We Are One Forever
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Dates2018 - Ongoing
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Author
To speak about faith is to speak about mystery. On one side, it is a mystery why 84% of the world’s population identifies with a religious group, meaning that he or she decides to belong to God, an entity that cannot be seen or empirically proven. On the other side, it is a mystery for the believers to see so many people not to accept God as the only truth of the world, not feeling its presence in everything.
Today in Rome, the capital of Catholicism, the Christian evangelical community ‘Equippers’ is witnessing an ever increasing number of participants. This community was born in 2000 in New Zealand, by pastor Bruce Monk, nowadays it counts 40 churches all around the world with the only Italian location based in Rome.
Francesco Basile, the pastor of the Italian church, defines the community as “a church as you wouldn’t expect it, a church that believes in joy and it is thought for the young people”.
Pop music, neon lights and big stages are part of the Sunday service, social media are used as a tool to “spread the word of God”, preaches are live streamed on Facebook, events advertised on Instagram and music shared via YouTube. The contemporary look catches the attention of many teenagers, some of whom got to know the church via social media, choosing to actively take part to the activities of the church. It is an opposite trend compared to the catholic church, who is witnessing a decreasing number of believers aged between 15 and 30.
I started photographing the Equippers community in November 2018, I was curious to see how the pop world could communicate with the Christian teachings, it seemed so profane compared to the catholic culture we Italians grow up with. However, even if all these free aspects are what make the teenagers stay and engage to the community, the Equippers teachings are deeply rooted in the Bible. Reading and prayer are the two fundamental practice for any believer, in order to create and develop a ‘personal relationship with God’.
In We are one forever I decided to play on the contrast among sacred and profane, reaching for God through pop means. Is it a paradox or are these two faces of the same coin? Joining a church nowadays, is it a divine call or just an action of falling into the trap of the best seller of happiness on social media? And, going back on a personal level, can a kid be part of such a strong community and still maintain his/her personality?
The project is divided in two blocks of photographs, the first part is a visual narration of spontaneous moments in the Church and a record of social media activities, the second one is a series of portraits, decontextualized from the church activities, willing to recreate a sense of meditation and calmness.