Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Unique talents

When you see a painting you are drawn into the beauty of its strokes and colors, the scene and story of it. And while you are relating to a work of art, enjoying its beauty, moved by its sadness, you are registering something about the painter, the artist, the author. So it is with you and me. God does not bring us into the family and say, "Well, you were a painting and you are a sculpture, but now that you are Christians, I need you all to be poems." You are a symphony, I am a poem, he is a barber-shop-quartet melody, she is a sculpture in bronze, and God is expressed through each of us. And God does an amazing thing. He puts all of these works of art together, and they form one perfect picture, the body of the Lord Jesus. ~ Alice Bass (The Creative Life - A Workbook for Unearthing the Christian Imagination)

It is in living and acting that man establishes his relationship with being, with the truth and with the good. The artist has a special relationship to beauty. In a very true sense it can be said that beauty is the vocation bestowed on him by the Creator in the gift of “artistic talent”. And, certainly, this too is a talent which ought to be made to bear fruit, in keeping with the sense of the Gospel parable of the talents (cf. Mt 25:14-30). Here we touch on an essential point. Those who perceive in themselves this kind of divine spark which is the artistic vocation—as poet, writer, sculptor, architect, musician, actor and so on—feel at the same time the obligation not to waste this talent but to develop it, in order to put it at the service of their neighbour and of humanity as a whole. ~ Pope John Paul II..

0 comments: