What Do You Want to Make Today? (2024)

Recently, I was looking for a simple Christian teaching comparing the Japanese art of kintsugi with the healing power of the Gospel to share with a Creation Gospel Workbook 4 class. (Email me at kisha@graceintorah.net or creationgospeltrainers@gmail.com to learn about classes.)

In my search, I found a video by a Japanese artist and believer named Makoto Fujimura. Kintsugi is the process where a broken vessel is mended back together with an epoxy mixed with a metal, usually gold, which acts like a glue and a filler, even filling in for a missing piece of pottery. The vessel, once useless in its broken state, is transformed into a unique and beautiful piece of art. Beauty for ashes. That’s precisely what Yeshua does for us. He takes these jars of clay and transforms us into the good gold of the Kingdom. He takes our brokenness, pain, sorrow, and trauma, and through His grace, He transforms these things into a vessel of honor that gives Him glory.

I was so moved by Makoto – maybe as an amateur artist I related deeply with how he teaches the good news – that I watched a few more videos of him. Back in May of 2012, he gave a commencement speech at Biola University. The title is the same as the title of this post:

What do you want to make today?”

This question, which he heard asked by a high school art teacher, was meant to invoke the imagination of students beginning their high school journey. The question was a metaphor. It wasn’t really about physical art, but their lives. As image bearers of the Creator of the Universe, every human being is “creative.” We are “makers,” like our God. Every single day we have a choice about “what we will make.” Will it be love or war? Will we be a peacemaker or one who stirs up strife? We will choose to make something beautiful and beneficial for others, or will we destroy and burn what is around us to ashes? Will we compete with others or cooperate with them? Will we be the hero or the villain? We will choose life or death?

I used to work for a company that had the slogan, “Make a Great Day.” There is no “it” in the sentence. You are not making “it,” you are making “a day,” great. The implication is that a great day is not something that happens “to you”; rather, it is something you choose, something “you make.” Even when bad things happen, or when a day is simply rote and mundane, one has a choice as to how they will “see” it and how they will react or respond. “What will you make?”

We are so used to just doing what we are expected to do that we get tangled up in things that are not eternal. This is true even in circles of faith because we tend to mirror the earthy realm. The secular world boils down our creative energy to mere usefulness and profitability, assessed through the lens of competition with others. (Who hasn’t seen this occur in the “church?”) This isn’t true creativity, but cunningness. It’s the lie of the serpent. It makes us a taker and user of others, not creative givers and lovers. Mr. Fugimura says that this changes the fundamental question above to, “What can I take from others?” Or, “How little can I do to get the maximum results?”

How different these questions are from, “What do you want to make today?” Imagine sitting in an art room filled with blank canvases, brushes, and paint in every possible color at your disposal when you are asked that question. All the “have-to’s” fall away and one’s mind/heart is free to go to an entirely different place where competition transforms into creativity. The jail cell of striving becomes an open field of dreams and new creations. We’ve had some “art days” with our local women and kids – and all, no matter their skill level, have enjoyed them and found them to be cathartic and spiritual experiences.

Creating is therapeutic whether it is music, art, writing, designing, constructing, fashioning, refurbishing, sewing, etc. Adonai fills His people with His Spirit to build His House.[1] But this same gift of creativity can be used for the enemy’s kingdom. Even Believers struggle with the inward war that Paul speaks of in Romans 7. We want to make love, peace, and unity, but often fail, and instead “do” the works of the flesh. A review of Romans 8 is helpful. In Messiah, the Spirit helps our weakness so we can persevere and choose to put to death the works of the flesh, and walk in the freedom of the Spirit of God.

In the video, Mr. Fugimura recounted the events of 9/11 and how a few people chose “to make” vengeance and destruction and death. As I listened, I couldn’t help but to think back to the more recent events of October 7th, 2023 when others made the same horrid choices. He also spoke of the negativity that pervades our culture, which I would say is even worse now than when he gave this commencement speech in 2012.

Knowing that some, perhaps many, choose to use their creative imagination for evil, destruction, and death is depressing. The question, “What do you want to make today?” can seem like an naïve dream when compared to our present reality. But is it?

The brilliant artist and Gospel teacher, Makoto Fujimura says this question is NOT an idealist escape from reality. Rather, it is a quiet resistance against the deadly fears dominating our world today. It’s a refusal to submit to destructive ideologies, and to instead make a grand use of one’s creative imagination.

The creative power given to us by God is capable of inspiring hearts who seek ways to protect and save lives, and develop new ways to lift people from poverty and from oppressive rulers who demand and teach hate and murder. In the end, it is these things, not the evil wrought by man, that will go on into eternity. The devices or imaginations of evil hearts will not go on. ALL things will be renewed with the kintsugi of the Master Artist.

Meanwhile, we can choose to remake what is broken, to build new things for the glory of God and His Kingdom. The Spirit of the Living God resides within us, and His transformative power has not been cut short by the mere antics of man’s fleshly nature. Maybe you don’t know how to use a paint brush or even draw a good stick figure. You are still creative and have a God given imagination! Your art doesn’t have to be on canvas or in the form of poetry, song, or music.

