One for the road.. conversations for the journey

Entries from March 2009

Elizabeth Gilbert on the concept of genius & creativity

March 8, 2009 · Leave a Comment

This video has proved to be very popular amongst my fellow students on the M.min course. I’ve deliberately not read through their posts yet, so as not to influence my initial reactions. Gilbert delivers a heart felt, and genuinely warming speech on the pressure of genius, and the pressure of simple creativity.

As a guitarist primarily influenced by blues and rock artists, as well as being a worship musician, I’ve always been attracted to the “tortured artistic soul”. The lone guitarist standing at the Crossroads, doing a deal he may regret. Memories of Robert Johnson, John Lee Hooker, Clapton, Hendrix, Lennon; all my heroes had lives filled with tragedy, self destruction and a good measure of insanity. This is the music I’m attracted to, raw, intense, soulful.
Gilbert, in this video sums up what every creative artist would love to say, but instead, usually just gets bitter or empties another bottle down their neck. Oh that we would be honored for, “Just showing up” as Gilbert suggests. In the church our job is doubly hard because we perceive, sometimes rightly, often wrongly, that we aren’t “allowed”  or expected to express frustrations or fears, especially fears. Quite rightly we need to have integrity, self control and seek righteousness. The Keith Richards school of chemical intake and sexual prowess is not a good model for worship leaders (or really anybody). But perhaps he (Richards) has kept creating so prolifically for 40 years because of his authenticity and that he seems to have laid aside the pressure to be anything other than who he his. What really struck home for me with this video was the sense of release and permission that Gilbert gives creative artists, by just telling it how it is. Often the worst enemy of the artist is the artist themselves, constantly beating ourselves up and setting impossible goals. Although she may attribute it to “fairies”, where genius is concerned, I am reminded of the parable of the Talents, and of a quote from NT Wright in “Surprised by Hope”,

All the skills and talents which we have put to God’s service in this present life….will be enhanced and ennobled and given back to us to be exercised to his glory.

http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/453

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Different Perspectives

March 3, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Its amazing what can be communicated through the unlikeliest of sources. I watched the “monster” movie Cloverfield the other night. Flawed as it was, I thought it was ok, some good ideas in there, the suspense and sense of constant peril was well done. However it wasn’t after I had watched it and started delving into the interviews and special features that I was floored with an interesting concept that the film introduces. Cloverfield is shot from a very narrow viewpoint. There is one camera, operated by one character. During the movie, there is a scene where we see thousands of people on the Brooklyn bridge trying to escape Manhattan. For a moment we see someone else filming, and that’s where the question is raised. This is a generation where almost everyone in the western word has some kind of camera with them constantly; we have Youtube, Flickr, Facebook etc. The point was made that in the context of the film, is that there is the possibility of hundreds of thousands of different viewpoints, experiences and “movies” within the movie. If you do a search on 9/11 on Youtube, you’ll see the day’s events from a multitude of different vantage points. The Gospels are like this too. One of the arguments against the authenticity of scripture is that there are differing emphasis’s and details. But for me, that proves its authenticity. If the Gospels were fiction then surely they would be exactly the same, you know the phrase, “getting your story straight”. This worldview also gives us hope for the church, yes we have different vantage points and views, the details differ, but the fundamentals are the same.

Relevant scripture: Mark 7 (Jesus shifts someones paradigm about the law and tradition)

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