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#NO THANK YOU GAME WINESKIN FREE#
Again, you can feel free to send those in at any point this evening. And after the conversation between David and Mako, we’ll have a time of moderated Q&A. We will have time for Q&A after the conversation this evening, so please send in any questions to me in the chat throughout the course of the evening. Briefly, before I introduce our speakers, I want to provide just a few video instructions to hopefully allow you to more fully engage tonight… Tonight, we’re so grateful to be able to host this important and timely conversation in response to these questions of our weary souls this year. So how do we even think about beginning to work towards the new? How might we reimagine and remake this world as we walk forward in 2021?
#NO THANK YOU GAME WINESKIN SERIES#
And this calling has felt even more pressing in light of all that we are facing right now, in a year of unprecedented disruption and upheaval, amidst a global pandemic, through a series of national crises, on top of dramatic shifts in our work and our family lives. Goldenwood exists to cultivate a new vision for work–more concretely, our vision is to see work revived by love.

For those of you who I haven’t yet met, my name is Amilee Watkins, and I’m one of the co-founders of Goldenwood. We’re thrilled to have so many familiar faces joining us tonight, as well as many of you who are joining us for the very first time. It’s so wonderful to see you all coming in from everywhere. On Tuesday, January 19, 2021, Goldenwood hosted artist Makoto Fujimura for a rich discussion with David around the need for a whole new approach to our work–new wineskins into which the Spirit might pour forth His fruitfulness, reviving this world with love.įrom Old to New Wineskins | Tuesday, January 19, 2021Īmilee Watkins: Hello everyone, welcome. If digested slowly, Art + Faith will turn workers into makers whose imaginations have been captivated by the New Creation that is to come.” In this new paradigm of ‘slow work,’ the brokenness we experience becomes the unexpected starting place for the ‘New Newness’ to break into our world. Fujimura addresses a critically under-represented perspective of the faith and work movement through his interjection of a ‘theology of making.’ Drawing from rich biblical and theological streams, Fujimura helps us see a distinctive alternative that challenges the pragmatism that overwhelmingly characterizes our approach to work today. To make this conclusion, however, would keep many from reading what is one of the most important faith and work books written to date. Goldenwood Founder David Kim writes: “The title of Makoto Fujimura’s latest book, Art + Faith, might lead some to believe that this book is written primarily for the artist or art enthusiast.
