A Refreshing Sense of Forgiveness and Optimism

My family and I had a chance to see Wes Anderson’s amazing new film Moonrise Kingdom over the weekend. Highly recommended! Relevant Magazine recently had a feature on the filmography of Wes Anderson and concluded:

Anderson’s formal and thematic consistency is what makes him a genuine auteur. Instead of following the “one for them, one for me” model of filmmaking, every one of Anderson’s films are marked by a refreshing sense of forgiveness, optimism and, above all, a longing for spiritual and emotional maturity—no matter what age its characters or viewers happen to be.

Read the full article: The Grown-Up Fables of Wes Anderson

Cāny Award: Babette’s Feast

“Babette landed among the graceless ones. Followers of Luther, they heard sermons on grace nearly every Sunday and the rest of the week tried to earn God’s favor with their pieties and renunciations. Grace came to them in the form of a feast, Babette’s Feast, a meal of a lifetime lavished on those who had in no way earned it, who barely possessed the faculties to receive it. Grace came to Norre Vosburg as it always comes: free of charge, no strings attached, on the house. “

– Philip Yancey

As part of our continuing Cāny series, the second film that we absolutely had to choose is Babette’s Feast, a Danish film that won the Oscar for Best Foreign Film in 1987. Not only is the film a critically acclaimed masterpiece, but the story is an extraordinary parable of “grace”, the single most important word in all of Christianity. Adapted from a short story by Isak Dinesen, Babette’s Feast tells the story of two minister’s daughters who give up love and fame to remain in service to their tiny Lutheran church in a remote village in Denmark. They eventually take in a refugee from Paris and discover a secret from her past that ultimately transforms the small church.

Without giving away the surprises in the story, I will say that I cannot think of a more remarkable picture of the gospel, contrasting the church’s age-old bent towards legalism with Christ’s free, undeserving, unappreciated, and bountiful gift of grace. In the end, Babette’s Feast provides unique insight into the true nature of the Incarnation.

I have heard many sermons on grace over the years. None have had the impact on me as this underrated, obscure Danish film.

Move over Emmys, Grammys, and Tonys…We’ve got the Cānys

We at Cana believe God doesn’t just communicate to the world through the pages of a Bible or inside of the walls of a church. Instead, we see that God reveals himself in all aspects of the world around us — in both the sacred and secular.

Along this line, J.R.R. Tolkien maintained that readers should be able to extract meaning from an author’s work rather than the opposite — having the author force a particular idea or agenda onto the reader. While we would suggest there is certainly a place for an author to convey their faith or beliefs through their work, we rather like Tolkien’s principle of applicability. For, when we apply it to our modern world, we are free to extract meaning from all forms of art — both sacred and secular — and apply them to our lives as we seek Jesus Christ.

Unfortunately, not everyone sees how God can or would choose to reveal himself in the secular world and therefore would have no use in trying to integrate various facets of art into their faith journey. This jarring difference in perspective reminds us of something C. S. Lewis once said of a non-reader: “He may be full of goodness and good sense, but he inhabits a tiny world. In it, we should be suffocated.”

In the end, our hope at Cana is that we all avoid “suffocating in a tiny world” — that we can experience Jesus Christ as we watch a great film or listen to great music and invite God to use them as tools for shaping and molding us in our faith.

In that spirit, we are introducing the Cāny (pronounced kay-nee), an award that celebrates instances we’ve seen in which God has revealed himself through the arts. When we watch a film, listen to a great song, or read a great book and believe that there’s something truly exceptional about the way God is revealed, we will award it a Cāny.

In the near future, we will be adding a new section to Canawalk which has our running list of Cāny award winners. We hope that you’ll find the Cānys useful as you seek to walk, stumble, and tread onward towards Jesus Christ.

The Creative Christian: An Oxymoron?

All too often we in the Church have a tendency to overlook mediocre artistry in ”Christian films” and “Christian literature” because of the underlying gospel message behind the story. “As long as the gospel is proclaimed”, goes the line of thinking, “does craftsmanship and creativity really matter?”

We can do better. Movies like the amazing French film Of Gods and Men prove that artistry and a faith message can go hand in hand. The subtle, yet powerful witness of a group of French monks under fire can speak to the heart of someone outside the church far more effectively than movies made by Christians for Christians.

Missionary Jim Elliot once wrote, “Wherever you are, be all there. Live to the hilt every situation you believe to be the will of God.” Let’s “live to the hilt” not only on the mission field, but also in fields of music, film, and literature.

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