spacer
Ransom Fellowship
spacer articles movies music books art faith discernment spacer
 
articles
publications
search
people
links
faq
blank
about
contact
press kit
Ransom Blogs
spacer
spacer
current article  
spacer
spacer
spacer
The Wonderful Freedom to Fail spacer The Wonderful Freedom to Fail
BY: Denis Haack
spacer
Speaking at the 2009 Christians in the Visual Arts (CIVA) conference allowed me to attend some fascinating presentations. New York artist Makoto Fujimura, for example, talked about how artists need to see failure correctly. Failure isn’t always a bad thing, he said. Often it’s the best way to learn, it’s necessary for growth, and since we have a God given yearning to achieve and participate in a level of perfection impossible for finite and fallen creatures it turns out to be the story of our lives.

Makoto was not referring to moral failure. He was referring to the chance to experiment, to try new things, to push into new areas. As he spoke I thought about how this doesn’t just apply to artists. Being given the freedom to fail is a precious gift of grace we all need.

“Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better,” Irish author and dramatist Samuel Beckett said. “Go on failing. Go on. Only next time, try to fail better.”

I’ve noticed that a few people seem to know their life’s calling from childhood. It’s as if they were made for one thing. Others discover their calling when some event or force narrows their focus in an unexpected way. Others stumble upon opportunities they couldn’t have predicted but find fulfilling. And some seem unsure of having any calling or clear direction at all, and need the chance to experiment, to explore possibilities to see what fits them best. Their pilgrimage, as legitimate as the others, can take years.

It’s the same for uncovering one’s creativity. Some people seem to instinctively know their penchant to be creative. But others need untold number of opportunities to find theirs. Finding their way through life takes time and a chance to try various options. In such a world, providing a safe place for such failure is a necessary aspect of Christian faithfulness.

Our world esteems productivity, rewards decisiveness, and dislikes inefficiency. Which is good when you are making widgets, or an engineer, or a manager, or a physician. In the rest of life, however, these modernist values merely decrease human flourishing by demanding conformity when diversity is what God called into being.

“I have not failed,” scientist and inventor Thomas Edison once said. “I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.”

Tim Keller says that the God of Scripture is prodigal. The word doesn’t mean “wayward,” but “recklessly extravagant, spendthrift, having spent everything until there is nothing left to give.” And since God has been so prodigal with us, we can be prodigal with others.

I want my home to be known as a hospitable place where failures can safely fail some more. Where people can laugh together, help each other learn and grow, and cheer one another on to the next failure. I want it to be, quite simply, a place where the free exploration of creativity and meaning and vocation and calling can be safely nourished and encouraged by prodigal grace.


image

Questions:
--

Source:
--
spacer
spacer
spacer
about the author
spacer
Denis Haack
Denis is the author of The Rest of Success: What the World Didn’t Tell You About Having It All and has written articles for such journals as Reformation & Revival Journal, Eternity, Covenant, and World. He holds a Master of Arts in Theological Studies degree from Covenant Seminary in St. Louis.
spacer spacer spacer
other articles from this author
spacer
The Silent Revolution and the Making of Victorian England (Herbert Schlossberg, 2000)

Someone I Love is Gay: How Family and Friends Can Respond (Anita Worthen and Bob Davies, 1996)

Steering Through Chaos: Vice and Virtue in an Age of Moral Confusion (Os Guinness, 2000)

spacer
related articles
spacer Common Sense and Canon Sense

Postville (I): Undocumented Workers, Immigration & Justice.

Bored By Life, By God

Glimmers of Light

Questions for Lost People

Everything Is Broken

What makes you afraid?

A One-Way Trip Into Space

A Wedding Homily

The Wonderful Freedom to Fail

What Would Jesus Value?

Satisfied: A Conversation About Fullness, Spirituality & Food

Moments of Perfection...Almost

Understanding Scripture correctly (II)

Understanding Scripture Correctly (I)

Trust In A Financial Crisis

“A Few Like You”: Will the Church be the Church for Homosexual Christians?

Sin that Afflicts the Righteous

Why the Gospel Isn’t a Romantic Comedy

Bible Reading Program for Slackers & Shirkers

spacer
spacer spacer spacer bottom
Ransom Fellowship
Ransom Fellowship
spacer On my desk is a little vase of flowers cut from our yard, a little reminder of the beauty that is all around if we only have eyes to see. I've needed that reminder after reading the latest news of the horrific oil spill in the Gulf. Such glory in this world, such brokenness. Such hope, such deep need for redemption. These are the realities of life and death we seek to explore on this web site. Thank you for visiting.

Denis & Margie

spacer
spacer
bottom

Home | Articles | Publications | Search | People | Links | FAQ | Donate | About | Contact | Press

All material © 2000-2010 Ransom Fellowship Ministries
Site design by JaM Multimedia