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This Sunday is week six of Christ in the Psalms 2021 at Park Church Downtown. We’ll be in Psalm 115.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
This Sunday is week six of Christ in the Psalms 2021 at Park Church Downtown. We’ll be in Psalm 115.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
This Sunday is week seven of Christ in the Psalms 2021 at Park Church Highlands. We’ll be in Psalm 116.
Learn more about Christ in the Psalms weekly artwork and see previous pieces here.
While reading Psalm 115, I felt two distinctive things: the conviction of idolatry and its contrast with the sovereignty, steadfastness, and trustworthiness of the Lord. As someone who often struggles with shame, verses 4–8 stood out to me first, addressing the idols we often build.
Through idols built by our own hands, we try to make our own way separate from God, thinking we know ourselves better than He knows us. I do this all the time. This idolatry is symbolized by the gold rock/gemstone raised from the panel, representing our attempt to build and construct our own lives separate from Him. But, by the grace of God, HE is steadfast and faithful and is the true God. The whimsical gold and white background represents the Lord’s sovereignty and faithfulness. His refinement, like actual gold, is at work in us. Even though we make our own idols and try to separate ourselves from Him, He clings to His people and frees us to rest in Him and trust in Him alone. Like verses 9–11 tell us, God is the one true God, our help and our shield. My prayer is that this rests on our hearts and transforms us.
This piece is a mixed media artwork: ink, watercolor, pastel, and spray paint. I have worked a lot with ink, watercolor, and pastel, but this was my first time working with spray paint. For the gemstone, I purposefully wanted to use mediums I could use to add more detail with—like the ink and watercolor and pastel. I wanted those mediums to represent the intense efforts we often go to to build the idols to which we desperately cling. However, for the background panel, the representation of the sovereignty of God, I wanted to use a material more mysterious—free flowing—but with the same color palette. I created the background using a technique called hydro dipping: spraying spray paint on top of water and dipping your surface in to create layers. This technique reminded me of the whimsical beauty of God and the everflowing trust in Him by His people.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
This Sunday is week five of Christ in the Psalms 2021 at Park Church Downtown. We’ll be in Psalm 114.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
This Sunday is week six of Christ in the Psalms 2021 at Park Church Highlands. We’ll be in Psalm 115.
Learn more about Christ in the Psalms weekly artwork and see previous pieces here.
My piece, based on Psalm 114, is an abstract acrylic paint depiction of the metaphoric waters in motion as described in the Psalm. The emphasis of the painting is the dramatic water that could be interpreted either as the Red Sea or as the River Jordan, each that “ran off” at God’s command. In the background is a land element that has a glow to imply that it is a holy place. This painting is my humble attempt to create a tangible illustration of the Lord’s beauty and strength.
This was a fun piece, it came together pretty quickly for me which is always a gift! The biggest challenge I found along the way was how much emphasis to put on the water vs. land elements of the painting. I did several iterations of the mountains/land, and ended up emphasizing the dramatic nature of the water, while keeping the land element simple. I’m grateful for the inspiration of the Psalm and excited for others to interpret the piece as they see it.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
This Sunday is week five of Christ in the Psalms 2021 at Park Church Downtown. We’ll be in Psalm 114.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
This Sunday is week five of Christ in the Psalms 2021 at Park Church Highlands. We’ll be in Psalm 114.
Many Christians today feel an aching divide between their worshipping life on Sunday and their working life on Monday. Sunday worship is often viewed as an escape from a busy week of work in the office, the classroom, and the home. But what if that’s not the way God intended it to be? What if God designed human beings to live integrated lives–to carry the cares and concerns of our daily work into his sanctuary in an act of worship. What if we could experience the gospel in new and transformative ways by bringing our work and worship together?
Learn more about Christ in the Psalms weekly artwork and see previous pieces here.
After spending a lot of time reflecting on Psalm 113, what stood out to me the most is that it is a psalm about hope; blessing the name of the Lord and also being blessed by Him. It’s about His praiseworthiness, and His active compassion for those the world has forgotten. He raises the poor, lifts the needy, and gives the barren a home.
My painting represents a woman walking from a dark place into a bright field of flowers, leaving the shadows behind and entering into light.