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Posts Tagged ‘stained glass’

A Window to Truth

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

 

A portion of Yale's "Education" window

A portion of Yale's "Education" window

Mark I. Pinski, one of the better-known names in the realm of religious journalism, offers a pretty salient look in yesterday’s USA Today at the sometimes fractious relationship between faith and science, looking both to the past and the present.

Pinski suggests (rightly, I think) that President Barack Obama’s appointment of renowned scientist Francis Collins (a committed evangelical Christian and author of one of my favorite books, “The Language of God“) to head the National Institutes of Health, is an effort to heal some of the riffs between science and faith. He also finds inspiration in Yale’s famed Tiffany window called “Education,” which has graced the university for around 120 years. 

The window, commissioned by businessman Simeon Baldwin Chittenden back in 1889 puts science and faith on center stage, flanking an angelic-like woman with her eyes cast upward. Pinski notes that a thumbnail picture of the window can be found on the Web site for the BioLogos Foundation (an organization founded by Collins). 

Collins earned his Ph.D. in chemistry at Yale in the early 1970s, and I find no mention of the Chittenden window in his writings, or whether the NIH head has contemplated its significance to his own life. But in a commentary for the Christian Broadcasting Network, he displays sentiments consonant with the window’s message.

“The God of the Bible is also the God of the genome,” Collins said. “God can be found in the cathedral or in the laboratory. By investigating God’s majestic and awesome creation, science can actually be a means of worship.”

It’s a beautiful window, reflecting I think beautiful, and truthful, sentiments. Collins is one of my heroes, and I hope he does fantastic work in his new position.

Medium is the Message

Monday, September 14th, 2009

 

An 8 mm camera. Photo by Holger Ellgaard

An 8 mm camera. Photo by Holger Ellgaard

Another book to put on my ever-growing list: “Flickering Pixels,” by Shane Hipps.

 

In a recent post, The Evangelical Outpost takes a quick look at the book: It sounds as if Hipps has brought to life a subject that few of us think much about but most of us should: How the media we use to digest and distribute our faith affects our perception of the faith itself. As the Outpost author states:

It has often been said that while the Gospel message will never change, the methods used to present it must change in order to make it feel immediately relevant to new audiences.  Christians have used countless methods, both conventional and unconventional, to communicate the Gospel:, movies, breath mints, billboards, T-shirts, toys, video games, flannel boards, comic books, and, in Francis of Assisi’s case, even poverty.  On the surface, this makes sense – different methods are saleable to different groups, and it’s important to communicate the Gospel effectively.

Unfortunately, Christians often assume the methods used are unimportant as long as the Gospelmessage remains unchanged.  In 1967 communication theorist Marshall McLuhan announced, “The medium is the message.”  In other words, the various media we use to communicate are not neutral – they are a message in themselves, and that message inevitably changes the content you intended to convey.

The example given in the post is how Paul’s epistles were practically filler for much of the Dark and Middle Ages: Few people could read, you see, and most folks got lots of their biblical knowledge from the local cathedral’s stained glass windows, which naturally made concrete stories all the rage. But Paul experienced something as a renaissance during — well, he Renaissance: As believers pocketed more schooling, Paul’s scholarly letters came in vogue, with the result that Christianity became a little less about story and a little more — well, stodgy.

I had never thought — at least not very deeply — on how the media might affect the faith: I simply assumed that, as long as the message is being expertly conveyed regardless of medium — books, music, movies — the core would come through.

But what if someone refused to actually read the Bible and instead got all his biblical knowledge from, say, movies? Not only would he see a lot of Charlton Heston, it seems like he’d also get a steady dose of CGI-ready stories: Noah’s Ark, Moses’ Exodus, John’s Revelation. The poetry of Psalms would never make it on screen — certainly not effectively. Meanwhile, musicians could make some outstanding albums just using the Psalms. But they might not be able to use, say, 1 and 2 Kings quite as effectively.

Which makes me wonder … what sections of the Bible seem made for this hyper-fast, hyper-wired world of ours? Is Proverbs the biblical book of choice for the Twitter age?