Reader

Add friend
Sign in to Goodreads to learn more about Reader.


Loading...
Makoto Fujimura
“Effective stewardship leads to generative work and a generative culture. We turn wheat into bread—and bread into community. We turn grapes into wine—and wine into occasions for joyful camaraderie, conviviality, conversation, and creativity. We turn minerals into paints—and paints into works that lift the heart or stir the spirit. We turn ideas and experiences into imaginative worlds for sheer enjoyment and to expand the scope of our empathy.”
Makoto Fujimura, Culture Care: Reconnecting with Beauty for Our Common Life

Makoto Fujimura
“Our failure is not that we chose earth over heaven: it is that we fail to see the divine in the earth, already active and working, pouring forth grace and spilling glory into our lives. Artists, whether they are professed believers or not, tap into this grace and glory. There is a "terrible beauty" operating throughout creation. If Christ announced his postresurrection reality into the darkness, even into hell, as the Bible and Christian catechism suggests, then, as theologian Abraham Kuyper put it, there is not one inch of earth that Christ does not call "Mine!”
Makoto Fujimura, Silence and Beauty: Hidden Faith Born of Suffering

Makoto Fujimura
“According to Flaubert, the artist inhabits his or her work as God does: present everywhere, but visible nowhere.”
Makoto Fujimura, Silence and Beauty: Hidden Faith Born of Suffering

Makoto Fujimura
“In my experience, when we surrender all to the greatest Artist, that Artist fills us with the Spirit and makes us even more. creative and aware of the greater reality all about us. By "giving up" our "art," we are, paradoxically, made into true artists of the Kingdom. This is the paradox Blake was addressing. Unless we become makers in the image of the Maker, we labor in vain. Whether we are plumbers, garbage collectors, taxi drivers, or CEOs, we are called by the Great Artist to co-create. The Artist calls us little-'a' artists to co-create, to share in the "heavenly breaking in" to the broken earth.”
Makoto Fujimura, Art and Faith: A Theology of Making

Makoto Fujimura
“The surface of my “slow art” is prismatic, so at first glance the malachite surface looks green. But if the eye is allowed to linger on the surface—it usually takes ten minutes for the eye to adjust—the observer can begin to see the rainbow created by layer upon layer of broken shards of minerals. Such a contemplative experience can be a deep sensory journey toward wisdom. Willingness to spend time truly seeing can change how we view the world, moving us away from our fast-food culture of superficially scanning what we see and becoming surfeited with images that do not delve below the surface.”
Makoto Fujimura, Silence and Beauty: Hidden Faith Born of Suffering

year in books

Reader hasn't connected with their friends on Goodreads, yet.



Favorite Genres



Polls voted on by Reader

Lists liked by Reader