CHESTERTON HOUSE:
A CENTER FOR CHRISTIAN STUDIES
"daring to discuss the important and the amusing"
NEWSLETTER #25
WINTER 2007
Hear, O LORD, and be gracious to me;
O LORD, be my helper.
You have turned for me my mourning into dancing;
You have loosed my sackcloth and girded me with gladness,
That my soul may sing praise to You and not be silent
O LORD my God, I will give thanks to You forever.
Psalm 31:10-12
I don't know what I would have
done if I had been an artist living blocks from Ground Zero, but I
like to think I might have done what Mako Fujimura has
done.
Over the last several years,
Fujimura has communicated in images and words that 9/11 was not only
an extraordinary event, but also an ordinary event, in this sense:
the whole world is a Ground Zero of sorts The world is broken,
full of suffering that ought never be denied That is not to say
Fujimura's work is cynical He rather steers a middle course
between despair and sentimentality, capturing the complexity of a
world that is simultaneously broken and beautiful Not
only that, but he also suggests hope for re-creating the world as it
ought to be Such nuance is a mark of good art--and of good
religion.
Last month, Chesterton House
provided scholarships to Cornell students attending "Redemptive
Culture: Creating the World that Ought to Be," the 2007
International Arts Movement (IAM) conference in New York City.
The conference was outstanding Speakers included IAM founder
Fujimura, Les Miserables producer Karen Goodwin, Ground Zero
master plan architect Daniel Libeskind, and two
theologian-musicologists--Dr. Jeremy Begbie and Dr. William
Edgar.
Begbie's keynote addresses also
dealt with the theme of re-humanizing a broken world The
tension is that while we long for something radically new, we are
bound to time and space The "relentless cult of novelty"
(Solzhenitsyn) among the avant-garde is a longing to be re-born, and
yet we cannot escape tradition Every effort to transcend
tradition fails, and results in a new tradition The concept of
artists creating ex nihilo is thus mistaken What
creative artists really do is re-create; they add something new to
something old and thereby re-make or re-envision it Indeed, in
art, music, literature, and film, there is always the presence of
antecedent texts, styles, and methods.
Speaking from the book of Isaiah,
Begbie asked whether God himself might renew this world by a similar
pattern--by introducing "a newness from beyond" that arrives
in the world in recognizable form "Quite so," he
concluded his first lecture.
There is nothing so new, Begbie
continued the next evening, as the new heavens and the new earth
promised in Scripture And yet even the new heavens and the new
earth are not radically new, but a renewal of what already is.
What does that mean for us? It means that we are "agents of
the new world" who still live in the old world Playing
bi-tonal chords from various pieces of music, Begbie illustrated his
point that we live in the overlap--"between the times."
The new world has invaded the old.
Good art thus not only weaves joy
together with woe, but hints at hope for the transformation of
mourning into dancing Drawing on Revelation, Fujimura
encouraged members of the audience to think of themselves as wedding
planners "We need to begin to live like a bride expecting
a great, cosmic wedding." Our work is to be anticipatory,
even preparatory, of the new heavens and new earth.
Edgar, also a presenter at the
IAM conference, speaks and writes on this theme of beauty amidst
brokenness with respect to African-American music--spirituals,
ragtime, blues, and jazz The blues, he writes, echoing
Fujimura, are funerary but not hopeless In fact, they are
preparatory "The realism of the
blues does not stand opposed to hopefulness, but to sentimentality. So
often the music of white people responds to troubled times with
escapism. The blues is stark and realistic, but not hopeless. The
blues tells us how to live on earth in order to prepare for heaven.
Living down here makes no sense unless there is a heaven to give it
meaning."
For those who love the arts, for
those drawn and intrigued by this theme of finding grace amidst the
ground zeroes of our lives, and for those who are sorry to have missed
this wonderful conference, we have some very good news For
those in Ithaca, Chesterton House will be hosting Fujimura next
semester For those in the Metro New York area, we will be
hosting a very special evening of jazz music and history with Edgar in
May.
