Through Pastor David Jang’s preaching, this piece illuminates—through rich theological insight—how the threefold salvation narrative of the Cross, the Resurrection, and the Holy Spirit blossoms into artistic beauty and the early church’s economic sharing.
In
a quiet corner of San Luigi dei Francesi in Rome, Italy, a single, fierce beam
of light slices through thick darkness and runs across the canvas. It is The
Calling of Saint Matthew, the masterpiece left to us by Caravaggio—the
maverick of Renaissance art. Over the stiff finger of Matthew the tax
collector, seated at his booth and greedily clutching coins, the light of
Christ’s gentle yet uncompromising call pours down like a waterfall.
This
dramatic collision of chiaroscuro does not merely depict the private conversion
of one sinner. It captures, and forever fixes on canvas, the sublime moment in
which a worn-out, selfish, worldly economy is utterly overturned by the sacred
order of grace. The irresistible beauty of God piercing through the dense greed
of the human heart—this is not the cold language of doctrine, but an
overwhelming aesthetic encounter, and the magnificent overture of salvation
that awakens a hardened soul.
A
Canvas of Grace Where Light and Darkness Intersect
Pastor
David Jang (founder of Olivet University) reads this same wondrous spiritual
and aesthetic overturning with remarkable clarity in the vibrant life of the
early church community recorded in Acts 2. His preaching does not leave the
core threefold salvation narrative of Christianity—Cross, Resurrection, and
Holy Spirit—as fossilized logic trapped inside the covers of a Bible. Instead,
he beholds it as “the mystery of love inscribed as an event, etched into time
as a story,” and through deep theological insight lifts Christian soteriology
into the radiant realm of imagination—literature and art.
The
paradoxes embedded in the journey of salvation—light and shadow, emptiness and
fullness—extend beyond the practice of simple Bible meditation. They are
reflected with striking clarity in the deepest chambers of the human interior
through a second revelatory mirror: painting, literature, and music.
In
his spiritual message, Dante’s Divine Comedy becomes the
majestic language of resurrection, moving from the cold ignorance of hell
toward a symphony of light and harmony. The anguished confessions voiced by
characters in Dostoevsky awaken the communal solidarity of guilt. Bach’s St
Matthew Passion is reborn—not merely as melody, but as a holy cross
erected upon the staff lines of music.
Above
all, through the stark contrast in Rembrandt’s The Return of the
Prodigal Son—the tattered, worn rags of the son against the father’s
luminous embrace—Pastor David Jang sheds light on the complete and overwhelming
love of God that covers humanity’s universal shame. In this way, when the
gospel breaks the flat frame of text and expands into visual and auditory
aesthetic experience, it makes the cooled hearts of modern people beat again.
The
Colors of Hospitality and Koinonia Born of Self-Emptying
The
radical shared economy the early church displayed—“having all things in
common”—was the most concrete and revolutionary event in which such spiritual
aesthetics descended from abstraction into the realm of real life. Pastor David
Jang insists that at the foundation of this holy sharing stands Christ’s
thoroughgoing kenosis (self-emptying). In a world ruled by the
logic of capital, the miracle of a community breaking the chains of greed and
becoming truly one body in the Holy Spirit cannot fully bloom through
oppressive laws or institutional coercion. It blossoms only when human
sensibility and the imagination to move toward the other are first restored.
Pointing
to the warm, radiant yellows Van Gogh laid down with rugged brushstrokes
in Café Terrace at Night, he names it “the golden light of
hospitality” and “the color of sharing.” Just as the believers of the early
church closed the heavy doors of private possession and opened a warm table of
public fellowship, so the light flowing through Van Gogh’s canvas must become a
saving illumination that brightens the frozen nights of modern cities hardened
by egoism.
Only
a soul that has beheld absolute beauty can cast off the bondage of the “having
mode”—the compulsion to grasp and possess without end—and cross over into the
joy of the “being mode,” where one willingly shares not merely possessions, but
existence itself.
The
Eternal Chorus of Salvation Filling the City’s Sanctuary
Furthermore,
ethical and economic practices grounded in such aesthetic sensitivity must
overflow beyond the fence line of any single church and move into the public
life of the entire local community if they are to gain true vitality. Creative
initiatives—like preparing a shelter for the soul in the middle of a complex
city as in the silence-filled transcendence of a Rothko chapel, or letting
Mahler’s Resurrection Symphony thunder through a cold street
corner or a glittering concert hall—become the church’s most beautiful and
dignified gesture of reconciliation toward a sick world.
In
addition, the “solidarity budget” Pastor David Jang concretely proposes in the
form of a common fund, or community art projects in which believers take up
brushes alongside marginalized neighbors to fill city walls with color, can be
seen as practical pastoral alternatives—excellent translations of Acts’ ancient
description, “they enjoyed the favor of all the people,” into the living
grammar of the twenty-first century.
Theology
without aesthetics cools holiness into religious legalism. Conversely,
aesthetics severed from theology causes the true beauty of the cross to
evaporate into emptiness. Pastor David Jang’s weighty declaration—“The cross is
the most miserable art; the resurrection is the most radiant art; and the Holy
Spirit is the painter who redraws both arts anew in our lives today”—leaves a
deep, lingering resonance in the soul.
The
river of grace moistens the barren heart and gently cuts away the calluses of
greed. Even now, the Holy Spirit is diligently painting new landscapes of life
and sharing into our fierce routines and desolate streets. Within this dazzling
and overwhelming gospel canvas, with what colors of sharing and love will you
paint the rest of your life today?
You
are invited to the true table of koinonia shaped by art.


















