Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Fujimura on Cultivating the Imagination
Fujimura on Cultivating the Imagination
Feb 1, 2026 3:11 AM

“The cultivation of imagination is to begin to integrate life into faith and every other facet, whether mundane or extraordinary, whether 9-5 work realities or worship in a church. Imagination is key to the thriving God intends for us.” –Makoto Fujimura

The burgeoning faith-work movement has does a fine job of re-orienting our perspectives about the meaning of everyday toil and the importance of stewardship in the area of work and creative service. Butone area that continues to sufferneglectis that of the human imagination.

The problem isn’t so much with imagination in a strictly “for-profit” or utilitarian sense. We all recognize the importance of the imaginative capacity of a Steve Jobs, for instance,insofar as hedelivers someinnovation or experiment or new convenience.

But do we have a more basic concern for cultivating and stewarding the imagination in and by itself? Do we see value and meaning in simply learning to connect reality with faith, truth with beauty? Do we recognizethe type of long-view foundation it takes to even get to that more “useful” Silicon-Valley phase?

As Stephen Grabill reminds us in Episode 6 of For the Life of the World, we rarely give ourselves the time and space to pause and cultivate this corner of the human intellect, and even when we do, it’s often for the wrong reasons. “We need to develop a palate for what is good,” he says, “not just for what it can do for us, but for what it is in itself.”

Later in the episode, artist Mako Fujimura chimes in on this same point, “Perhaps the greatest thing we can do as a munity is to behold,” he says. “Behold our God. Behold his creation.”Without a front-t0-back understanding and appreciation ofGod’s creation and the beauty bound up therein, all of our striving — energetic and “innovative” though it may appear — will neither glorify God norserve the long-term flourishing of civilization.

In a recent essay for The High Calling, Fujimuraexpounds on this further still, connecting the cultivation of the imagination to the development of our faith and a Christ-centered philosophy of life:

To be sure, “imagination” ought to be distinguished from “fantasy.” The former is fully present in the gritty reality of the earth; the latter, a disconnected solipsism, a type of narcissism. Imagination is a uniquely human faculty that is connected with reality and faith at the same time. Human beings have the capacity to imagine the future and actually see it into reality.

Further, for a Christian, imagination is even more valuable: “Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” (Heb. 11:1) If you take this word of the New Testament seriously, it follows that you must have imagination in order to have faith. In this light, parents might not only encourage the teen, butinvite, for being an artist—focusing as a way of making a living to cultivate imagination in himself and others—is essential for our faith, essential for living out the Gospel promises.

There are plenty of different approaches Christians can take on this, some of which Fujimura outlined in his lectureon culture careduringlast year’s Acton University.

In his latest essay, however, he speaks more directlytothose who don’t viewthemselves as artists, encouraging thosewho struggle with prioritizing the imagination to begin stretching and challenging themselves in this area (quoted directly):

Befriend an artist.Go to her studio, listen live to her songs, watch her rehearse, read her poetry (aloud to each other munity). Tell her you care for her as an individual. Admire her willingness to take risks trying to make the invisible visible, municate that you would like to know more about the process of her journey so that you can journey with her.Invite an artist to brainstorm with you.Call him when you begin anything new, whether a new business plan, a new church, or an pany. Do this at the start of the process rather than at the end when all you need is a logo. Surprise him by paying a consulting fee, and keep him in the loop of your creation.Partner with an artist in creating a “Culture Care” movement in munity.Think bigger than just your business, family, or church. Instead, think of the old-fashioned monwealth, and create “wealth” that can be shared by everyone in munity.“Waste” time with your spouse, children, and friends.Imagination only grows when you are not in a nine-to-five efficiency mode. Let the margins of your life expand, and live in the expectation of the abundant, gratuitous reality of love.

For more, see The Economy of Wonder (which will be streaming for FREE this Wednesday).

