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Scarce Abundance
by Hannah Garrity
Inspired by Mark 6:32-44
18”x18” Paper lace with watercolor

Artist's Statement

In this account from Mark, Jesus had compassion.This word, splagchnizomai in Greek, comes from the root splagchnon (meaning “bowels”) which has a sense of a visceral, gut-level form of compassion. It intrigues me that this deep, embodied compassion prompted Jesus to teach. Leading up to this moment, Jesus is trying to get
away, to rest. His disciples row him toward the people; however, he is compelled by compassion to teach. As he is teaching, I imagine the crowd turning to one another—What did he say?—repeating his words, passing them along.


In this artwork, the elements of the story are framed in a stained glass window design. Centered, the people gather in circles, passing the scarcely abundant food to one another. Waves encircle the crowd, representing the twelve disciples. The outer architectural elements portray the twelve baskets full of pieces of bread and fish—a representation of abundance from scarcity, powered by collective belief. Jesus did not have a microphone. It was the people in the front who passed the still, small voice of God back to those behind them. It was the people in the front who passed more than enough food back to those who were hungry. In our propaganda-filled global information system, we must remember: God is not holding the mic. God is present in the still, small voice and in the smallest offerings, multiplying one by one. The message, the compassion, the corners of bread, and the pieces
of fish all return in abundance.

—Hannah Garrity​

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Far More Abundantly
by Lauren Wright Pittman
Inspired by Ephesians 3:20-21
11”x14” Hand-carved block printed with oil-based
ink on paper, with gold leaf detail

Artist's Statement

 

​I read this Ephesians text alongside the feeding of the five thousand. I placed Jesus at the center of
the image, but he did not feed the crowds alone. He asked his disciples to offer what they had. They responded with meager resources, yet those small gifts were enough.

 

Through the lens of Ephesians, if Jesus were to ask us today what we have to give, our answer would be:
 

We have the power you have given us to do the impossible. The same power that turned five loaves and two fish into a feast for thousands—with leftovers—empowers us “to accomplish far more abundantly than all we can ask or imagine.” Do we allow this truth to settle into our bones and animate our actions?


I’ll admit, I tried to avoid this passage because it felt overly optimistic in light of today’s world. People still go hungry. Wars rage. The earth groans under our misuse. Yet if we reimagine the systems we created, studies show it is possible for every human being to have what they need. That would require massive restructuring, international cooperation, and the reallocation of resources—but not more than we already possess. We don’t need a miracle of multiplication. We simply need to use what we’ve been given.
 

In a world convinced of scarcity, this is astonishingly good news. We already have enough. And as my
mentor used to say, “Enough is abundance.” What will we do with this abundance? Is it too lofty to
dream of a world that sustains all of life? Perhaps. Yet I believe it is God’s own desire that all may have
life, and have it abundantly. This is the work before us, accomplished through the power at work
within us, through Jesus Christ. Amen.

 

—Rev. Lauren Wright Pittman

Lent Resources copyright A Sanctified Art  sanctifiedart.org

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