Fear’s Inception – Where’s the Evidence? #1

Don’t fear, it’s only day #1 of Evidence Week!

evidence

Evidence-based Fear

What do you fear?  Is it based on evidence?  For example, I fear getting shot in the heart by a bullet because the evidence shows that people getting shot in the heart will almost certainly die.  If I am in a situation where that looks like it might happen, you can damn well be sure I will be both afraid and will do everything I can to not let it occur.  However, I do not fear Friday the 13th, black cats, walking under ladders, breaking mirrors or spilling salt.  Why? Because there is no evidence that those things hurt anyone in any more proportion than any other day, color of cat, walking anywhere else, breaking or spilling anything else.  Those who believe they are dangerous are believing a superstition, meaning something that has a tradition, but no evidence, as being a bad thing.

Superstition-based Fear

Yesterday at the church we attend the Pastor asked a woman to come up to the alter and read an email she had sent him a few months prior.  The woman had written it in response to a sermon he had given. In the email she told the story of living a fear-based life. Her fear was directly connected to her overhearing a conversation when she was very young between her father and her pastor.  A man in the church who had voiced his disagreement with the Pastor’s direction for the congregation had been in a terrible automobile accident. He was mortally injured but suffered greatly before he actually died.  The pastor was overheard by the young woman telling her father that it was probably a good thing that he had died, and it was also a good thing he had suffered before his death because it indicated he was being punished for being outside the will of God.  This led the young girl to live her entire life with that fear of God punishing and hurting her or others if she did not obey exactly what the church told her to do and be.  She had written the email to our church’s pastor to let him know how liberating it was to hear him rebut that idea and instead replace it with a vision of God being loving and caring and not out to crush and hurt her or others over theological or any other differences.  

This is a perfect example of the acronym of fear.  She was captive to False Evidence Appearing Real because she listened to an authority whom she trusted and she wasn’t old enough to understand cause and effect, science, biology, and other evidence-based areas of life that argue against that vicious, superstitious and self-serving way of seeing the events in life.

What do you fear?

Is there good evidence that makes the fear valid?

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Drawing by Marty Coleman

Quote by Neale Donald Walsch, American Author of a book series, ‘Conversations with God’.

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Artists I Love – Roger Brown – Winter Weekend Series

 

Hey Everyone, it’s wintertime again and that means I am going to restart my ‘Artist’s I Love’ Series.  I will do an artist each weekend or so for a while. Let me know if you have a favorite artist, it might jog my memory and I’ll want to include them too!

If you want to see last year’s series, check it out under  ‘Artist’s I Love‘.

 

roger brown cover

Roger Brown Exhibition – 1981 – Catalog cover

First up for this year is Roger Brown.  I first saw his work while I was a student in Graduate School at San Jose State University. I don’t remember the exact circumstances but I saw a show of his work and it blew me away.  He combines humor, social commentary, great painting (and other media) techniques, fantastic color and spot on compositions.  He is inventive, creative, always moving forward in exploring the possibilities of art.

I got this catalog from a Roger Brown exhibition that I did NOT attend. I was at a museum that had a few pieces of his and saw this catalog in the museum bookstore and had to have it. It’s been opened a LOT since I got it 30+ years ago, as you can tell by what shape it is in. He’s been one of my favorite artists ever since.

The Entry of Christ into Chicago in 1976 – Roger Brown

This image might be his most famous piece and it’s indicative of his imagery, high contrast and stylized into flattened patterns with repetitive elements. The subject matter is both contemporary and historical, which is also typical of many of his images. But there is a decided anti-religious feel to the piece, as if it is a tacky city-sponsored event.

talk show

‘Talk Show’ – Roger Brown

He frequently uses suburban scenes, most often with the banality of that world appearing to be the message. At the same time he uses it so much that I have always go the feeling that he knows and actually has affection for that world, even while leveling a sort of frustrated critique on it.

‘Devil’s Surprise’ – Roger Brown

‘Jim and Tammy Show’ – Roger Brown

As is obvious, he has no love lost for organized religion in this painting. The surprise that the churchgoers are the ones in hell probably has a lot to do with his being from the south and having been raised with that baptist fundamentalism all around him. His tacky, paperdoll cut out view of Jim and Tammy Bakker, preachers who fell from grace in the 90s, also give that message.

‘Post Modern Res Erection’ – Roger Brown

He has also played around (pun intended) with making light of America’s sexual obsessions, which isn’t unrelated to our religious ones.