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Christians shouldn’t be surprised to find capitalism infected by cronyism
When anyone criticizes socialism by pointing out the failures of socialist countries like Cuba or Venezuela, its defenders claim, “That’s authoritarian socialism, that’s not the type of socialism we support.” We defenders of free enterprise mock this shift, but don’t we do something similar? When anyone criticizes capitalism, don’t we say, “That’s crony capitalism, that’s not the type of capitalism we support”? Can the two really be separated? As political scientists Michael C. Munger and Mario Villarreal-Diaz write in their...
All homeschoolers may have to register with the government
The Department of Education has proposed new guidelines that all homeschool parents must register with the government. Officials say the registry, es as a booming number ofchildren are being educated at home,would be used for government officials to check upon students and assure the pupils are receivingthe government’s definition of aquality education. The UK government unveiled the proposal as another controversial policy percolated through the British school system: pulsory classes about homosexual, bisexual, and transgender relationships beginning in primary school.That...
Alejandro Chafuen in Forbes: Aquinas and Bitcoin
Yesterday in Forbes, Alejandro Chafuen, Acton’s Managing Director, International, analyzed moral questions of cryptocurrency in light of St. Thomas Aquinas’s Summa theologiae. It is an application of centuries-old thought to a very recent phenomenon—but of course, as the article seeks to show, moral considerations are perennial even as their particular objects change. What would Thomas Aquinas have thought of cryptocurrency? Our answer may be a conjecture, but if we look at Aquinas’s body of work our conjecture can be well-informed....
Review: Light-Horse Harry Lee, the Revolutionary hero and his reckless downfall
Henry Lee III, besides being the father of Confederate General Robert E. Lee, may be best known for his masterful eulogy of George Washington. “To the memory of the Man, first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen,” was Lee’s most memorable line about the first American president. In “Light-Horse Harry Lee,”(Regnery History, 434 pages, $29.99), historian Ryan Cole offers up prehensive portrait of the oft-forgotten Lee whose rapid rise as a brilliant military...
The downside of paid family leave: Denmark
As Republicans unveil plans pulsory paid family leave, they would be well instructed to see how such policies have hurt women’s employment prospects. In Europe, where paid leave is pulsory, women face fewer prospects for advancement than in the United States. Veronique de Rugy, a senior fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, writes about the example of Denmark in The American Spectator. De Rugy, who took part in the first transatlantic “Reclaiming the West” conference in London...
Acton Line podcast: A trial for religious liberty; defining honorable business
On this episode of Acton Line, Trey Dimsdale, director of program outreach at Acton Institute, sits down with Andrew Graham, attorney at First Liberty Institute, a public interest law firm. Trey and Andrew talk about a current case threatening Bladensburg World War I Memorial in Maryland, known as the Peace Cross. The land on which the cross stands was first privately owned by American Legion and the memorial was erected with privately raised funds. Now the land belongs to the...
How the minimum wage affected workers during (and after) the Great Recession
The law of demand is one of the most fundamental concepts of economics. This law states that, if all other factors remain equal, the higher the price of a good, the less people will demand that good. Most of the time this is too obvious to mention. Yet people seem to think we can suspend the law of demand when es to wages. They seem to believe, for example, that increasing the price of labor for low-skilled workers will have...
A Spaniard defends Conservative Liberalism
“Conservative liberalism” isn’t a monly used in the United States. Indeed, to American ears, it seems positively oxymoronic. In Europe, however, it constitutes a venerable tradition of political thought and embraces figures ranging from the French thinkers Alexis de Tocqueville and Raymond Aron to economists such as the primary intellectual architect of the German economic miracle, Wilhelm Röpke, and the French monetary theorist Jacques Rueff. As a political tradition, the “liberal” part of conservative liberalism concerns mitment to freedom. The...
The reason women don’t enter STEM professions revealed
Conventional wisdom believes three things: Women areunderrepresentedin science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM); this is largely due to sexual discrimination; and the government must redress this imbalance. But multiple studies have discovered a much different reason behind the STEM gender gap. Most media and mentary accepts the theory of “disparate impact”: Any statistical inequality isipso facto“proof” of discrimination. When activistscallthis “one of the most important issues of our time,” opinion-makers nod in agreement. The United Nations General Assembly has passed...
Beto O’Rourke’s markets and morality mismatch
Former Texas congressman Beto O’Rourke, who famously lost a senate bid against Ted Cruz (R-TX) in the 2018 election, is currently one of the front-runners in the Democratic presidential primary race. He has polled as high as 12% and as low as 5% in recent polls. He raised $6.1 million in his first 24 hours after announcing his candidacy, and a total of $9.4 million in the first 18 days. I have to admit, I don’t get O’Rourke’s appeal. South...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved