Who's for the gospel-infused best of Western
culture? Korean Christians are. The Museum of Biblical Art is.
At the beginning of October's first week, Korean
evangelist Ock Soo Park spoke at Madison Square Garden, where
homegrown evangelist Creflo Dollar often tells listeners to grab as much
prosperity as they can. Park examined the New Testament's parable of the son
who scorns his dad, squanders his inheritance, comes to his senses amid
poverty and heads home.
Park noted that the prodigal son in the pigpen
perhaps thought "he could work hard, get money and go back to the father
proudly … but that kind of repentance does not bring change to our
lives. The heart must come completely crashing down." Park described the
attitude we need: "These ragged clothes, this dirty person, this
foolish person, this is me. I've tried, I've labored, but this is the
result."
Park concluded, "So many people today try to
decorate themselves before they come before God." Then he added another
practical application: "Many Americans have left God. They are filled
with their own ambition. We hope that the American people will return to
God, that they will awaken from a long sleep."
So the U.S. -- perhaps the Western world
generally -- is a prodigal son. Outside Madison Square Garden that night, I
heard the worst of American rap music, with its mantras of murder and
misogyny. Inside, framing the sermon, were Korean cellists, violinists and
singers communicating to an enthusiastic audience Handel's gospel
message, "Unto us a child is born."
Later last week came the opening of a new
exhibit, "The Art of Forgiveness: Images of the Prodigal Son," at New York's
Museum of Biblical Art, 30 blocks uptown from Madison Square Garden.
(The exhibit continues until Feb. 17.)
The exhibit includes a Rembrandt etching from
1636, "Return of the Prodigal Son." In it, the father is leaning forward,
and the emaciated, almost naked son, with a beastlike face, falls into
his father's arms. Next to the etching is a painting from 1640, with
the same title, done by Govaert Flinck, one of Rembrandt's top students.
The father is hurrying to a son who is on his knees and looking away
with an expression of shame, unable to make eye contact. Neither
Rembrandt nor his pupil prettied up the scene.
Some remarkable works created within the past
century are also on display: Christian Rohlfs, Robert Hodgell and Karen
Swenholt show sons miserable in sin and fathers yearning in love. A.
Malcolm Gimse's "Prodigal Parent" sculpture powerfully depicts a mother in
despair.
Two recent works in the exhibit modernize the
story without diminishing it. James Janknegt's colorful triptych begins
with a left panel showing the prodigal in a modern big city sitting next
to garbage cans. The middle panel centers on the father in a blue coat
rushing to greet the desperate son, while others carry to the prodigal
a similar blue coat and a pair of boots. The right panel shows the
older son so angry that he's broken the neck of his guitar.
My favorite recent work at the exhibit is a
collage by Texan Mary McCleary, whose materials include painted foil
sticks, wire and even lint: "I like the irony of using materials that are
often trivial, foolish and temporal to express what is significant,
timeless, and transcendent." (Isn't that what God does with our short-lived
frames?)
Her "Prodigal Son" (1996) displays figures in
Western garb, boots and all, on a flat terrain under a big sky. The
father and the prodigal are reconciling as they sit on metal folding chairs,
surrounded by numerous family members and friends -- but almost all of
them are eating barbecue and partying, not noticing God's redemption
amid this commonplace scene.
I left the museum and walked south, where New
York Leather Weekend, filled with prodigal events such as an outdoor
fetish festival, was beginning. |