It’s become more
common today to see churches, denominations, and religious organizations begin
to embrace and grapple with the role of the Christian (and the church) in the
arts. But it’s been a long time coming.
The reason for
that long time coming has been what can only be called antagonism, likely born
in the Protestant Reformation. Protestants not only looked to reform theology;
they also were done with icons, church paintings, and statues, seeing these as
idolatrous. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, fundamentalists
and others turned their backs on culture, both popular and “high.” Art, movies,
magazines, novels, and other aspects of culture were often considered a danger.
By the 1970s, a
Christian imitation of popular culture had begun to appear, especially in music,
self-help books, and fiction. “CCM” or “Christian Contemporary Music” became widely
known, and secular music producers began buying up Christian labels. The same
thing has happened over time with Christian books, with many Christian
publishers now subsidiaries or imprints of larger secular concerns. But much of
what is called Christian is still clearly separated from the general culture.
Also in the
1970s, Francis
Schaeffer was one of the first spokesmen for Christians to re-engage with
the culture at large. He, and many others, could clearly see the decay of
secular culture – essentially what was happening without the redeeming “salt”
of Christianity. The decline seemed to be happening quickly, but it had
actually been happening for more than a century.
But before there
was Francis Schaeffer, there was Clyde Kilby.
Kilby
(1902-1986) was a long-time professor of English and department head at Wheaton
College in Illinois. He also happened to be a passionate advocate for the arts.
He taught literature and poetry and fought the good fight to defend both, and
especially poetry. He was heavily influenced by British Christian writers like
J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, and other members of the Inklings. He was also
instrumental in the founding of the Marion Wade Center at Wheaton, what became
a major research center and document depository for the works of Lewis,
Tolkien, Owen Barfield, Dorothy Sayers, G.K. Chesterton, George Macdonald, and
Charles Williams.
Various
manuscripts and essays by Kilby have been collected and published under the
title of The
Arts and the Christian Imagination: Essays on Art, Literature, and Aesthetics.
It’s almost uncanny how Kilby advocated for and anticipated the renewed Christian
involvement in the arts, which is only now beginning to gain velocity.
Clyde Kilby |
The collection
is divided into four sections. The first, “Christianity, the Arts, and
Aesthetics,” includes a lengthy unpublished manuscript by Kilby drawn partially
from his published essays as well as original material. He was especially
interested in form in the arts, but parted company with academics, critics, and
artists who saw form as everything. Kilby, says collection editor Willian
Dyrness in his introduction, understood form in a radically different way: “True
form, for the Christian, is exemplified by the Spirit-filled life. It is more
closely connected to being than doing.”
The second
section, “The Vocation of the Artist,” discusses the Christian and culture, a
defense of beauty, individuality, and evangelicalism and human freedom. “Faith
and the Role of the Imagination” is the third section, followed by a section specifically addressing poetry and
fiction, two art forms too long neglected or ignored by the Christian
community. Kilby, in fact, saw Jesus as more of a poet than an expositor, and
said that “we have forsaken the poetry of Christianity for it prose, and especially
its dull expository prose.”
Kilby was the
author of several works about Lewis and Tolkien, including The
Christian World of C.S. Lewis
(1964); Tolkien
and the Silmarillion
(1971); Images
of Salvation in the Fiction of C.S. Lewis (1978); and Brothers
& Friends: The Diaries of Major Warren Hamilton Lewis (1983). He served as editor for C.S.
Lewis: Letters to an American Lady
(1967). And a companion volume to The
Arts and the Christian Imagination, A
Well of Wonder: C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and the Inklings, was also
published in 2016. Kilby also published Minority
of One: A Biography of Jonathan Blanchard (1982).
The Arts and the Christian Imagination has insights and thought-provoking
observations on almost every page. Kilby was a shrewd observer of both the
contemporary arts and how Christians did, and didn’t respond to and participate
in them. It’s an important collection that is pertinent for Christians and for
anyone who cares about the arts today.
Related:
Photograph: Whitby Abbey in the United
Kingdom by George Hodan, via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
4 comments:
Someone you may enjoy reading is Leeann Payne. She is deceased now but was Kilby's assistant if I recall for a long time. Her book real presence might be the one to start with.
Paul,, I just looked her up on Amazon. She has quite a few books, including one about C.S. Lewis. Thanks for the tip!
I'd agree this is (at least historically) a mainly (specifically?) Protestant, perhaps American protestant, problem. The Roman Catholics have engaged with the arts, as have prior generations of protestants -- witness Kilby's subjects for instance.
This is a subject that greatly interests me. Thanks for the heads up on this author and his book.
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