A Festival of Short Films

This year in Lent we have the best Gospel readings: four great, long stories from Saint John’s gospel. First is Nicodemus coming at night, told he must be born again of the Spirit. Then comes the woman at the well, to whom Jesus offers living water, i.e. that same Holy Spirit. In chapter 9, Jesus gives sight to the man born blind, who gradually comes to a faith so close to Jesus that he shares Jesus’ fate of being cast out. Finally, in chapter 11, Jesus summons his friend Lazarus back to life from the grave.

Each of these marvelous stories is a little drama in itself. It’s as if the church is inviting us to a festival of short films. Each of them has a different locale, a distinct dramatic conflict, a layering of meanings one on top of the other. Often Jesus moves on a spiritual level that those around him struggle to comprehend. Together these film shorts sketch the possibility of a human world transfigured from birth to death, a world of vision that actually sees Jesus for who he is, a world whose animating spring is the Spirit of God.

Following these short films (these great long stories) is the feature film, the climax of the festival. This is the one where a man starts out on a donkey and goes through being praised and being condemned, a loving meal and a betrayal, a mock trial, a wicked execution—you know the film don’t you? Have you seen it? It’s the one that ends with an empty tomb.

If you have not yet come to the festival, it’s not too late. Check it out. It’s running this weekend at a church near you.

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Out & About. This Sunday, March 19, from 5 to 6:30pm at Incarnation in Dallas: the Good Books & Good Talk seminar meets to discuss James Matthew Wilson’s The Strangeness of the Good. I’d like for participants to select one poem that they would particularly like for us to discuss, for whatever reason. There is a nascent movement back towards reading (even memorizing) poetry; just imagine how satisfying it is to be (for once) on the Cutting Edge. I hope you can join us. 

On April 16, the seminar will discuss Whose Body? by Dorothy L. Sayers.

Yours truly is to preach on Maundy Thursday at St. Matthew’s Cathedral in Dallas (April 6 at 7pm) and on Good Friday at Incarnation in Dallas (April 7 at noon and 6pm).

 

A Statue

Her nose is long and narrow, coming to a point above her relatively small yet firm chin. Her eyes are closed, though if they were open she would be seeing her son. He has a long neck that holds a preternaturally mature head, a head that grows larger as it moves upward and back. His hair lies close to his head, ageless.
Her right hand supports a sphere with a cross on the top of it. His left hand lightly touches it; his right hand is a bit higher, fingers arranged to bless and yet not exactly aimed to bless anything in particular. His face is stressless and calm as he gazes on the sphere, eyes open.

Both their lips are closed, neutral. He is smaller than she but he seems no younger. What does he see in that perfectly round, cross-topped sphere? Is he in time and she, with closed eyes, outside it? Or is she in our time which he has somehow entered—perhaps even as we gaze upon them we see him approaching, coming from eternity to be with us?
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To pause and look, to wonder, to ask, to pray: this is a good thing to do in Lent. You can find this statue of Mary and the Child in Holy Trinity Church in Bonham, Texas. It is a small treasure. The figures seemed to me slightly alien, slighty E.T.-ish even, and yet in that dark wood very traditional and thoroughly human. Art can stop us that way: it can show us the ordinary as something extra-ordinary. What can be more ordinary than a statue of Mary and Jesus in a little church? And yet here it was, a treasure, a gift for anyone who would stop to pray.
Fourteen of us were there that Sunday. But with us was the whole world.
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Out & About. The next Good Books & Good Talk seminar will be Sunday, March 19, on James Matthew Wilson’s The Strangeness of the Good. I’d like for participants to select one poem that they would particularly like for us to discuss, for whatever reason. The seminar meets at Incarnation in Dallas at 5 o’clock and runs to 6:30pm.

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The Rev. Canon Victor Lee Austin. Ph.D., is the Theologian-in-Residence for the diocese and is the author of several books including, "Friendship: The Heart of Being Human" and "A Post-Covid Catechesis.: