214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com
Words of Hope
In Hollywood during the 1930’s when sound had come to movies. A young choreographer named Busby Berkeley arrived from a successful career on Broadway. He was charged with directing and choreographing the dance numbers in several musicals, but he had a problem. Cameras in the early days of sound were paralyzed. Often locked inside huge glass fronted booths to minimize the noise of the camera itself. Musical dance numbers were often shot much like you were watching the show from an audience in a theater.
Berkley took his cameras out of the booths and put them on cranes and dollies and choreographed their movements just like one of the dancers. It was a revelation for the motion picture art.
Once he created a kaleidoscope-like arrangement of dancers on the floor and he pulled the camera as high as he could get it to reveal the intricate and mesmerizing movements shot from above. The crane couldn’t get high enough to take in the picture, so he had a hold cut in the roof of the sound stage and put the cameraman on the roof to get the ultra-wide-angle image. It was a hit, and the “top shot” became a standard in his repertoire and cameras were never condemned to being locked in place again.
Jesus followers were just as brave, and they literally removed the roof to un-paralyze their friend.
Sometimes you must be unafraid to raise the roof in order to perform miracles.
Prayer
God, may we find courage to raise the roof when needed, in order to bring healing to our broken world.
Devotion Author
Hardy Haberman
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com