Tag Archives: creativity

Tomato Seedlings, Dave Ramsey, and Sustainability

The week we got our tomato seedlings and herb sprouts in the ground is the week I finally sat down and read Dave Ramsey’s Total Money Makeover. Both things speak to me of the value of being self-sustainable in a nation underwater in debt.

Like a lot of people, my husband and I have school loans, and we’re committed to scaling them down to zero. I’m willing to get a little crazy like Dave Ramsey suggests to come out on top.

I’m grateful that my husband and I were raised similarly in the way we were taught to handle money, which makes it so much easier in our marriage to spend and save together. It would be difficult if we disagreed on this point, because we do a lot of weird things, such as making our own chicken stock and granola, choosing not to own a TV, going through a Christian non-profit for insurance cost sharing, and not owning credit cards. We both love to go out and try new restaurants and go to the movies, but we can do these things comfortably because we don’t have monthly bills for cable, smart phones, or stuff bought on credit.

In the past two years of marriage and learning to live within our means, I have noticed a few things about making, growing, and doing things by hand the slow way.

It’s empowering. Our backyard garden plot is small, but war-weary generations before us called it a “victory garden” for a reason. It is empowering to create something from scratch that costs pennies, that is fresh and free from a bar code. It’s empowering to know that we can feed ourselves on what we grew by hand, food that is not reliant on a system–farmers, factory workers, machines, airplanes and trucks–to find its way to my plate. And as a freelancer subject to nearly 40% self-employment taxes, guess how good those Italian green beans taste.

It teaches me to be resourceful. Our American concept of “need” is becoming more and more subjective. I’ve found that it is healthy to look within what I already have and ask, what can I use that is already within reach? I am proud when I can re-purpose a yard sale item instead of buying new. I am learning the difference between consuming and creating, and it teaches me to take a second look at things I already own and get creative, to see fresh possibilities.

It trains me in the art of cultivation. This was humanity’s first call–to enjoy and cultivate a garden. I love growing our own tomatoes, making my own peanut butter, and getting crafty to decorate my home because the process teaches me to better appreciate what has been provided. In these simple tasks, I get to participate in the divine action of creating, and it reminds me, better than swiping a card, that all of it is a gift from God’s hand.

Do you see value in being self-sustaining, financial, spiritual, or otherwise? How do you pursue this in daily, simple ways?

The Seventh Day

Creativity can be very fulfilling, but it is work. And we all need our cycles of work to be interspersed with cycles of rest.

We all need a seventh day.

We all need to rest to keep us from creative blocks and burn-out.

I’ve had a fantastic weekend in Chicago. I’ve enjoyed visiting the city I used to live in, visiting old haunts and reliving old memories. I’ve enjoyed the opportunity to connect with Moody Publishers in person again, the publishing house that got me started on the journey that I am on now. I’ve enjoyed living in the concentrated creative environment of the STORY conference, learning from the craft of others, being encouraged by the stories of so many talented people who are in many ways bringing good things to life. I will be going home filled.

I am grateful for a Sabbath tomorrow to slow and rest after such a creative swell, to let it all soak in. I am grateful for a seventh day.

For a great post on creativity and rest, visit Elora Nicole’s blog with a great post from Christina Kroeger. How do you rest after the creative process? 

Beauty Will Save the World

I thrive when surrounded by beauty. It’s why I pick flesh flowers from my garden for the table. It’s why there are bright paintings covering my wall in my office. It’s why I love good literature, good food, art museums, city parks, church sanctuaries. Beauty ushers me into His heart.

But I am wounded every time the church casts suspicion on beauty, beholding it with fear rather than awe.

I experienced this disappointment again this morning while reading a rather uncharitable review of Ann Voskamp’s One Thousand  Gifts, the bestseller about learning thankfulness in the presence of our Creator God.

As someone who works in the publishing industry, I was impressed and incredibly grateful to read One Thousand Gifts as a mature literary work. In these pages, I see a poet-saint who truly savors words and understands a writer’s craft. Here is a woman who writes from her core–seeing the world with her senses wide open and articulating beauty in a truly memorable way. It is my deep regret that I do not see more of this from Christian bookshelves.

I read many wonderful Christian books every year; books that reflect sound biblical wisdom, moving stories, and sharp insight and research. But I also know if I want good literature, if I want to read words that will resound in my head all afternoon with raw and haunting beauty, I have to turn to secular books. I get burnt out reading stories saturated in Christian cliche. I become cynical when confronted with sloppy prose and functional, overused descriptions. I want more than that. I want to be awed.

Do you know what truth has captured my attention for weeks? Reading Genesis, I learned something that is changing my entire outlook on faith: Eden means “delight.” We serve a Creator God who is infinite in beauty, who created us with electric sensitivity to all things good and beautiful. He gave us eyes to see, ears to hear, tongues to taste–so many ways to feel and to experience His aesthetic truth.

Eden means delight. It means pleasure. Because this is Who God Is. Sometimes we are afraid of feeling, beholding, of any mention of pleasure. We don’t like to talk about sensuality in church, associating it with hedonistic immorality, but it really means beholding with our senses. As God’s people, why should we fear beautiful things? Why can’t we celebrate them?

The thing about art is that it relies on the viewer’s taste and preference, and sometimes an artistic expression is just not our cup of tea. I understand that. But I would hope that even if we cannot personally appreciate a Christian expression of beauty, we will respect it as a human response to Creator’s call to fashion beauty and bring good things to life.

What is your experience with artistic expression? Does it influence your faith? How do you think beauty plays a part in God’s economy?

Critique by Creating: Take Two

Last week I wrote out some ideas on a fascinating quote from Michelangelo, “Critique by Creating,” but even as I wrote it I wished I had more room to flesh out these ideas. You can only do so much in 4-500 word blog posts!

So when RELEVANT magazine asked me to re-write the piece for their website, I was glad for the opportunity to go a little deeper into exploring this idea of engaging with the culture as creatives, rather than consumers or critics.

Here’s the beginning of my revised article,

“Critique by creating,” said Michelangelo, a man who painted a ceiling with glory—and a man the Church of the 21st century could learn from.

Christians are infamous for being reactive, polemical, boycotting and rebutting everything that goes against the grain of our worldview. And I am as guilty as the next. Sometimes, controversy is our drug of choice.

It’s why Love Wins rocketed to the top of the bestseller lists. It’s why there’s been a recent web explosion over bullying the “effeminate.” It’s why we’re up in arms over hot-button issues of homosexuality, divorce, gender roles and differences of theological opinion.

Tolerance is one extreme, but knee-jerk reactions are another. What if there is a third way? What if instead of triggering a backlash, we put our energy into moving forward?

What if we chose to critique by creating?

Head over to RELEVANT to read the rest!

And I’d love to hear your thoughts on this. It’s a fine art to learn how to navigate as believers in cultural immersion. How can we best do this? How did Christ do this? 

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...