East and Southeast Asia
Music of Diverse Cultures
By:
Anna J. Micklatcher-Peterson
Joseph Prince Ministries
Southeast Asia is the
location of my favorite television preacher, Joseph Prince. He is a very intelligent minister who was called
by God to preach the gospel of grace around the world. His vast knowledge of Judaism and
Christianity help him to correctly break down the words of the bible. Joseph Prince shares this knowledge with his congregation
and a multitude of people who receive his “Grace” message all over the world
through his books, teaching resources, television ministry and internet.
Joseph Prince (born
on May 15, 1963) is an evangelist and the senior pastor of New Creation Church
in Singapore. He has a wife named Wendy
and two children. New Creation Church is
a non-denominational Christian church that holds its services at The Star
Performing Arts Center. It has an
average Sunday attendance of 33,000 and was founded in 1984. His television program is called “Destined to
Reign” and broadcasts to more than 150 countries including the United States of
America. Joseph Prince does not take a salary
from New Creation Church. He encourages everyone
who watches his broadcast to give their tithes and offerings to their local
church.
Joseph Prince has written numerous books. Some of which share a very “simple” message about
the power of the Holy Communion. He
believes those who have accepted Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior should take
the Holy Communion every day so they can enjoy the divine health and wholeness
that our Lord and Savior paid for on the cross.
Many people share their testimonies of “healing” through the Holy
Communion on his daily broadcast.
Mosques of Southeast Asia
There are many
beautiful mosques located in Southeast Asia. Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta,
Indonesia is the largest that was completed in 1978. It can hold 200,000 people. It is also the fourth largest in the world. This mosque was built to commemorate
Indonesian independence. Its name “Istiqlal”
means “independence.” President Barrack
Obama was one of the many world leaders that have visited this mosque during
their diplomatic visit.
One of my favorites
is the Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkaiah, located in Cotabato City, Philippines. Even though it is the largest in the
Philippines, it is by far much smaller with the capacity of holding only 60,000
people. Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah of
Brunei Darussalam funded the construction at 48 million dollars that is said to
help the growing Muslim population in the Southern Philippines. It was completed in 2011. I love the balance and symmetry of the design
with the bright golden yellow domes.
The Baiturrahman
Grand in Aceh, Indonesia is one of the oldest mosques in Aceh that survived the
2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. It represents
a symbol of religion, culture, spirit, strength, struggle and nationalism of
the people of Aceh, Indonesia. Smaller
in size, it has a capacity of 30,000 people.
The construction on it was completed in 1881. In my opinion, it is the most gorgeous with
the seven navy colored domes and the beautiful architecture of the mosque.
East Asia
Chinese culture
celebrates the Spring Festival at the beginning of the Lunar New Year. The dates fall between mid-January and mid-February. This is a time when the Chinese honor their
ancestors. The celebration lasts for fifteen
days and they do something every day to welcome the new year. One of the things they do during this time is
eat rice congee and mustard greens to cleanse the body. Their celebration during this time includes
fireworks and parades that have dancers that are dressed like
dragons.
dragons.
The Istiqlal Mosque in Indonesia is absolutely beautiful. The dragon dance is very popular in China
ReplyDeleteThe mosques are very beautiful and I always knew they were big but to know that some of them can fit up to 30,000 people was shock. I'd love to attend a spring festival it looks very fun and entertaining.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this information, and especially on the mosques. I've spent a good amount of time teaching about the architecture and art on European cathedrals and how they relate to the music, and I've been able to visit many of them (and spent a year working at St. Patrick's Cathedral in NYC before coming to Converse). My knowledge of mosques is more recent, but I'm fascinated by how the two religions can have such similar constructs as a historical heart of the tradition, achieving similar goals with different architectural designs.
ReplyDelete