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July 7 2010:
The use of arts will greatly impact the work of
evangelism and discipleship, said an Arlington, Texas,
professor.
Stan Moore noted that a large majority of students in
many of his seminary classes came to faith through
music.
This is because “the arts speak to the whole person –
intellectually, emotionally, physically and of course
spiritually reaching into the very depths of our minds
and bodies and spirits,” he said.
Professor Moore was speaking at the Global Consultation
on Music and Missions event in Singapore. He co-founded
the consultation and also currently serves as senior
fellow and professor of Church Music and Worship at the
B. H. Carroll Theological Institute.
The event draws music missionaries worldwide to learn
from one another.
The arts, he said, is as an “indispensable means to
reach those who do not know Christ and to teach and
disciple those who do know Him.”
Christian artists have a responsibility to “create or
adapt artistic expressions that adequately and embody
the Christian message within a given culture,” he
highlighted.
Already Christians are called to “use all possible and
worthy means to communicate the Gospel of Jesus Christ
to all peoples,” Moore noted. This includes every
talent, gift and ability Christians have.
If Christians are called to use any tool they can find
to spread the Gospel, there is clearly no justification
for passing on a powerful one, he reasoned.
However, the Texas professor cautioned music
missionaries against confusing or distorting truth
through their art, language and lifestyle.
The affective qualities of the artistic expression
should appropriately reinforce the truth of the message,
he emphasized. It should not have any inappropriate or
unwholesome associations for a given culture.
Moore held up God as the supreme communicator.
Jesus Christ became a human being to clearly communicate
His love for people in a way they could understand. He
did this in order that they might know Him, understand
Him and be brought back into a right relationship with
God.
“Jesus became a man; a specific man at a given time and
place with a specific message to communicate to a lost
world,” he told attendees at Singapore Bible College and
Bartley Christian Church.
He did not force others to learn His language, Moore
added. He learned theirs. Jesus used art forms His
listeners could understand. He told parables, stories
and drew pictures.
Mere transmission of information should not be mistaken
for communication, he clarified.
Real communication is characterized by involvement and
"exchange of creative understanding" between two or more
parties, he explained.
In order for communication to take place, the
communicator must move into the frame of reference of
the receptors. This is the responsibility of any
communicator, according to Moore.
As important as the arts is, it is still merely a means,
he emphasized. The arts is a means to call and disciple
all peoples to be true worshippers of God.
The message that Christians are called to spread is “not
just about (Christ’s) atonement. The full message of
Christ was His very life; His life of obedience to the
Father, His obedience to death and His glorious
resurrection from the dead,” he said.
The message of Christ is not a simply a truth to be
displayed through art. It is a message that must be
lived out, Moore stressed.
This is the first time the Global Consultation on Music
and Missions is being held outside the U.S. since it
began in 2003. Other keynote speakers at the July 4-7
event include Landa Cope, Ron Man and Tony Yeo.
Cope is the founding international dean of the College
of Communication for Youth With A Mission's University
of the Nations. Man serves as director of the department
of worship and creative arts for Greater Europe Mission.
And Yeo is deputy senior pastor of Covenant Evangelical
Free Church.
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