the Tabernacle should look. He goes into great detail about how things should be put together, and then he says “you shall make the tabernacle with ten curtains of fine twined linen and blue and purple and scarlet yarns; you shall make them with cherubim skillfully worked into them.”
The word skillfully here can also be translated inventive or even ingenious. Its a adverb stating that the cherubim which are going to hang in the curtains should be the best. God is telling the Israelites to do a good job. A few chapters later he even goes as far to say that he has empower certain people in Israel with the skills and artistic ability to make art worthy of God’s Tent of meeting.

Of course things are a little different now, but if we say that God gives still people the ability to compose songs for his glory. Couldn’t it be possible that He has given other people gifts that allow them to craft visual beauty, like Bezalel and the other artists of Exodus?

Some big churches like Marshill that are now getting into the fine arts and having gallery space, but they have 6000 people in and out every week.

How do smaller churches communicate that the Visual Arts are important?

At our church we have have Arts Coffee houses, were the Artists in our church have put stuff together, but we have not really pursued much of the Artistic community.

One church that I really like is Sojourn in Louisville KY.

They recently moved into a new building which acts as studio, gallery, and even performance space. They even have a yearly film fest utilizing their space.
These guys are doing something right, they are truly calling out to artists and saying “Jesus, cares about Art. He wants to see creative visual expressions.”

I hope to check out their space one day if I ever get down to Louisville.

Information and a list of upcoming events at the 930 Art Center can be found at their website.

Pedro the Lion- Be Thou My Vision


thanks – stillsearching