Jam Cary’s post on Evangelicalism and Art is well worth reading.
Rough Table of Contents.
- Trends in modern, Western, conservative evangelicalism. Things that modern, Western, conservative evangelicalism has absorbed from various influences… Things which make modern, Western, conservative evangelicals suspicious of art.
- Quote: “As a result, of all of the above, Evangelicals will often find art, creativity and drama to be unnecessary, frivolous and vain; expensive and time-consuming; exclusive and alienating; crass and stereotypical; ambiguous; dangerous and subversive; emotionally manipulative.”
- But art is frequently all of these things. Then some well-picked examples of artistic creations that are precisely those things, and therefore that modern, Western, conservative evangelicals are likely to view with suspicion.
- But yet, look at God and his handiwork; look at the Bible. We find that he is a God who delights in beauty for the sake of his own glory (as opposed to beauty for beauty’s sake). Yet beauty can bring God glory.
Conclusion: “Is it at all possible that Evangelicals frequently get this area wrong? And even misunderstand the Bible?”
If that Table of Contents doesn’t make you want to read Jam’s post, I don’t know why not.
- Artists who aren’t persuaded by evangelicalism should read it to discover that it may be a caricature of evangelicalism that they don’t like.
- Evangelicals who aren’t persuaded by the potential of art to glorify God should read it to be healthily challenged.
- Evangelicals who are persuaded by the potential of art to glorify God should read it to see the arguments painted (deliberately mixed metaphors) at their most beautiful and rigorous.
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