Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Editorial Policy

Any good publication has an editor. Someone to fix sentence fragments like this one.

We have one here too, and that's Michael.


Now, in general, we don't want to mess with people's posts, but we have to balance that with wanting to have a blog with good grammar and spelling. So our policy is that we reserve the right to make changes. Our commitment to you is that the changes won't alter what you're trying to say.

If you feel like something gets modified that does mess up what you were trying to say, then please - by all means - get in touch with Michael and let him know.

2 Comments:

Blogger Michael Slusser said...

Most likely, I'll high-handedly ignore you. In fact, I may retroactively go back and make you say something totally contradictory to what you originally intended.

Okay, that's not true. I'm a mostly "hands-off" kind of guy. I probably will be more active in the future in setting discussion topics and keeping Devin's endless profanity off here.

So keep up the posting. That's my only current official order.

11/08/2005 1:33 PM  
Blogger Kathie said...

Here's a link I think you might like to add to the site: http://www.iamny.org/

I read an article on Makoto and IAM (International Arts Movement and a reference to God's name for himself) a couple of years ago, and have a dear friend who met with him as she worked for Campus Crusade's art ministry in Florida. Here is a description of the movement and community from their website:

International Arts Movement, Inc. (IAM) is a catalyst arts organization committed to cultural and spiritual renewal. Its programs support individual artists in their work and embrace the entire arts community. IAM is active in Tokyo and New York City, with affiliations in Orlando, Los Angeles, and London. Its vision: a fusion of creativity and faith that expresses and illustrates God's intimate and merciful identity in the world.

IAM was first conceived when its founder, Makoto Fujimura, traveled to the Philippines to organize an exhibit by Christian artists. An established artist - with his own newborn faith in Christ - Fujimura was exhibiting in Tokyo at the time. Moved by these experiences, Fujimura went on to publish "Wouldest Thou Love...:" a personal record of an artist's journey to faith. This publication had a wide and lasting impact; it was later quoted in major arts magazines and museum exhibits. Most gratifyingly, it had a very real personal impact on the lives of many artists, curators and critics in Japan and in New York. IAM grew out of this experience with a vision to unite leaders who share the passion for creativity and Christ. We want to understand our "stories" together as God knits us together.

11/08/2005 3:24 PM  

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