The greatest art of all is LOVE. But to be an artist, a maker, a creator, or a master architect one must practice their trade. Not every piece will be perfect. In fact, more will end up in the trash heap of trial and error than on public display. Sometimes things need to be erased or painted over. But like kintsugi, do-overs, things remade, can be far more valuable and glorious than the original. And if it weren’t for those mistakes or brokenness, or traumas, the piece wouldn’t hold any value at all. This is the beauty of Grace and the work of love.

Many of my personal paintings have an “underpainting” beneath my final work. Sometimes it is the mistake that inspired the new work that I am happy to display. We shouldn’t feel condemnation for what came before. Messiah is the greatest artist of all, and you are one of His vessels. He can transform your feeble, childish brush strokes into a masterpiece. In fact, He promises to do so![2]

No matter who you are, today you can choose to make something beautiful. You can “make a great day.” Even a smile at a stranger can lift their spirits and make them feel valued. We can choose to be a maker and not a taker. We can choose to beautify what others have broken, left for rot, or destroyed.

It’s all a matter of perspective. Sight is the sense for the fourth month of Tammuz, which is what leads to transformation. “I was blind, but now I see.” A transformation is a thorough or dramatic change in form or appearance. One’s speech, thought, walk, and vision have been radically altered (senses of the first four months). That’s what the spring feasts, culminating on Shavuot at the Mountain are meant to do. They spiritual recreate us every year, transforming and conforming us more and more into the image of Messiah. This enables us to go through the hot, dry summer months without making the same mistakes as our ancestors.

Another way of saying this is “focus.” What are you focusing on? One’s focus requires great creative energy. Take every thought captive to Messiah. And then ask yourself:

What do I want to make today?

[1] For example, see Exodus 35:30-35. Also consider building Adonai’s House is also building up His people, and expanding His Kingdom.

[2] “I am sure of this very thing—that He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the Day of Messiah Yeshua.” (Philippians 1:6, TLV)

What Do You Want to Make Today? (2024)
Top Articles
Craftology East Peoria Il
Back Market : la start-up française la plus valorisée souhaite créer une économie circulaire pour la technologie - Forbes France
11 beste sites voor Word-labelsjablonen (2024) [GRATIS]
Pet For Sale Craigslist
The UPS Store | Ship & Print Here > 400 West Broadway
Jennifer Hart Facebook
Frank Lloyd Wright, born 150 years ago, still fascinates
Blanchard St Denis Funeral Home Obituaries
Ross Dress For Less Hiring Near Me
Craigslist Motorcycles Jacksonville Florida
St Petersburg Craigslist Pets
Koordinaten w43/b14 mit Umrechner in alle Koordinatensysteme
Wmu Course Offerings
Puretalkusa.com/Amac
Mlifeinsider Okta
Craigslist Free Grand Rapids
Aita Autism
fltimes.com | Finger Lakes Times
Transformers Movie Wiki
Obituary | Shawn Alexander | Russell Funeral Home, Inc.
Mission Impossible 7 Showtimes Near Regal Bridgeport Village
Are They Not Beautiful Wowhead
Truth Of God Schedule 2023
Espn Horse Racing Results
Where Is George The Pet Collector
Sulfur - Element information, properties and uses
The Largest Banks - ​​How to Transfer Money With Only Card Number and CVV (2024)
Rs3 Eldritch Crossbow
Menus - Sea Level Oyster Bar - NBPT
The Largest Banks - ​​How to Transfer Money With Only Card Number and CVV (2024)
Naval Academy Baseball Roster
Discord Nuker Bot Invite
Wood Chipper Rental Menards
Panolian Batesville Ms Obituaries 2022
Cylinder Head Bolt Torque Values
Log in to your MyChart account
UAE 2023 F&B Data Insights: Restaurant Population and Traffic Data
Tu Housing Portal
Helpers Needed At Once Bug Fables
25Cc To Tbsp
Frequently Asked Questions - Hy-Vee PERKS
Royal Caribbean Luggage Tags Pending
Trap Candy Strain Leafly
Guy Ritchie's The Covenant Showtimes Near Grand Theatres - Bismarck
Mitchell Kronish Obituary
Cabarrus County School Calendar 2024
Embry Riddle Prescott Academic Calendar
Gli italiani buttano sempre più cibo, quasi 7 etti a settimana (a testa)
Spurs Basketball Reference
Shannon Sharpe Pointing Gif
Barber Gym Quantico Hours
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Last Updated:

Views: 5519

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Birthday: 1992-06-28

Address: Apt. 413 8275 Mueller Overpass, South Magnolia, IA 99527-6023

Phone: +6824704719725

Job: District Real-Estate Facilitator

Hobby: Letterboxing, Vacation, Poi, Homebrewing, Mountain biking, Slacklining, Cabaret

Introduction: My name is Mrs. Angelic Larkin, I am a cute, charming, funny, determined, inexpensive, joyous, cheerful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.