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Calvin News

Faith and music

Fri, Mar 13, 2009
Allison Graff

She said
That she would give me greatness
Status
Placement above all of the others
My face would grace covers of the magazines of the hustlers
Paper
The likes of which that I have never seen
Her eyes glow green with the logo of our dreams
The purpose of our scene
An obscene obsession with the bling...

So go lines from the title song of Lupe Fiasco's latest album, .

Now , a Grammy-winning hip hop artist, is coming to Calvin College in what is to be the biggest concert of the year. Performing in the new Van Noord Arena on Friday, April 3, he will be one of very few hip hop artists to take the stage at Calvin since the student activities office began bringing concerts to campus in 1993.

will join music artists such as rock band , independent artists , (formerly of Pedro the Lion), and , and breakout artist for this year鈥檚 , April 2-4. The bi-annual festival brings artists and music-lovers together for an extended conversation about the intersections between faith and art.

Engagement in popular culture

For student activities director Ken Heffner, the three-day festival is a continuation of what he and his staff do throughout the year to promote Christian engagement with popular culture. They bring in concerts, show films and host fashion shows and video game nights to get students seeing these things through the eyes of faith.

"There鈥檚 a kind of teachable moment here,鈥 Heffner said. "Because younger people 鈥 tend to be disproportionately interested in popular culture, you have a touch point there.鈥

Engagement with popular culture helps to bring Calvin鈥檚 curriculum to life, Heffner said. Students learn to take the theological ideas and Christian discernment they鈥檙e learning in the classroom and see how they play out in something they care deeply about. 鈥淭he ideas kind of die on the vine if they don鈥檛 get practiced,鈥 said Heffner.

And so students will have a chance to grapple with the ideas they learn at Calvin as Lupe Fiasco and others come to campus to present their art during the festival.

Bringing in the hip hop

Seniors Jenna Vanden Brink and Ryan Camp are part of the group that worked to bring Lupe Fiasco, The Hold Steady and others to campus for the 2009 Festival of Faith and Music. The decision to bring a hip hop artist to the festival was an important, but risky one, they said.

"Hip hop is something that in the four years I鈥檝e been here, like Ken says, we鈥檝e never legitimately tried because of some of the complexities that come with it鈥攖he language and stuff,鈥 said Camp.

Vanden Brink quickly added: 鈥淪o it鈥檚 important that we鈥檙e doing it.鈥

It鈥檚 important, the students said, because some hip hop鈥攅specially the type of hip hop that Lupe Fiasco creates, in the genre called 鈥減ositive hip hop,鈥 or 鈥渃onscious rap鈥濃攕peaks to social issues within the urban black community that need to be talked about:

"Lupe鈥檚 talking about things that other rappers aren鈥檛. 鈥 And while he鈥檚 doing that, he is bringing up dark stuff. 鈥 He鈥檚 talking about issues that we as Christians should be talking about. So we think it鈥檚 important to look at that, because鈥ther rappers are still stuck on their money and their girls and their guns.鈥

Vanden Brink agreed: 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 cool that Calvin can recognize that he鈥檚 doing something different, something positive. I just hope that people come to the show and listen to it,鈥 she said.

The students can鈥檛 wait to hear Lupe Fiasco speak and perform at the festival, but they know that it will mean extra work for them as they listen.

"It鈥檚 definitely a reach for us as far as content and difficulty in discerning it,鈥 said Camp.

The seniors both came to Calvin in part because they wanted the chance to become involved in events like the Festival of Faith and Music.

"I hadn鈥檛 done a lot with music in high school, but it was something I was always interested in. So when I came to Calvin, one of the things that attracted me here were the great concerts and the kind of music thing they had going on,鈥 Camp said.

Vanden Brink, too, found Calvin鈥檚 student activities programming to be a major selling point when choosing a college.

"My parents are part of a community theater that does concerts in Livonia, Mich. I guess that鈥檚 where I got interested in doing this type of thing. But mostly, I was just attracted to the concert series at Calvin,鈥 she said.

Many students and staff from schools belonging to the Council of Christian Colleges and Universities (CCCU) are also attracted to Calvin鈥檚 approach to popular culture. The festival draws a number of registrants from this group, and there are workshops specifically designed to share Calvin鈥檚 model of cultural engagement with those planning student activities at other schools, Heffner said.

