Heaven in Ordinary: a photo marathon, and a missional opportunity

Roger Saner's picture

A photomarathon is a full day of taking photographs on particular topics. The emphasis is on fun and creativity, and anybody can participate - all you need is a digital camera.

On Nov 3rd, we'll meet at Bryanston Bible Church at 8:30am where we'll have a short introduction to the theme, "Heaven in Ordinary." Heaven can be thought of as an "out there" concept but we want to explore (through photographs) how heaven can break into the daily ordinariness of life in Jozi. There will be 12 topics (given out 4 at a time, at 9am, 1pm and 5pm) for the day and although you can shoot as many pics as you want under each topic, you can only submit a single entry - so at the end of the day you'll hand in 12 photographs.

The cost is R50 to enter and we'll exhibit the photos the week afterwards at Bryanston Bible Church. We'll also find some place to hang out together after all photos have been handed in.

The above is a description I posted on the "Heaven in Ordinary: A Photo Marathon" group on Facebook (apologies if you haven't succumbed yet!). Some of the inspiration is from the other 2 photo marathons run in SA so far and some of it is from a talk by Don Miller and John MacMurray called "Where photography and theology intersect.".

Photography takes pictures of the world, yet those pictures aren't the object they seek to capture - they're only a visual representation of it. A picture of a dog is not the dog, it is only a picture of the dog.

Theology is that which seeks to talk about G-d, but can never capture G-d (and if it could it would idolatry). So theology always seeks to point beyond itself towards a bigger Reality who cannot be reduced to words or descriptions, who thus describes Himself as, "I AM."

And so we put these two ideas together into a photo marathon where the participants look for the heaven in the ordinariness of a Saturday in Johannesburg. Listening to the whispers from the wings (mixed metaphors are fun!). Especially since it can be easy to only see the ugliness around us. When we are conditioned to that end, beauty becomes hidden...and friends encourage us to seek it out.

I'm really enjoying this idea from a missional perspective as it draws in people from all background and (un)beliefs to do something creative together and, perhaps in seeking a glimpse of heaven, glimpse G-d, who is always at work in the world around us. Who knows?

So if you have some time on Saturday (and are in Gauteng), why don't you join us? The idea isn't to spend all 12 hours stressing about which photos to take, but to rather live your Saturday normally...and look for heaven breaking through during the course of the day.

Comments

nicpaton's picture

wonderful

This is a great opportunity to explore world and G-d, and do it in community.

I like the iconic approach. I'd love to be there for the imagemaking, and the review: I'd definately see that as a time of worship, reflection and fun.

Enjoy.

Roger Saner's picture

Help with the review!

Thanks Nic. I'm pretty sorted for how the day will be run but am clueless for how to do the review. Firstly, we don't know how many people will be taking part, so don't know how many photos. Secondly, don't know how much it will cost to print 12 x slightly-bigger-than-postcard-size photos (so we'll hopefully have enough cash to print and mount them).

Then, we have a church in which to exhibit the photos and we'll probably do it after their evening service next Sunday. We could go the "formal" route, as in "Everyone sit down, now Ryan is going to tell us why he took the photo of the upside-down dog and how that relates to heaven," thing, or...something else. Some kind of open space where people can come in, walk around. Will hopefully have at least one projector and a TV so we can do something with word and image on those...any ideas?

nicpaton's picture

roger saner, clueless?

completely off the ends of my fingers then:

  • have a dedicated room where you control lights and music, don't use e.g. a foyer where there is only "passing" traffic. Ordinary must not be devalued into the innocuous; active conscious celebration must be maintained.

  • On the other hand you may WANT to present it in a public space, not in the "unordinaryness" of an exhibition space.

  • make this not an addendum to the evening, but an integral part of the liturgy. Get the whole congregation to file in just before they expect the Eucharist / Alter call. Is the sermon if there is one using the theme?

  • If the regular minister isn't 100% there buy them tickets to a movie or if necessary have them kidnapped for the night (I know this abductor at the Vatican who will do it for a fee - yeah thats right the guy from the Da Vinci Code) and you take over. I have many times given my all to an idea before and the minister doesn't get it and its pretty dispiritiing.

  • try find a combination between a contemplative (out of time) and a performed (in time) approach.

  • maybe get an idea of the space and how many can be mounted then divide this by the participants and 12. You don't want to to mounting 1200 photos if 100 people pitch.

  • You might give each artist on exhibit 2 minutes to lead a relective moment on the process/their photos/any photos but integrate this with ongoing reflection - dont break it up.

  • combine the mounted stills with a projected slideshow.

  • music/sonic: ambient, evocative, but NOT a religeous sound (eg plainchant) - you are trying to get across the "Ordinary". Maybe you could put on a radio in the background just for that everyday sound? I find low volume tickydraai evokes this well.

  • Maybe to get out of the church paradigm you could also take a guerilla approach to this, set up the exhibit in a public space or at a fair or "crossroads", possibly the next weekend? Obviously no projector, tho.

Further thoughts on Designing the Sacred.

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