Art Life Faith Podcast
Latest Episodes
37. Imaginative Expression Specialists — A Conversation with Byron Spradlin
In the photograph, "How Beautiful are the Feet," we see a circle showing only the feet of the dancers. On one foot, they wear a point shoe. On the other, the foot is completely bare. One foot is dress
36. Living in Full View of the God of Grace
Im excited to announce that our first official book with Community Arts Media is coming out on November 1, 2022, Living in Full View of the God of Grace. It will be in English and Japanese, in hard
35. I’m So Hungry!
Im sooo hungry! I said, I want to eat something! No, my wife said. We have to keep going. If we eat now, there wont be enough for later. We were in one of the most beautiful landscapes on th
34. Hope Will Not End In Despair
Today Id like to introduce you to Daisuke Yokoyama, an amazing Christian singer songwriter here in Japan. I had the privilege of meeting him in the relief movement shortly after that terrible earthqu
33. Global Mission Chapel
So here they were in this position of weakness. They had an unfinished building. Their numbers were small. They were still rebuilding trust in their congregation, and they were still getting to know t
32. Kintsugi Academy
Id like to share Kunio Nakamura-sans message about Kintsugi Academy and the role kintsugi can play in our lives. This traditional Japanese art of mending broken pottery with gold is packed with mean
31. Tsunami Violin
This week Ive been working on putting subtitles to the various talks from our Aroma of Beauty conference we held here in Tokyo in March. There were so amazing stories shared. Although it was all in
30. Setomono
Everyone in Japan knows the word setomono, because you find it on quite a few boxes you get in the mail. It means fragile, but it also literally means product of Seto. Seto is an art village known
29. Cow Pie Water
All forty were completely empty. I lifted each plastic gallon jug just to be sure. Hikers in the previous town promised a huge cache of water here. Whatever drops had been left quickly evaporated as t
28. Ryokan Taigu
Id like to introduce you to a little poem by Ryokan Taigu, who lived in the late 1700s and early 1800s, and is one of the most popular figures in Japanese history, known for his poetry, calligraphy,