I first started to learn something about being cultured, as we would call it, around the Sumpter dinner table; this is what I remember as a young kid.
My folks would talk about being cultured. They aimed very practically by speaking, for example, of the pleasure and blessing of the Japanese violin players who were downstairs in our home; these young men were housed with us, the members of a Japanese symphony orchestra. This happened in Anchorage maybe at some point back in 1969, maybe ’70. Cultured—it’s having an interest in classical music, even more, supporting it with your presence at performances. That meant going to the West High auditorium to listen to the rapid saw-work of the bow on the strings. It was OK. For my folks, it was culture.
So I was scared when I was invited to the Stites home. Likely, as I remember, it was not on the very first dinner with the Stites family, that I boo-booed a biggie by keeping the Pork Chops serving fork at my plate. Bad move and embarrassing—and not cultured. I showed irresponsibility around the table, an absence of table mindedness. My wife remembers. Yes, now a family joke; but I remember it as a want of art.
How does a kid growing up in this experience interpret the world around him? Fear it. Resist it. Resent it. Make fun of it. Harden myself against it. Decide that it’s for sissies.
The Gospel has grabbed me by the lapels the past 3-4 years. For some reason, God decided to give me a lesson in art, culture, life and liturgy in a most unusual way. Last month while at the Library of Congress at the Jefferson Building in Washington, D.C., I got a lecture from Shirley MacLain. Let me mention it here.
While doing my tourist thing, waiting my turn for a tour, a library assistant urged me to meander over to the exhibit of Gershwin and Hope—George and Bob, that is. Can you spell c-u-l-t-u-r-e? Spell a-r-t (music)?—expression, rhythm, syncopation, lyrics, meter, mannerisms, an audience and context.
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Substitute the words, The people that are void…
Substitute the words, The churches that are void…
Substitute the words, The families that are void…
MacLaine nailed me.
I have been given to abstractions—that is, there in abstractions, there is life, truth, help, hope and meaning. She got me to thinking, “I’ve been a Christian, a pastor, encompassed by the stranglehold of abstractions and it’s been a life of sterility.”
I’ll try to write more on this. But I have learned the Gospel is not about mere abstractions. Just look outside—God invites us to his art room: mountains, plains, rivers, rolling hills, hay fields, checker-board farmlands, ocean deeps—and the constellations, hosts and dancing of the shooting stars. He is the Artist. He is cultured.
Each Sunday, at my home church, we celebrate the Lord’s Supper. It’s dinner time. Flatware, words of welcome, a minster who serves, cup, bread, trays, persons to eat. The Gospel gets down to a shared meal. The abstractions of preaching become taste and see. I am so very thankful for holding, tasting, seeing, smelling, swallowing truth. The head alone can take only so much.
Teach me, Lord, teach me of the necessity of the artforms and culture. I want to be cultured.
G. Mark Sumpter