How Satan Twists Genres


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Matt Taylor

SPARK ARTIST

Sparking your inner missional flame with weekly inspiration, equipping, and sending exhortations.


đź’Ą INSPIRED BY

The Power Of Music & Poetry In Pakistan

Don McCurry served as a missionary among Muslims in Pakistan. During one of his early furloughs, McCurry sought to better grasp the Pakistan life and culture, so he studied under Dr. Daud Rahbar, a Pakistani convert to Chrisitanity with a PhD in Urdu literature.

He learned an invaluable lesson from Dr. Rahbar, who told him,

“Don, you can say anything you want–in poetry or music–to these people and they will receive it, but if you preach it in prose, they will probably try to kill you.”

Don put these words to the test when he returned to Pakistan.

Receiving permission from the local mayor, he organized an international music festival. At this event, the gospel would be shared within acceptable musical art forms.

As if the crowd's standing ovation weren’t enough, the city’s mayor debriefed with McCurry, “This is the greatest social event that has ever been staged here…We hope you who are guests in our country will come back and do this every year.”

Check out more stories like this in All The World Is Singing. ​


🛠️ EQUIPPED BY

Twisting Genres

Satan deceives. He lies. He distorts truth. He steals, kills, and destroys.

The arts have been his playground ever since the days they transformed the raw materials of earth to construct Babel’s tower.

We must stay on the line of God’s intent for the arts and artistic genres. When we dishonor them, devastating results follow.

There are two ways we see Satan twisting our worldview of the arts: by adding and taking away God's intent for them.

ADDING

Recently, a video made the rounds on social media of artist Roman Signer. The video featured his performance piece of 10 sand buckets stacked on top of each other. Once the buckets fell to the ground, the crowd clapped.

My social media feed contained multiple pot shots at Signer from various people, surprisingly, mostly Christians. At first glance, sure, this performance piece doesn’t look like much of anything. But witnessing contemporary performance art through the lens of a 10-second Instagram doomscroll doesn’t quite grant the artist the benefit of the doubt. The negative comments I heard completely missed the context, story, and intent, and therefore, missed the potential to learn from the piece. The nay-sayers imposed an addition to what this artist's intent.

We distort first by adding to what art is. This damages a couple things: first, it shows a lack of grace to artists and second, we shut the valve from on our own imaginations. By adding to what an artwork is, we steal what it can do for our imaginations. When we add, three results follow:

  1. Golden Calf-ism: We make art more than what it's supposed to be or do. God did not intend for us to ascribe life and such power to artwork. The world isn’t meant to be saved through the arts.
  2. Elitism: God also did not mean for any certain class or status to be higher than any other. The West has done massive global damage by assuming that the Classical arts are the closest to heaven.
  3. Romanticism: While God might have endowed a certain kind of wisdom to craftsmen, He did not ask them to take His throne. Yet, we esteem them as untouchable and perfect saints.

TAKING AWAY

We can, likewise, take away from God’s intent for genres. When this occurs, we go further than distorting our imagination. We kill it.

Nazi propaganda art was quite aesthetically pleasing to the eye. Beneath it, however, lied curses upon literal curses against entire people groups. The following occurs when we subtract from art forms:

  1. Propaganda: Art gets used as a mere container for a message.
  2. Utilitarian: Art is only valuable only if it teaches.
  3. Sacred: Diminish art forms unless they narrowly fit within a “divine” category (i.e. sacred arts of high church). Historically, some churches placed burdens (theological, financial, etc.) on locals in order to fund church architecture and other “holy” art forms.

The church and her artists must retain the middle. We must boldly take up our God-given crafts, hone them, sharpen them, and use them endowed with all of their glorious and creative purposes.

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🚀 SENT WITH

“Art is an object or event conceived and structured by human design to be perceived by our senses, and characterized by an imaginative and allusive finish that affords the piece its own independent identity."

Calvin Seerveld


113 Cherry St #92768, Seattle, WA 98104-2205
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