‘Family Tree Mourning’ – Roger Brown

His social commentary wasn’t restricted to just two of the taboo dinner subjects, religion and sex, he dealt with the third as well, politics. Here he connects all our wars up until that time into a gigantic national family tree. He obviously felt that war had come out of and had overwhelmed the goodness of our founding.

He did a number of fine art prints and in this case made sure the viewer knew it was a print by saying so right on it. I like that cheekiness.

‘Twin Towers’ – Roger Brown – 1977

Brown delved into 3D work in his later career while not actually straying very far from his thematic and visual focus. This is obviously done much closer to the construction of the World Trade Center than it’s destruction, but it has a very moving feel to it, with the emphasis on the silhouettes in each window busy doing their work.

Here are just a few more I think are of interest.

‘Crater’ – Roger Brown

“City Expanding’ – Roger Brown

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If you like his work you can read more about him at:

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Fall/Winter 2016

Winter/Spring 2015

Summer 2014

Winter 2012/2013

Winter 2011/2012

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Jesus Developeths His First Crush – Secret Jesus #5

I am crushin’ on the fact I finished 5 fun drawings this week about Secret Jesus. Here’s number 5.

secret jesus #5

Jesus and Puberty

So now we reach the obvious final question about Jesus’ lost teenage years. Did Jesus ever have a crush, fall in love, have a girlfriend and even perhaps ever marry?  The stories of Jesus in the Bible and elsewhere say nothing specific about these things. But I know this: if Jesus was real, meaning a real human, then I assume he went through what humans go through when they reach certain ages. What that means to me is that when Jesus reached puberty and beyond he had the same feelings most other boys have and that is a new found attraction to girls.  

Crushing Jesus

If Jesus had a crush and later maybe a girlfriend or two, it is safe to assume he also had break ups.  Some might have been his choice, others might have been the choice of the girl. I can hear it now, “I am so sorry Jesus, but there is just TOO MUCH PRESSURE dating the savior of the whole world. I have to break up with you.”  

Feeling What We Feel

But seriously, what this means is, once again, Jesus felt what we feel. If he was a real human, then he went through what we go through.  Isn’t that why we pay attention to him and his teachings, because we know that he knows and understands?

Do you follow Jesus and his teachings? What caused you to do so?

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Drawing by Marty Coleman, who follows sometimes.

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Jesus Scared Before the Storm – Secret Jesus #4

I am not afraid to tell you, it’s day 4 of Secret Jesus week!

secret jesus #4

Jesus Takes a Trip

Jesus had to have gone places on his own when he became an older teen. Maybe to visit his relatives, maybe to sell something his father and his shop at created, maybe to get supplies.  No doubt new and interesting experiences awaited him on these journeys.  There were likely moments of fear and confusion about what to do next as well.  

Facing the unknown

One of the most heroic elements about Jesus was his willingness to face his fears head on. He had to have learned that he grew up, don’t you think?  Whether it was learning from his parents or learning while out on his own, it’s the same thing we all have been through. We can’t learn if we are curled up into a ball, afraid to move and grow.  It might be scary, it might be dangerous, but if it is the path you know you need to go down, then you need to face those things, and you can.

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Drawing by Marty Coleman, who has faced a few storms.

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Jesus Feeling Blue – Secret Jesus #3

Don’t get depressed about it, but we are over half way done with Secret Jesus week!

secret jesus #3

Jesus Funk

Do you think Jesus ever got depressed?  We know he struggled quite a bit as an adult, and for good reason.  But what about as a teenager?  I can imagine him feeling blue, lonely, confused, even depressed about things, like most teens do at one time or another. Maybe he was feeling unappreciated, or misunderstood by his siblings or parents.  Maybe everyone else had something important to do for a big holiday but for whatever reason he didn’t and that led to him feeling left out.

Who is Real?

If Jesus is real, if he is capable of complete understanding, complete mercy and compassion, then it isn’t due to his academic genius or his theological brilliance. There were plenty of people high in both those categories during his day.  It is due to his empathy, his knowing what it is humans go through. If he didn’t experience it himself, (which in truth it’s likely he didn’t experience every single feeling and emotion ever known to man) then he at least was able to discern and feel it when other people were going through something.  And he learned from it. Not just how to be empathetic but how to move past the feeling into a new and better place.  

That’s the Jesus I like and relate to.  That is the Jesus I admire and want to be more like as I continue to grow.

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Drawing by Marty Coleman, who is glad he isn’t the Pope.

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