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What does Christian art have to do with how followers of Jesus should relate to the world? Dominic Jackson opens with the question he wrestled with as a young film student—why is so much Christian art so bad—and uses it as a doorway into a bigger one: how should Christians actually see the world around them? Working through the tension between John 15 and John 3:16, he proposes a framework of four kingdoms—the kingdom of God, the kingdom of the world, the kingdom over the world, and the kingdom of me—as a way of navigating what it means to be in the world but not of it.
By The Gateway Church4.9
1414 ratings
What does Christian art have to do with how followers of Jesus should relate to the world? Dominic Jackson opens with the question he wrestled with as a young film student—why is so much Christian art so bad—and uses it as a doorway into a bigger one: how should Christians actually see the world around them? Working through the tension between John 15 and John 3:16, he proposes a framework of four kingdoms—the kingdom of God, the kingdom of the world, the kingdom over the world, and the kingdom of me—as a way of navigating what it means to be in the world but not of it.