Lately I have had passionate conversations at art events about
feeding the hungry. My work as a
volunteer with a food bank has re-kindled my passion for the cause.
After working in a mission based ministry in North Carolina
I understand the spiritual drive to feed the hungry and serve the poor. By serving “the least of these” we are
serving the Most High God. By ignoring
the poor and hungry we ignore Him.
Homelessness, hunger, and generational poverty are pervasive in the Pacific Northwest. My artwork doesn't communicate anything about this. What's up with that?
Homelessness, hunger, and generational poverty are pervasive in the Pacific Northwest. My artwork doesn't communicate anything about this. What's up with that?
Consider Elijah’s experience of the whirlwind, the earthquake and the fire. Despite the tumult he found that
the Lord was not in them. It was
the still small voice that was the Lords.
(1st Kings 19:11-12)
The disruption, chaos, and turmoil didn't contain the Lord.
The disruption, chaos, and turmoil didn't contain the Lord.
We are moved emotionally by what we see and become swept up
in our circumstance, our society. Then
we express ourselves out of the abundance of our heart: anxious, angry, afraid....
Our circumstances can blind us to the ever
present, all knowing, all powerful God. We
are reminded that those things which are seen are temporary and that the unseen things are eternal. (2nd Corinthians 4:15-18)
"Single Red", 2017, © James Thatcher |
Clean lines, concise edges, and sequenced colors are
an expression of faith and not the world’s noise.
Pine study based on the work of Scandinavian architect, Soren Korsgaard; © 2017 |
I’m keeping on.