I fell in love with the work of Luc Freymanc three years ago when I sought an image that captured the wisdom and mystery, passion and turmoil that was the life of Christ. What was it like to be that teacher, I wondered, to test your own hypothesis about the ultimate power of love even to the point of your own death? To do so with courage and integrity that the people you held dear might understand that we are part of the one life, the one truth, the one mystery we call God?

At Freymanc's site, I discovered a veritable ocean of drawings of Christ that captured all of this. These were rapidly drawn sketches, passionate moments, insights into the very heart of a loving God. Impressionistic and immediate, the intense lines and the open spaces spoke to me of the purpose, passion, and pathos, of a Man good for his Word.

Freymanc uses a fountain pen to create these works, some of which are 1 to 2 inches high. Freymanc drew his first pen-and-ink image of the Christ on the night his father died. The image accompanied the obituary. It has accompanied his mothers and that of many others since he created it in 2001.

I visit Freymanc's site and literally fall into the drawings--Jesus at Gethsemane, healing the leper, praying...the Stations of the Cross. All of these images tell me that the Kingdom of God--that wonderful world of peace and truth and eternity--thrive in each of us.

I used Freymanc's images to create the video "It Could Have Been You" here.