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During his village’s art festival, Wayan was invited to direct a performance of dancers and musicians. CBF photo

Field personnel encourage artists in Asian communities

By Patricia Heys
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
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Editor’s note: Due to global security concerns names and specific locations of some of CBF’s field personnel will not be publicized.
 
ATLANTA –“Did you hear the music they’re playing,” said a wedding attendee to his friend. “These Christians are just like we are.”
 
Jonathan and Tina, who serve as CBF field personnel, believe that the arts have the power to break down barriers, as music did at a wedding in Southeast Asia. The wedding couple, who were two of the few Christians in the community, invited many of their non-Christians neighbors to join them for the celebration.
 
“So often there is no separation between ethnicity, culture and religious tradition, even in North America,” said Jonathan. “As the world becomes more multi-cultural, I think we have a difficult time dividing what is cultural and what is of our faith. In some places in Asia, if you follow Christ, then you can no longer say you are part of the community. Christianity is seen as the religion of the foreigner, and local Christians are sometimes asked to leave.”
 
Jonathan and Tina encourage Christian artists to stay connected to their cultures, using the music, dance and visual arts of their native community to express Christian faith. They hope that these expressions will help remove the walls between communities and local churches.
 
“When we began looking at how the arts are used in local communities, we realized that the arts could be a part of redefining in popular understanding what it means to be a Christian,” Jonathan said. “To follow Christ doesn’t mean that you leave your culture behind and accept Western culture, but that you could live out your faith in your local community wearing your traditional clothes, playing your traditional instruments, and that is valid.”
 
Pak Wayan became a Christian five years ago, and when he did, he lost his inheritance and was asked to leave his community. Wayan serves as Jonathan and Tina’s gamelan instructor, teaching them and other Christian musicians how to play the 20-piece metallaphone instrument that is the foundation of music in Southeast Asia. His group of students has quickly grown from six to 16, and earlier this year the group played a piece Wayan wrote based on Psalms 150.
 
Recently, Wayan was invited back to his community to participate in the annual arts festival. And while he celebrates this step toward acceptance, he is facing a new challenge – diabetes. Through his relationship with Jonathan and Tina, Wayan was provided with a blood sugar tester, donated by a church member at Winter Park Baptist Church in Wilmington, N.C. Now, Jonathan and Tina are helping raise funds for Wayan to have cataract surgery.
 
“Though still struggling with this life-changing illness, he is working diligently to change his diet and lifestyle,” said Tina. “Not only has the blood sugar tester helped him physically, it has given him the opportunity to testify to the God who provides.”
 
Jonathan and Tina provide support and encouragement to other artists as well. They also facilitate visual art exhibitions, teach music and dance classes, work with local musicians to create compositions for worship and provide training to seminary students.
 
“God has placed within us such creative potential,” Jonathan said. “And the arts speak in ways that make visible things that are invisible. When you read scripture you know you see the music, the poetry, the stories. You see that Jesus walks away and leaves us to figure out the story’s meaning. And artists today are doing the same thing. There’s tremendous potential among artists to create expressions of the gospel that will continue to speak even when they have walked away.”
 
Jonathan and Tina encourage churches and individuals to partner with Christian artists and communities around the world. They hope Fellowship Baptists with skills in music, dance, painting, drama and other art forms will share their gifts.
 
To learn about partnership opportunities, contact Chris Boltin at (800) 352-8741 or cboltin@thefellowship.info. To financially the support Jonathan and Tina’s ministry, give to the CBF Offering for Global Missions at www.thefellowship.info.
 
CBF is a fellowship of Baptist Christians and churches who share a passion for the Great Commission and a commitment to Baptist principles of faith and practice. The Fellowship’s mission is to serve Christians and churches as they discover and fulfill their God-given mission.