from the site : Philosophical Fragments
 
 
_A Movement of “Courageous” Culture-Making  Churches?_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/community/philosophicalfragments/2011/09/05/a-movement-of-courageous-cul
ture-making-churches/) 
 
By _Timothy Dalrymple_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/community/philosophicalfragments/author/TimD/) , 
September 5,  2011


 
Here are a few paragraphs from what I wrote for the “Religion Notebook” in 
 the next issue of World Magazine: 
The new movie _Courageous_ (http://www.courageousthemovie.com/)   played 
before a packed house in its red-carpet premiere in Atlanta on  August 26th. 
It tells the story of a group of  male friends who remember the importance of 
fatherhood and commit themselves,  in the midst of personal tragedies and 
professional struggles, to be the  husbands and fathers God calls them to be. 
It’s the fourth film from Sherwood  Pictures, the filmmaking ministry of 
Sherwood Baptist Church in Albany,  Georgia. 
Stephen Kendrick, who is both pastor over Sherwood’s prayer ministry and  
writer and producer of the film, explained after the premiere that the series 
 of films is a reflection of the unity and purpose that God gave Sherwood  
Baptist 

to reach the world from their little town. After the congregation saw their 
 first effort, Flywheel, 500 volunteers stepped forward for Facing  the 
Giants. The number grew with the highly successful Fireproof,  and over 1,500 
congregants helped produce Courageous. The church has  used the profits to 
plant other churches and to fund missions and community  outreach. As Kendrick 
told me, “We encourage other churches who are considering  making films: Don
’t despise small beginnings. An avalanche can start with a  single stone.” 
 
It was once common, of course, for churches to commission sculptures and  
frescoes, portraits and plays. There has been no greater patron of the arts 
in  the past two millennia than the Christian Church. Yet this is less 
frequent  today, when art is commonly seen as a secular pursuit. So there are 
at 
least two  points worth celebrating, according to Andy Crouch, author of  
Culture-Making, in the efforts of Sherwood Films. Whatever the artistic  merits 
of the movies themselves, he told me, “it’s better to create something  
worth criticizing than to criticize and create nothing,” and the movies “open 
 the door to a cultural creativity the church should never have lost in the 
first  place.” Talented young Christians may watch the movies, “get the 
sacred-secular  dichotomy knocked out of them,” and find the inspiration to 
invest the time and  training that are needed to create enduring and 
redemptive works of art. 
As the article goes on to explain, other churches have begun to follow  
Sherwood’s example, producing films like The Grace Card, The Glass  Window and 
To Save a Life.
 
When I went to see the Courageous premiere, of course, I  was not expecting 
anything avant-garde.  I had not seen any  of their previous movies, but I 
understood that Sherwood Pictures is not out to  push the envelope of 
filmmaking.  Does that mean it’s not “art” in the  strict sense of the term?  
When Curtis Chang _asked_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/Resources/Additional-Resources/Thomas-Kinkade-vs-Modern-Art-Curtis-Chang-and-Daniel-Siedell-08-01-2011?off
set=1&max=1)  Daniel  Siedell, a Christian professor of art history, 
whether Thomas Kinkade paintings  were works of art, Siedell responded that art 
“
should force us to rethink our  beliefs about the world.”  Kinkade’s work, 
however, “only reconfirms and  solidifies what we [Christians] already think 
about the world.”  
While it’s certainly true that nothing in Courageous will cause  Christians 
to question their view about the world, art can serve a variety of  
purposes.  Most generically, I agree with Martin Heidegger’s view: art  
discloses 
truth.  Art cuts through our socialized, lazy, comfortable,  distracted ways 
of seeing the world, and shows us truths that we often forget or  want to 
forget or perhaps have never known before.  What challenges “our”  views 
about the world may not challenge the views of, say, secularists, and  
conversely what confirms our views may challenge the views of a secularist.  
Churches 
like Sherwood Baptist are honing their craft, refining their  product, and 
putting into the marketplace of ideas a cultural artifact that can  disclose 
certain truths and call people to love what is true and good and  beautiful.
 
To be clear, I hope that Christian films will continue to raise their  
standards in screenwriting, cinematography, acting, and the like.  There is  an 
important witness to be given the world in the commitment to excellence, to  
thoughtfulness, to the freedom and well, courage to penetrate the most 
profound  and painful aspects of human experience.  How astounding it would be 
if  Christians could be known — again — for supporting and producing the 
very best  works of art.  Courageous explores the ways in which men fail  their 
wives and children, the ways they find strength in friendship to do the  
right thing and hold one another accountable, and the ways in which men suffer 
 and seek the strength of God in the midst of pain and loss.  These are  
worthy things — and it sounds a lot like art to me. 
Is the movie preachy?  It ends with a five minute sermon promoting a  
pro-fatherhood movement.  Is it any more preachy than, say, Milk  or Green Zone 
or The Fountain?  I would say not.  And, given the devastating consequences 
of fatherlessness across American  society, consequences that are explored 
throughout the film, it has an important  message.  Art often does have a 
message, a change it seeks to promote in  society, a movement it seeks to 
awaken.
 
Yet what I find so fascinating here, and so encouraging in the example of  
Sherwood Films, is the very concept that churches — and not merely 
individuals —  can be culture-makers.  The church as the filmmaker.  The church 
as  
the artist.  There’s interesting biblical precedent.  The scriptures  tell us 
that the ancient Hebrews not only brought their treasures for the  
tabernacle and the Temple, but that craftsmen of all kinds gave their talents  
and 
expertise.  Perhaps churches can marshal their resources as well as  their 
people and all their gifts to create world-changing works of art.  If  
highbrow Christians are sometimes embarrassed at the dialogue or the  
predictability of the script, then perhaps they can lend their talents and make 
 them 
better. 
Will the day ever come when a church produces a film that wins an Academy  
Award?  Or a musical that wins a Tony?  Or a collection of poems or  short 
stories that wins a Pulitzer?  I pray that day will come.  But  the point, of 
course, is to change the world and not to win its applause.  For believers, 
there is always an audience of One, and that One is pleased  when we honor 
him with the best of our talents and efforts and also when we  participate 
in the redemption and re-creation of all things. 
I believe Sherwood Films is being faithful to its calling.  They are  
crafting works of culture that exercise a redeeming influence upon society.  
And 
I believe that young Christian actor or writer or director who follows  
after them, with work that is more complex or daring or refined, will be  
following her calling as well.  Rather than casting aspersions on high  culture 
Christians or low culture Christians, we should celebrate our unity in  the 
Spirit and our cooperation in advancing the work of the kingdom in many  
spheres at once.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to