[New post] Roundup: “A Radiant Birth,” Kate Bowler’s Advent Guide, messy family trees, and more
Victoria Emily Jones posted: " This year I'm continuing my Advent and Christmas tradition of daily art-music pairings on the blog, from December 2 (a prologue before the official start of Advent on December 3) through January 6, Epiphany. If you know of anyone who might be interested " Art & Theology
This year I'm continuing my Advent and Christmas tradition of daily art-music pairings on the blog, from December 2 (a prologue before the official start of Advent on December 3) through January 6, Epiphany. If you know of anyone who might be interested to follow along, they can subscribe here.
An ancient catacomb painting, a contemporary light installation, an Urdu anthem, a French West Indian carol, an Ethiopian tapestry, an impearled chasuble, a kinetic sculpture, a jazz rhapsody, a Byzantine-inspired piano quintet, an isicathamiya-style song, a Puerto Rican bulto, a Netherlandish altarpiece, and settings of Herbert, Blake, Wilbur, and Augustine—these are some of the gifts from artists on offer this season, inviting us to deepen our desire for and celebration of Christ Emmanuel, God with us.
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THE DAILY PRAYER PROJECT:Advent 2023: With Advent comes the start of a new liturgical year—which means a new volume of the Daily Prayer Project's Living Prayer Periodical! Published in six editions a year, this periodical aims to "connect and unify Christians by resourcing them with daily prayers, practices, and music from the global-historical church, and visual art of spiritual and artistic value." I curate the art. The cover image for Advent 2023—which, providentially, was finalized before the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7 and the ensuing retaliations—is a calligraphic rendering of the Hebrew word shalom by Michel D'anastasio, a French Catholic artist with Jewish ancestry. The lamed is like a candle held hopefully aloft against a dark-blue midnight.
The Rev. Joel Littlepage, who is the pastor of worship and formation at Grace Mosaic in Washington, DC, curates the prayers. Here's Friday evening's, from the church in New Guinea: "Lord, oil the hinges of our hearts' doors, that they may swing gently and easily to welcome your coming." Wednesday morning's prayer is a responsive confession by Jorge Lockward, a Dominican song leader from New York, which begins, "Por tantas injusticias, perdón, Señor. Por tanta indiferencia, perdón, Señor." (For so much injustice, forgive us, Lord. For so much indifference, forgive us, Lord.)
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NEW BOOK: A Radiant Birth: Advent Readings for a Bright Season, ed. Leslie Leyland Fields and Paul J. Willis: New this fall from InterVarsity Press, this Advent devotional book is a multiauthor compilation of forty-two readings for Advent through Epiphany, consisting of literary essays, poems, and short stories. Contributors are affiliated with the Chrysostom Society and include Richard Foster, Lauren Winner, Madeleine L'Engle, Philip Yancey, Walter Wangerin Jr., Eugene Peterson, Luci Shaw, and Marilyn McEntyre. About one-third of the content is previously unpublished, including a wonderful little reader's theater (pages 81–89) by Leslie Leyland Fields that I can imagine working really well as part of a church service (and I received confirmation from Fields that people may use it freely in such settings). I know the market is really thick with Advent books, and I've read a lot of them, but this one has to be one of my favorites—the selections are wonderful.
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ART SERIES: Advent by Riki Yarbrough: For Advent 2018, artist Riki Yarbrough set herself a challenge: each day, create a 24 × 24-inch mixed media work corresponding to that day's family devotions, structured around Jesus's lineage. She didn't have nearly enough canvases to last the duration of the season, so on day two "I woke up, took the very same canvas I had painted the day before, and worked right on top." The final product was an artwork twenty-seven layers deep—the various people, prophecies, and foreshadowings adding weight and texture to the progressing story that culminated, in Yarbrough's devotional program, with the infant Christ in a manger. "To cover the previous day's work under the beauty of a new focus and set of Scriptures became both an offering and a sacrifice," she said. "I wasn't worried about meeting someone's expectation or coming back to rework it later. I was simply conversing with the Lord over the truth of His Word in those wonderful moments on that particular day."
Here's a thirty-second time lapse of the Cain and Abel composition transforming into Noah:
In Advent 2022 Yarbrough reprised the daily challenge, this time executing her images on separate canvases. You can find this series on her Instagram @rikiyarbrough, starting with the candle image—but you can also purchase it in book form, as this month, Yarbrough released Advent in Art and Verse, combining full-color photos of all twenty-seven works from her 2022 Advent series with scripture passages and original poetic reflections. I received my copy, and my first impression was: what a beautiful design!
I like the allusiveness of her paintings: a set of footprints, stalks of grain, a red cord, tongs gripping a hot coal, tree rings, harp strings, a split fig, a cairn—simple objects like these guide us through the narrative of the Old Testament and the opening pages of the New.
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SONG MEDLEY: "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel / Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus" by the Petersens: In this video shot in Weddings at the Homestead in their hometown of Branson, Missouri, family bluegrass band The Petersens perform the two best-known Advent hymns—the one mournful, meditative, and minor key, the other bright and exuberant. They recorded both songs (released as two separate tracks) for their 2020 album Christmas with the Petersens.
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SUBSTACK POST: "O Come, Thou Rod of Jesse" by Grace Hamman, Medievalish 1.12, December 12, 2022: In last December's installment of her monthly Medievalish newsletter, Grace Hamman considers Jesus's family tree, visualized in the Middle Ages as what's called, after Isaiah 11:1, the Tree of Jesse [previously here and here]. What does it mean that Jesus came from a real human family, a "complex web of generation, adoption, relationship, and dependence"? "The Son did not only take on flesh," Hamman writes, "he took on David's sometimes troublesome courage and cowlicks, Anne's devotion and double-jointed pinky fingers. He comes from a line of real and complex people: faithless and faithful, abusers and abused, holy and broken. Baby Jesus is born into our funny human particularities and our burdensome histories, into created time and place."
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PODCAST EPISODE: "The Season of Waiting (and Waiting . . . and Waiting),"Everything Happens with Kate Bowler, November 29, 2022: In this podcast episode from the beginning of last Advent, bestselling author Kate Bowler introduces the season as one of waiting. She explains the history of the Advent wreath, and takes calls from listeners who share Christmas traditions they observe to honor a loved one they've lost. Be sure to download Bowler's 2023 Advent guide, titled Bless the Advent We Actually Have. Here's an excerpt from Day 1:
Advent is a time marked by waiting. We wait for God to make all things right. For justice to be meted. For democracy to feel stable. For wrongs to be righted. For our communities to be safe spaces for the vulnerable. For our earth to heal. We wait for our lives to get easier—for us to have the financial security we need, for our relationships to be restored, for our bodies to ache less. We wait for our parents to understand us and our families to feel whole. We wait for our kids and grandkids to be healed or come back home. We wait for the grief to end.
But the waiting of Advent is one marked by hope. We wait with expectancy. With anticipation for the inbreaking of God to make all things new. . . .
Advent hope is gritty. It shirks all false optimism. It is hope as protest. Hope in the face of impossibilities. . . .
The excerpt Bowler reads in the podcast is from her 2022 Advent guide, The Season of Waiting (and Waiting . . . and Waiting . . .) (which you can also download for free, along with 2021's A Good Enough Advent + Christmastide, at https://katebowler.com/advent/).
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