Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Can Art Help Save The World?
Can Art Help Save The World?
Jul 6, 2025 7:06 AM

In Grand Rapids, Mich., we await the beginning of ArtPrize tomorrow, the world’s largest free, open-entry petition. Those of us familiar with ArtPrize know that the entries (remember, ANYone can enter) range from the incredibly ridiculous (bunny mannequins in the Grand River, anyone?) to the breathtaking and beautiful. There is always a subjective nature to art, even among art considered by most to be “great” (you like Picasso, I like Renoir.) As we seek out great art, it is important to look past the art and ask, “What can art do?” Can art help save the world?

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI thinks so:

Beauty, whether that of the natural universe or that expressed in art, precisely because it opens up and broadens the horizons of human awareness, pointing us beyond ourselves, bringing us face to face with the abyss of Infinity, can e a path towards the transcendent, towards the ultimate Mystery, towards God. Art, in all its forms, at the point where it encounters the great questions of our existence, the fundamental themes that give life its meaning, can take on a religious quality, thereby turning into a path of profound inner reflection and spirituality.

“A path towards the transcendent.” Meaning art can lift us up out of the mud and dust of everyday life, and show us the way to God. It can prompt questions like, “What is man for?” and “What gives life meaning?” Art can make us reflect on beauty (or lack thereof) in our own lives, or the world around us. It can prompt us to seek out beauty, and to create it, even in humble ways.

Mako Fujimura, an artist hosted by the Acton Institute during ArtPrize explains it this way:

Art is a faithful way of knowing the world.

In this way, art and sciences share our journey toward knowledge. Science recognizes the boundary of the closed natural world, and then attempts to understand the mechanics of how things work. Art, in some specific ways, goes beyond those boundaries. When Carter Ratcliff notes that “art is inexhaustible,” I think he is referring to art’s role in breaking open boundaries, a core of art experience that is truly generative. Art can substantiate the “invisible” realities, beyond what the data shows. But both art and science can begin with mitment, and a faithful covenant, to knowledge.

Someone once said that the opposite of love is not hate, but apathy. In the same way, the opposite beauty is not ugliness, but blindness. We e unable to recognize the transcendent qualities of objects and people around us. We e numb, losing our sense of vision.

Art, in and of itself, will not save us. Only God saves us. But the true beauty of God is all around us is nature, and we humans – the most sublime of God’s creation – imitate Him in our attempts to create beauty. Listen to the music, tend the garden, click the shutter, meditate on the painting. God is there, asking us to see Him. His beauty can help save the world.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Britain’s Hot New Trend: Catholic Social Teaching
In Britain, a new zeitgeist is capturing business people, academics and political players from both the Left and Right, says the BBC’s Matthew Taylor: Catholic Social Teaching is a doctrine well-suited to today’s quest for more ethical businesses, a less overbearing state and a more vibrant and cohesive civil society. Now, as in 1891, many fear we will not be able to adapt to profound change without dangerous social upheaval. It may not provide easy or even practical answers right...
Samuel Gregg: Are We All Europeans Now?
Writing on The Corner over at National Review Online, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg points to the election and, refreshingly, tells us that, “I’m not one of those who, in recent days, have seemed inclined to indulge their inner curmudgeon, apparently convinced that it’s more or less game-over for America and we’re doomed to Euro-serfdom.” Gregg, author of the soon-to-be-released and available for pre-order ing Europe: Economic Decline, Culture, and How America Can Avoid a European Future (Encounter Books, January...
Envy Won’t Save the GOP—or America
After every electoral defeat—whether suffered by Republicans or Democrats—a period of hand-wringing and soul-searching inevitably develops in the days and weeks after the election. Journalists and politicians take to print to explain “What went wrong” and “Here’s what should be done differently.” Although the solutions are almost always what the pundits were saying before the election, the exercise in self-reflection is, on the whole, a much needed corrective. But too often the advice tends to be of the always terrible,...
At the Bleeding Edge of Marketplace Ministry
In the November issue of Christianity Today, Dr. Amy Sherman, senior fellow at the Sagamore Institute has published an article entitled “The Cutting Edge of Marketplace Ministries.” In this article Sherman describes “holistic ministry” being done by a variety of businesses. Businesses are able to plish this kind of ministry in part when “pastors and faithful Christians grasp their role in God’s economy of all things,” as Stephen Grabill, director of programs and international at Acton Institute describes the work...
2013 AU Registration Opens Thursday Nov. 15
Registration for 2013 Acton University, scheduled for June 18-21 at the DeVos Place Convention Center in Grand Rapids, Mich., will open Thursday November 15. Stay tuned to Acton’s homepage and the AU website for further news and announcements. If you haven’t had the chance to attend in the past, make this the year you do! ...
The Election’s Biggest Losers
Mitt Romney may have lost to Barack Obama but his was not the biggest loss of the election—at least not economically. Despite the millions the GOP spent to elect their candidate, the real economic losers of the 2012 election, as Joel Kotkin explains, are entrepreneurs: The real losers are small business owners, or what might be called the aspirational middle class. The smaller business — with no galleon full of legal slaves pulling for them — will face more regulation...
PovertyCure DVD Series Now Available
PovertyCure’s six-episode DVD series on human flourishing is now available for purchase. This high-energy, 152-minute documentary-style series challenges conventional thinking, reframing the poverty debate around the creative capacity of the human person. Listen to the voices of entrepreneurs, economists, political and religious leaders, missionaries, NGO workers, and everyday people as host Michael Matheson Miller travels around the world to discover the foundations that allow human beings, families, munities to thrive. ...
Post-election Prognosis: Keep Calm and Listen to Tocqueville
Peter Lawler,Dana Professor of Government at Berry College, has written a piece at Ethika Politika urging those upset by last week’s election results to be calm and take a deep breath. First, Lawler says we have to understand that there are small political parties and great ones. Great parties are parties of high principle. Their dominance on the political stage has the advantage of bringing great men into political life. They have the disadvantage of rousing up animosity that readily...
Going ‘Forward’ or ‘Backward’? Interview with Prof. Nicola Iannello about U.S. Elections
I recently talked to one of Italy’s leading classical liberal scholars,Prof. Nicola Iannello, regarding the e of this week’s U.S. presidential elections. Prof. Iannello, a devotee of classical liberalism and Alexis de Tocqueville, is an Italian journalist, international lecturer with Istituto Bruno Leoni, and chair of the Einaudi Foundation’s Austrian School of Economics course for Roman university students. Prof. Iannello has published several widely read academic articles on Friedrich Hayek, Murray Rothbard, Ludwig von Mises, and FrédéricBastiat, among other pro-liberty...
What’s Next in the Fight Against the HHS Mandate
Kyle Duncan, general counsel for The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, gives us a glimpse of what is ahead in the fight for religious liberty regarding the Obama Administration’s HHS Mandate, given the e of Tuesday’s election. In the National Catholic Register, Duncan outlines that current federal lawsuits fall into two broad categories: those filed by nonprofit organizations and those filed by business owners. In the case of the nonprofits, The federal government has not responded to the merits of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved