Go On, David Bridgeman

The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’  Matthew 25:40 NIV

He came to see me when I was on the margins, lonely and far away and he celebrated the paintings and the puppets I made.  He was not a common man.  He made room for me and the others like me to exist in a world that drew lines so sharp that we were cut off.  Not only did he make room- he invited me in to a wider place- with light and life and hope.  My wife, Amy, received word of the passing of the Reverend David Bridgeman only a few weeks ago, though he left for home back in August.

David, on one of his many trips to southwestern China.  This photo hangs on my living room wall.

I know woefully little of his personal story.  I know that he was born in China to missionary parents- and he was always drawn back to that land, returning as often as he could to share the God that he loved wth the people that he loved.  He delighted to share stories and photos and artifacts of the land and people of south western China whenever I saw him.   

Always an old man to my eyes- older by at least a decade than i am now (42) when I first encountered him nearly 30 years ago.  His prayers were beautiful and rich, authentic and long.  I respected them, though my tired teenage body would often nod then lurch back awake in my pew before he finished.  He possessed both ancient wisdom and childlike awe with genuine humility.  His old blue hatchback was a persistent reminder of his values.  It was a solitary and quiet voice amongst the ostentatious suv’s and sedans in the church parking lot, not unlike Colombo’s oxidized Peugeot.

detail of the crucifixion from The Issenheim Altarpiece by Matthias Gruenwald

We shared a love for Gruenwald’s unparalleled Issenheim Altarpiece, and especially the figure of John the Baptist, of which he would speak with a beautiful passion.  It could bring us both to tears.  He once bought for me a reproduction of the closed state of the altar, featuring the crucifixion, from a seminary in China.  Framed and on my wall with its captions in Chinese characters, it is more than a relic of my favorite painting, but of mentorship, friendship, and of a man whose embrace circled the globe.  

I have long considered David one of my painting teachers.  When I came home on break from art school in Kansas City, I would bring the paintings I was working on with me so that he could see them.  He would prop a picture up on a chair in his office and look at it in silence.  Then after a while he would start to speak about what he was seeing.  He would go through every detail and talk about what it made him think about- how he saw it relating to God’s story.  As a spiritual painter in a secular school, I had no shortage of technical conversations about composition and color and line, but nobody would touch the spiritual implications with a ten foot pole.  David could talk about the formal aspects of art, but he would dive right into the symbolism and wouldn’t come up for an hour.  When he did he had more associations and story from a picture I painted than I had ever imagined could be in there, and I was the one who painted it.  He helped lay a foundation for a core belief I hold about painting; being a deeply poetic visual language that always caries more information than what the artist intended.  At my best, I am an apprentice/collaborator with the Holy Spirit, and any viewer might hold keys into the symbolism of my work that I hadn’t seen before.  This dynamic has become one of the things I treasure most about making art:  learning from the insights of the audience about what is really in there.  It is a big part of being a student in the School of the Transfer of Energy.      

upper panel of the Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes

David and His wife Mary waited patiently, over five years, for the painting they had requested.  I had free reign and it took quite a while before I felt I had a fitting subject.  On one of my repeated visits to the Loretta Chapel in Santa Fe, New Mexico, in a dark corner far above and to the right of the altar is a painting of a fish resting on top of a loaf of bread.  I had never noticed it before- but it captivated me now.  I loved the simplicity and power of the image- so straightforward in the story it was referencing, the miracle of Jesus feeding the five thousand.  Soon afterwards as I contemplated the image and how I might approach it, I was reading Thor Heyerdahl’s account of his and his countryman’s pacific voyage to the Polynesian Islands from South America on a Balsa log raft named Kon-Tiki.  I was struck (as were the sailors) by the almost miraculous provision of flying fish that helped to feed them on their long journey.  From that day the flying fish became a new symbol for me of God’s unexpected provision.  It became the centerpiece for David’s painting.

I wish my account of David wasn’t so self-centered.  But I knew him through his self-less investments into me and my family.  He also sponsored my wife Amy through her own ordination process.  I am grateful for all that I have received from God through David.  The greatest honor I can give him is to say truthfully that he was like John the Baptist in our painting, always pointing and crying “behold! the Lamb of God who comes to take away the sins of the world!”    

The Reverend Jason Carter, who also grew up under David’s mentorship has written a much more fitting and beautiful remembrance of David here.

7 thoughts on “Go On, David Bridgeman

  1. Dear Jack,

    I’m so sorry for your loss. I also recently lost my mentor in the faith.

    Your rich work and faith are a part of Rev. Bridgeman’s living legacy.

    I know you already practice many arts, but I hope you will find ongoing outlets for your writing too. You write well.

    Blessings

    Amy

    Amy Ekeh

    (203) 693-3054 (H) (240) 346-6837 (C) http://www.amyekeh.com

    ________________________________

    1. Amy,
      Thank you for your sympathy and kind words. I am grateful as well to have your encouragement of the writing. It is appropriate.

      peace

      Jack

  2. This is beautiful Jack. I feel a little like I knew him now.

    Love to you and your family.

    Jason S. Edmonds

    Principal

    Edmonds Duncan Registered Investment Advisors

    645 Massachusetts Street, Suite 300

    Lawrence, KS 66044

    Main Phone: 785-856-2222

    Toll Free: 855-315-5449

    Fax: 785-856-2304

    [ http://www.edmondsduncan.com/ | http://www.edmondsduncan.com ]

    Securities offered through Purshe Kaplan Sterling Investments, member FINRA/SIPC, Headquartered at 18 Corporate Woods Blvd, Albany, NY, 12211. Purshe Kaplan Sterling Investments and Edmonds Duncan RIA are not affiliated companies.

    1. Thanks for writing, Jason. It makes me glad to know that you check in here at times. Love to you and yours as well.

      Jack

  3. Your account of David isn’t at all self-centered, Jack — it’s a beautiful, deeply personal testimony of the impact he had on your life. I think he would be pleased and honored to read this lovely tribute. As Amy said so well, your rich work and faith are now a part of Rev. Bridgeman’s living legacy. My heartfelt condolences for your loss.

    1. Thank you for the absolution of my selfishness, Heidi. I receive it. And always thank you for your deeply considered comments here. It is good to be reminded too that our faith is of a multigenerational continuum- a long legacy to Christ himself.

      1. Isn’t it wonderful to consider that faith has united so many generations, all the way back to Christ himself — and that your family will carry on the lessons you teach them, too, for generations after you’re gone? It’s one of the things that gives me hope when I despair for the future.

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