Goshen College performs plays on the lives of the saints

Last summer the theme of the 2008 Bridgefolk conference was “Saints and the Spirituality that Sustains Them.”  News of a specially-commissioned series of short plays being performed this coming weekend at a Mennonite college is particularly striking, therefore.
Continue reading “Goshen College performs plays on the lives of the saints”

Bluffton University Professor Lectures on “Why Mennonites Should Read Catholic Literature”

Bridgefolk conversations and events have focused most often on spirituality, liturgy, peacemaking and theology. But in recent decades many Mennonites have also found themselves drawn to the art and literature of the Catholic tradition. In an annual peace lectureship sponsored by Goshen College and Bluffton University, Bluffton professor Lamar Nisly addressed the topic of “Why Mennonites Should Read Catholic Literature.” Continue reading “Bluffton University Professor Lectures on “Why Mennonites Should Read Catholic Literature””

Speakers urge creative use of arts in worship

by Ann Graham Price

STURGIS, Mich. (MC USA) —

O worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness,
in the beauty of holiness, in the beauty of holiness.
Oh, glory hallelujah, hallelujah, hallelujah,
O come before his presence and glorify his name.
(No. 124, Hymnal:  A Worship Book)

Art is so beautifully open that worshipers can put themselves into an artistic work — a dance, poem or drama, for example — and the Holy Spirit can honor each individual response to it, Sally Morgenthaler told her audience the weekend of April 25 for the annual “Art of Worship” program at Amigo Centre.

Yet a long-standing suspicion of incorporating the creative arts in worship is deeply rooted in some aspects of Anabaptist traditions, said Marlene Kropf, director of the Mennonite Church USA Executive Board Office of Congregational Life. She is also associate professor of spiritual development and worship at Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary in Elkhart. Continue reading “Speakers urge creative use of arts in worship”