Expressing Truth From God’s Word By Katey Hearth for Mission Network News
If you’ve been a Christian for any length of time, you know it’s not enough to only read God’s Word. You have to apply it to your life, too.
“The one thing Bible translators hate is having produced a museum piece – something that sits on the shelf and doesn’t get used,” Wycliffe USA’s Chris Gassler explains.
“What we do in EthnoArts comes under the category of Scripture engagement.”
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“Communities are experts in their arts. We’re trying to encourage them to use their local expressions,” Gassler says.
“A lot of times, this job is giving people permission because people have looked at the Western world and said, ‘Oh, that’s how you do church, that’s how you do Christianity.’ I’m there to say, ‘No, no, no, you can be yourself!’”
Gassler draws on his background in professional music to lead songwriting workshops in countries across Africa. Each session balances biblical accuracy with the cultural application.
“We do a devotional in the morning before we get started; interacting with the text, talking about all the Gospel implications of it, because people in certain communities may or may not have heard the message in an accurate way,” Gassler says.
“A lot of times in a workshop [on] the first day, I’ll give them a passage and say, ‘I want you to quote this entire passage in a song,’ something short, something straightforward; I often will use Philippians 2, somewhere between verses four and 11.”