Silence and Beauty Audiobook By Makoto Fujimura, Philip Yancey - foreword cover art

Silence and Beauty

Hidden Faith Born of Suffering

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In this world of pain and suffering, God often seems silent. But light is yet present in darkness, and silence speaks with hidden beauty and truth.

Shusaku Endo's novel Silence, first published in 1966, endures as one of the greatest works of 20th-century Japanese literature. Its narrative of the persecution of Christians in 17th-century Japan raises uncomfortable questions about God and the ambiguity of faith in the midst of suffering and hostility.

Endo's Silence took visual artist Makoto Fujimura on a pilgrimage of grappling with the nature of art, the significance of pain, and his own cultural heritage. His artistic faith journey overlaps with Endo's as he uncovers deep layers of meaning in Japanese history and literature, expressed in art both past and present. He finds connections to how faith is lived amid trauma and glimpses of how the Gospel is conveyed in Christ-hidden cultures.

Download the accompanying reference guide.©2017 Intervarsity (P)2017 Oasis Audio
Christian Literature & Art Religious Studies Japan Art Christianity Asia Religious Intolerance Literary History & Criticism Ministry & Evangelism Inspiring

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Deep Reflections • Cultural Insights • Enjoyable Narrator • Faith Exploration • Theological Depth • Historical Context

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Book:
The book travels through a whole lot of stories, analogies, historical moments, and examples of faith and artistry-- but not only Japanese experiences or art. I found all of the content to be interesting, but struggled to find coherence throughout. There was a lot of jumping around and back and forth between analogies and stories. There as so much in here... This is most likely my failure as a reader and thinker, but I found that the book had me jumping in and out of arenas relevant to my thinking and actions as a western christian artist.
However I failed in these areas, overall, I found this to be an extremely useful and powerful book for my heart and thought process regarding the integration of faith and art.
The book invigorated my faith, humbled my pride, encouraged my evangelism, and inspired me artistically. I highly recommend it.
Note: I took his advise at the beginning of the book to put his down and read the novel Silence (even though I had seen and greatly appreciated the Martin Scorsese film), and I am glad that I did.

Narrator:
The narrator has a fairly thick asian accent which resembles Makoto's voice, but is still a distraction. The part of his narration that really, really bothered me were when he horribly mispronounced obvious words like "theologian," (and many others that I didn't keep track of). This mispronunciation made him sound unintelligent -- which is the last thing that Fujimura is. His vocal inclinations were also very repetitive and bland, so that there was no interest in his voice or passion. This made it hard to concentrate on the content and stories.

Excellent Book / Pretty Bad Narration

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The author explores the depths of the human experience, enlightens readers about Japanese culture and western culture. Most importantly how these cultures experience the sacred and holy across culture boundaries. The author writes as someone who knows reflection well.

Deep

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A must read after “Silence.” Gave me much to think about and made me appreciate the silence and beauty of the Lord Jesus Christ in a new way.

Incredible

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Very interesting history of some of the persecution of Christians in Japan but beyond that it delves into "faith kept despite obstacles". The cultural aspect was conveyed with detail and stories brought it to life. Lots of philosophical nuggets of wisdom that are perks for any person regardless of faith or denomination. Perserverance in all things was the underlying theme. Very enjoyable narrator and good pronunciation. I love AUDIBLE versus reading because I can do things while listening but one of the downfalls frequently is the narrators butchering the language of the story. I have listened to books with a Japanese theme but many times the narrator was like nails on a chalkboard with how they pronounced even the easiest Japanese words. This narrator was a joy to listen to. I rarely listen to a book twice but this one is on my repeat list.

Nuggets of wisdom

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I was expecting boredom and tolerance but I found challenge and depth. Except the mispronouncing of the reader, this was a great read.

Tour de force

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