Two Covenants Banner
02-11-2006, 11:10 PM
:zf: TWO COVENANTS BANNER
"I will write my law upon their hearts."
The banner is a 9X14 foot fabric mural depiction of the original acrylic painting by Martha Stern, Israeli artist. It pictures both the giving of the law to Moses on Mt. Sinai, and the coming of the tongues of fire of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost with the temple in the background. It was commissioned for the Christian Friends of Israel celebration of Shavuot (Pentecost) in Jerusalem in the spring of 1988.
<IMG content="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v708/hltpix/zionfire/2covenantsBnr.gif">
Altars of Remembrance in Banner Ministry - TWO COVENANTS
In the early spring of 1988, I was approached to do a banner for a Christian conference in Jerusalem, Israel that would celebrate the Shavuot, or Pentecost feast in May. I was to take the design from an acrylic painting of Israeli artist Martha Stern depiciting scenes of the old and new covenants and translate it into a 9 x 13 foot fabric mural that would be used as the backdrop for the conference. When I agreed to take the commission, I had no idea the adventures I would have in producing this project.
The time frame was maniacally short. From the time I received the print and patterns, I had exactly one month until the last day the banner could be shipped for timely arrival for the conference. While I was waiting on the patterns, I was talking to people I knew about the project and a great excitement was getting stirred up in our little rural church about the opportunity to be a part of something that would minister in Israel.
It took about two weeks to assemble materials and prepare the patterns. Because of the complexity of the design, over 70 different fabrics and 50 trims had to be selected and purchased. Most of these were found in one day in one store. The few others necessary were mail-ordered and were covered by much fervent prayer for timely arrival. Amazingly, though there were several shipping delays, items would arrived just on the day we needed them.
By the time I was ready to begin actual work, I had about twenty volunteers anxious to help and be a part of the effort. This was a new experience for me, I had never had anyone ASK to help with work on the banners before. So, from the time we were ready to begin I had shifts of up to ten people working 16 hours a day for the two weeks (yes, only fourteen days!) that it took to complete the mural banner. The patterns were arranged in sections, and each person would complete their assigned section and then it would be applied to the banner as if it were a piece in a giant jigsaw puzzle. The fact that God gifted me with the organizational skills to keep this whole production going is one of the little recognized miracles of this project.
Before delivering the banner to Paul Wilbur and Israels Hope to be hand-carried to the event in Jerusalem, the banner was previewed at a regional America Arise event in Detroit. Over 600 more believers began to pray for the Word of the Lord to go forth from the upcoming Shavuot event.
The real story begins in the testimonies that came back from Jerusalem following the conference. The site of the conference was an orthodox hotel, the Ramada Renaissance, in Jerusalem. Countless Jewish people filed past the banner as it hung in the conference hall, and even more as word got out and people brought their friends to see. There were many opportunities for the conference staff to give glory to the God of Israel and make a faith connection with Jewish people because of this banner that depicted their history. Jewish believers in Jerusalem, who up until this time had kept an extremely low profile, began to declare themselves and for the first time ever, the local newspapers began to carry reports on Jewish Christians. Believers from all over the world attended this conference and were affected by the message of the banner. In the future, Two Covenantsis slated to be hung on permanent display at a visitors center in Jerusalem, and will keep speaking the message of Gods faithfulness to fulfill His promises to His people.
"I will write my law upon their hearts."
The banner is a 9X14 foot fabric mural depiction of the original acrylic painting by Martha Stern, Israeli artist. It pictures both the giving of the law to Moses on Mt. Sinai, and the coming of the tongues of fire of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost with the temple in the background. It was commissioned for the Christian Friends of Israel celebration of Shavuot (Pentecost) in Jerusalem in the spring of 1988.
<IMG content="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v708/hltpix/zionfire/2covenantsBnr.gif">
Altars of Remembrance in Banner Ministry - TWO COVENANTS
In the early spring of 1988, I was approached to do a banner for a Christian conference in Jerusalem, Israel that would celebrate the Shavuot, or Pentecost feast in May. I was to take the design from an acrylic painting of Israeli artist Martha Stern depiciting scenes of the old and new covenants and translate it into a 9 x 13 foot fabric mural that would be used as the backdrop for the conference. When I agreed to take the commission, I had no idea the adventures I would have in producing this project.
The time frame was maniacally short. From the time I received the print and patterns, I had exactly one month until the last day the banner could be shipped for timely arrival for the conference. While I was waiting on the patterns, I was talking to people I knew about the project and a great excitement was getting stirred up in our little rural church about the opportunity to be a part of something that would minister in Israel.