On May 5th, at the Ethical
Culture Society in midtown Manhattan, Dr. William Edgar will provide
his highly regarded routine entitled "Heaven in a
Nightclub"--a narrative of misery and hope in the history of
African-American music We are also pleased to announce that Dr.
Edgar will be joined by a stellar cast of guests, including recording
artist Ruth Naomi Floyd on vocals, Ithaca area virtuoso Joe Salzano on
saxophone, and Grammy Award winning composer and musician John
Patitucci on bass Masters of Ceremonies for the evening will be
Christianity Today columnist and Christian Vision Project Director
Andy Crouch.
One last thing . . . A favor to
ask of all those we fondly call "friends of Chesterton
House." Do you know somebody in or near New York City who
might be interested in this event? Somebody who knows somebody
in or near New York City? Please take a moment and forward
this announcement to them, and/or tell them about this event.
Mention it on your blog Put it in your church bulletin.
The theatre seats 800, and our goal is to fill it without spending,
well, without spending money that we don't have on advertising.
This is a very simple way you can help the Chesterton House ministry.
Thank you!
More info on other upcoming events and Chesterton House news may be found below.
Karl E. Johnson
Director
COMING
EVENTS
Saturday, March 31, 7:00pm
"Word Transforms the World: Democratizing Academic Publishing"
Graduate Christian Fellowship Roundtable
NEW LOCATION: Morison Seminar Room, A-106 Corson-Mudd Hall
Saturday,
April 14, 9:30am
"Educating for
Shalom"
Dr. Nicholas Wolterstorff,
Philosopher, Yale University
Upstate NY Graduate/ Faculty
InterVarsity Conference
One World Room, Anabel Taylor
Hall
Wednesday,
April 25, 4:45pm
"God's Mechanics: The
Religious Life of Techies"
Dr. Guy
Consolmagno, Astronomer, Fordham University
255 Olin
Hall
Saturday, May
5, 7:30pm
"Heaven in a
Nightclub"
Dr. William
Edgar, Westminster Theological Seminary
with special
guests Ruth Naomi Floyd, Joe Salzano, and John Patitucci
Society for
Ethical Culture
64th &
Central Park West, New York City
All Chesterton
House events are open to the public.
CONFERENCE &
VISITING PREACHERS ON APRIL 14th-15TH
On April 14-16, Chesterton House
will be co-sponsoring the Upstate NY InterVarsity Graduate/Faculty
Conference Dr. Nicholas Wolterstorff, the Noah Porter Professor
of Philosophical Theology Emeritus at Yale University and author of
several books, will be speaking on the topic "Educating for
Shalom." On Sunday and Monday following this conference,
Chesterton House will be hosting a meeting of the directors from the
dozen or so Christian Study Centers around the nation As part
of this weekend, visiting directors will be preaching in local
churches Dr. Richard Horner, director of the Christian Study
Center of Gainesville, will preach at New Life Presbyterian Church.
Rev. Dr. David Mahan, director of the Rivendell Institute at Yale,
will preach at Bethel Grove Bible Church Dr. Terry Morrison,
Directer Emeritus of InterVarsity Faculty Ministries will preach at
Christ Chapel And Dr. Nicholas Wolterstorff will preach in
Cornell's Sage Chapel Don't sleep in.
IBS LECTURE
UPDATE
On Feb 9-11, Dr. Drew Trotter,
Director of the Center for Christian Study in Charlottesville, VA,
gave five lectures on the theme of the Fear of God On Friday
evening, Kennedy Hall's Call auditorium was filled with a diverse
audience of 350 students and community members One hundred
community members attended the Saturday sessions at Bethel Grove Bible
Church Watch the website for audio from this event, as well as
Dr. Barbara Dafoe Whitehead's recent talk on Marriage and
Dating.
"On the third day the friends of Christ coming at
daybreak to the place found the grave empty and the stone rolled away.
In varying ways they realised the new wonder; but even they hardly
realised that the world had died in the night. What they were looking
at was the first day of a new creation, with a new heaven and a new
earth; and in a semblance of the gardener God walked again in the
garden, in the cool not of the evening but the
dawn."
G.K. Chesterton
http://www.chestertonhouse.org