"People are finding out about this festival because it鈥檚 one of the only places where you can find a conversation among biblically driven Christians about the renewal of all things,鈥 he said.

Mission of the festival

Heffner鈥檚 philosophy of student activities departs from that of most other colleges and universities, both Christian and non-Christian.

"When I was brought in, I had this vision for how Calvin College could do student activities in a way that makes sense for the college, as opposed to how it鈥檚 done typically in higher education. It鈥檚 almost always treated as entertainment, as an escape, to distract students from other things, like drinking,鈥 he said.

What kind of engagement with popular culture does make sense for Calvin? It鈥檚 the kind, Heffner says, that is tied up with the that is a part of every class and activity at Calvin.

In Reformed theology, much is made of the extent to which sin invaded God鈥檚 good creation when Adam and Eve disobeyed God.

"There is this big view of creation, and there鈥檚 this very cosmic view of sin in which there aren鈥檛 just certain things that are affected by sin, but everything鈥檚 affected by sin because of the enormous power humans have, the high office humans have,鈥 said Heffner.

It follows that when Jesus Christ made his sacrifice on the cross, he did so to redeem and renew all things on earth, not just human souls. Culture鈥攊ncluding popular culture鈥攊s in the middle of a massive redemption project while the world awaits Christ鈥檚 return to earth to bring a culmination to it all. The project is so big, Heffner says, that God works to renew things outside the realm of Christianity, even.

"We have to have the eyes that see (which is discernment) where redemption is showing up in all kinds of places, some of which are Christian, some of which are not,鈥 he said.

The Festival of Faith and Music in particular offers a place where students look not only at where renewal is happening in popular culture, but also at where they might fit into the renewal project.

Festival speakers like social critic , writer and artist will set the stage for the music artists, giving students a social, cultural and spiritual context for what they鈥檒l hear later.

, head of the black studies program at Princeton University, will speak just before Lupe Fiasco鈥檚 concert. West is a champion of the positive hip hop movement, Heffner said.

"We thought, let鈥檚 bring Cornel in to talk about why hip hop matters and what hip hop can do. If you鈥檝e ever heard him speak, his lectures are a work of art,鈥 he said.

Lupe Fiasco and Cornel West have never before met, though they鈥檝e both spoken of each other publicly. In fact, Lupe Fiasco鈥檚 2007 album The Cool is named after an idea West has spoken about in lectures. The two will meet for the first time on the stage at Calvin鈥檚 Fine Arts Center for an interview that has bloggers buzzing across the Internet.

Said one : 鈥淪houtout to Mary at Calvin College! She gave me the heads up that Dr. West agreed to interview Lupe at [the] Festival of Faith and Music this year. I am EXTREMELY excited to hear this news and can't wait to see the interview!鈥

The appearances of Cornel West and Lupe Fiasco will make this year鈥檚 festival bigger than it鈥檚 ever been, Heffner said, and yet there are many other artists and speakers who will contribute to the event. In addition to concerts and keynote lectures each evening, days will be filled with workshops on everything from advertising in the music industry to DJ music. On Friday, a Christian collaboration called the will lead the entire community in its weekly hymn sing in the Fine Arts Center.

Heffner has great hopes for the festival. He hopes it will be a place for people of faith with a particular interest in the arts to meet each other and start good conversations. He also hopes it will continue his鈥攁nd the college鈥檚鈥攐ngoing mission to help students remain engaged in timely and important issues in the broader culture.

"This festival, among other things, is a place where Calvin College gets to shine. It鈥檚 a place that shows what all this theological talk means,鈥 he said.

Ultimately, the festival is a venue where students and other festival participants have the chance to be part of something that鈥檚 much more than entertainment鈥攎ore than a place to find new songs to add to an iPod. It is, Heffner says, about what keynote speaker Andy Crouch talks about in his most recent book, .

"If you really want to change culture,鈥 Heffner paraphrases, 鈥測ou have to make more. So you can鈥檛 just critique it, you have to dream up new ways of doing things.鈥

Heffner adds, 鈥淲e want people to just dive into this project of culture-making.鈥澛