It took about two weeks to assemble materials and prepare the patterns. Because of the complexity of the design, over 70 different fabrics and 50 trims had to be selected and purchased. Most of these were found in one day in one store. The few others necessary were mail-ordered and were covered by much fervent prayer for timely arrival. Amazingly, though there were several shipping delays, items would arrived just on the day we needed them.
By the time I was ready to begin actual work, I had about twenty volunteers anxious to help and be a part of the effort. This was a new experience for me, I had never had anyone ASK to help with work on the banners before. So, from the time we were ready to begin I had shifts of up to ten people working 16 hours a day for the two weeks (yes, only fourteen days!) that it took to complete the mural banner. The patterns were arranged in sections, and each person would complete their assigned section and then it would be applied to the banner as if it were a piece in a giant jigsaw puzzle. The fact that God gifted me with the organizational skills to keep this whole production going is one of the little recognized miracles of this project.
Before delivering the banner to Paul Wilbur and Israels Hope to be hand-carried to the event in Jerusalem, the banner was previewed at a regional America Arise event in Detroit. Over 600 more believers began to pray for the Word of the Lord to go forth from the upcoming Shavuot event.
The real story begins in the testimonies that came back from Jerusalem following the conference. The site of the conference was an orthodox hotel, the Ramada Renaissance, in Jerusalem. Countless Jewish people filed past the banner as it hung in the conference hall, and even more as word got out and people brought their friends to see. There were many opportunities for the conference staff to give glory to the God of Israel and make a faith connection with Jewish people because of this banner that depicted their history. Jewish believers in Jerusalem, who up until this time had kept an extremely low profile, began to declare themselves and for the first time ever, the local newspapers began to carry reports on Jewish Christians. Believers from all over the world attended this conference and were affected by the message of the banner. In the future, Two Covenantsis slated to be hung on permanent display at a visitors center in Jerusalem, and will keep speaking the message of Gods faithfulness to fulfill His promises to His people.
...See our banners in the ZionFire gallery
03-18-2006, 07:38 PM
I saw that banner on your website and thought it was totally awesome! Breathtaking, in fact!
Do you always have helpers for your banner making or do you do some of them single handed?
I have a couple of images that the Lord wants me to create into banners but I have never done anything like that before. Neither do I know anyone locally who would be likely to volunteer to help. In other words, guess I'm rather a newby and likely to make lots of mistakes!
Do you always have helpers for your banner making or do you do some of them single handed?
I have a couple of images that the Lord wants me to create into banners but I have never done anything like that before. Neither do I know anyone locally who would be likely to volunteer to help. In other words, guess I'm rather a newby and likely to make lots of mistakes!
03-18-2006, 09:29 PM
Thankyou, and welcome! I was so please to see your name registered here!
To answer your question, I sometimes do the banners alone, and sometimes have helpers---usually not so many as in the project above! On the Father of Life banner project, I had one faithful helper whose main artistic credit is as a knitting artist. She is an amazingly meticulous worker and a powerful intercessor. I appreciated and put a draw on both those giftings!
I'd be happy to brainstorm with you as you plan and make the banners the Lord is showing you. And there are others here also who have a wealth of experience and ideas. Don't worry about making mistakes...sometimes those "mistakes" can be turned into something even more wonderful than the original plan. I don't think I've ever made a mistake so bad that it couldn't be creatively redeemed. Fabric is a very forgiving medium.
I had a small team who worked with me when Dean and I lived in Pennsylvania. A couple of them are members on this board, Judy and Sorcha. Judy is an excellent banner maker in her own right. I hope she will share some of her pictures with us soon.
To answer your question, I sometimes do the banners alone, and sometimes have helpers---usually not so many as in the project above! On the Father of Life banner project, I had one faithful helper whose main artistic credit is as a knitting artist. She is an amazingly meticulous worker and a powerful intercessor. I appreciated and put a draw on both those giftings!
I'd be happy to brainstorm with you as you plan and make the banners the Lord is showing you. And there are others here also who have a wealth of experience and ideas. Don't worry about making mistakes...sometimes those "mistakes" can be turned into something even more wonderful than the original plan. I don't think I've ever made a mistake so bad that it couldn't be creatively redeemed. Fabric is a very forgiving medium.
I had a small team who worked with me when Dean and I lived in Pennsylvania. A couple of them are members on this board, Judy and Sorcha. Judy is an excellent banner maker in her own right. I hope she will share some of her pictures with us soon.
...See our banners in the ZionFire gallery
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