Saturday, May 14, 2016
At the Day in the Village of Oak Park in 1985, when I was pastor at River Forest United Methodist Church, our United Methodist United Cluster of Oak Park and River Forest Churches had bell ringing and a young adult street theater. This video mainly shows the bell ringing by First United Methodist Church and Euclid Churches, and part of the Young Adult Focus Group Street Theater. I'm the guy in the red tea shirt with the loud speaker, and I see there daughter Amy, and son John with Claudia.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1OVpatzW7O8
This morning I heard a good sermon - and since have pondered thoughts about the messiness of
shepherds, stables but divinity shines within - and also the
paradox that John August Swanson pictured as beautifull but paradox expressing the messy events through which simultaneously let grace get
through.
What crossed my mind was how I've seen xrays of the picture painted on the underlying layer beneath the overlying masterpiece, and the computer generated living face on top of a skeleton's skull. Can these bones live?
All of which got me thinking about underlying a picture of dirty shepherds, or stable, or baby refugees as would now be in Syria. I experimented with the Swanson drawings and some photos off the internet. I was shook up with thought which came during church - of seeing the divinity in the faces we have seen so much in the Aleppo news.
In this process of experimenting these few hours, I almost stopped because the photos were so painful, so sad, so un-nerving. But here it is.
What crossed my mind was how I've seen xrays of the picture painted on the underlying layer beneath the overlying masterpiece, and the computer generated living face on top of a skeleton's skull. Can these bones live?
All of which got me thinking about underlying a picture of dirty shepherds, or stable, or baby refugees as would now be in Syria. I experimented with the Swanson drawings and some photos off the internet. I was shook up with thought which came during church - of seeing the divinity in the faces we have seen so much in the Aleppo news.
In this process of experimenting these few hours, I almost stopped because the photos were so painful, so sad, so un-nerving. But here it is.
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