Freedom Loves Company - podcast cover

Freedom Loves Company

John Shuckwww.podomatic.com
Freedom Loves Company on Revolution Radio explores the many facets of our emerging dystopia and the ultimate defeat of evil.
Last refreshed:
Follow this podcast in the Metacast mobile app to refresh it and see new episodes.
Download Metacast podcast app
Podcasts are better in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episodes

Margaret Placentra Johnston, Faith Beyond Belief

The number of people not interested in religious institutions is rising. They are called the "Nones." Yet even though they may leave institutional religion behind many are still interested in spirituality and meaning-making. Margaret Placentra Johnston tells the stories of the nones who are on a quest for spiritual growth. Her book is Faith Beyond Belief: Stories of Good People Who Have Left Their Church Behind.

Aug 09, 201529 min

Michael G. Long, Peaceful Neighbor: Discovering the Countercultural Mister Rogers

"Fierce" is not a word one would expect to associate with Mister Rogers of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. But Michael G. Long author of Peaceful Neighbor: Discovering the Countercultural Mister Rogers writes that Fred Rogers was a "fierce peacemaker" and his show that spanned over 30 years took on issues of war and peace, hunger, civil rights, and more. Dr. Long, professor at Elizabethtown College introduces us to a countercultural Mister Rogers on Religion For Life.

Aug 02, 201529 min

Hemant Mehta, The Friendly Atheist

Hemant Mehta is the owner of the largest atheist blog on the web, The Friendly Atheist. He is the author of I Sold My Soul on eBay, The Young Atheist's Survival Guide, and The Friendly Atheist: Thoughts on the Role of Religion in Politics and Media. He talks with me about his story and his thoughts on religion in America. (By the way, you might enjoy an article I wrote for his blog!)

Jul 25, 201529 min

Peter Rollins, The Divine Magician

I welcome back Peter Rollins to discuss his new book, The Divine Magician: The Disappearance of Religion and the Discovery of Faith. Religion is a magic trick promising something at the end of the rainbow (eternal life, certainty, etc.) but the trick is that there is nothing there. The depth of faith is to embrace the world with all of its uncertainty.

Jul 19, 201529 min

Nicole Garcia, A Transgender Latina of Faith

Nicole Garcia is seeking ordination in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. When that happens she will be the first transgender woman of color to be ordained in the ELCA. She speaks with me about her journey from male to female, her counseling practice, Our Lady of Guadalupe, and the importance of queering the church. She was featured recently in a Religion News Service article, The journey of one transgender Latina in the church.

Jul 12, 201529 min

Alex McNeill, Executive Director for More Light Presbyterians

Nearly three years ago, Alex McNeill was on Religion For Life to discuss two journeys. His ordination to the ministry in the Presbyterian Church (USA) and his transition from female to male. Since then, Alex has become the executive director of More Light Presbyterians. He is the first openly transgender person to head a mainline Protestant organization. He talks about the steps he has taken on both journeys as well as next steps for justice for LGBTQ people in the church and society.

Jul 05, 201529 min

Nancy Ellen Abrams, A God That Could Be Real

A sage once quipped: "Galileo put God out of a home and Darwin put God out of a job." In our modern understanding of the universe that requires no "supernatural shenanigans" to operate, is there "anything in the universe worthy of the name, God?" Nancy Ellen Abrams asks this question and suggests that there may be a way to speak of the reality of God. She returns to Religion For Life to discuss the concept of emergence and her latest book, A God That Could Be Real: Spirituality, Science and the ...

Jun 27, 201529 min

Rachel Held Evans, Searching For Sunday

Rachel Held Evans is from Dayton, Tennessee, home of the Scopes Monkey Trial. It is certainly the Bible Belt. What happens when you grow beyond the beliefs of your church? Many follow a similar path to New York Times best-selling author, Rachel Held Evans. With wit and grace Rachel chronicles her journey of faith and doubt, leaving church and finding it again in her latest book, Searching For Sunday: Loving, Leaving, and Finding the Church.

Jun 21, 201529 min

Jennifer Grace Bird, Permission Granted: Take the Bible Into Your Own HandsI

I finish my three-part series on the "good" book with Jennifer Grace Bird. She teaches at Portland Community College and the University of Portland and has written a fantastic guide to the Bible, Permission Granted: Take the Bible Into Your Own Hands. She doesn't flinch from challenging the "bad" texts in the good book. More than a critique of the Bible, she encourages her readers to read the texts for themselves with a critical eye and not just accept it because it's what "the Bible says." You ...

Jun 14, 201529 min

John Dominic Crossan, How to Read the Bible and Still Be a Christian

In my second in a series of three on the Bible, world-renowned scholar on the historical Jesus, John Dominic Crossan returns to Religion For Life, to address one of the most troubling aspects of the Bible, the violence of God. How do we read and trust a book whose main character, God, is less ethical than most humans? His latest book is How to Read the Bible and Still Be a Christian: Struggling With Divine Violence from Genesis through Revelation.

Jun 10, 201529 min

David Felten, Fact or Fiction?

David Felten, co-creator of Living the Questions, is also pastor of The Fountains in Fountain Hills, Arizona. He found himself under attack by fellow clergy who do not approve of his brand of Christianity. These clergy have used the op ed page of the local paper, newspaper advertisements, and expensive banners to campaign against David and progressive Christianity. David spoke with me about it as well as the strange times we are in regarding religious faith.

May 31, 201529 min

Harvey Cox, How to Read the Bible

I am doing a three part series on the Bible, what it is and how to read it. Three excellent scholars and teachers will be our guides, Harvey Cox, John Dominic Crossan, and Jennifer Grace Bird. Leading off is Harvard University professor, Harvey Cox, author of the famous Secular City in 1965. He was with me two years ago on Religion For Life to discuss his book, The Future of Faith. He returns to talk about his latest book How To Read the Bible.

May 24, 201529 min

Carolyn Baker, Love in the Age of Ecological Apocalypse

Spend the apocalypse with someone you love. Carolyn Baker returns to Religion For Life to talk about her book, Love in the Age of Ecological Apocalypse: Cultivating the Relationships We Need to Thrive. The Long Descent is not a pretty picture. As industrial civilization hits its limits, resilience will be the primary characteristic of those who survive and thrive. Preparing emotionally and building relationships will be just as important if not more important than preparing materially for the fu...

May 17, 201529 min

Doug Pagitt, Flipped

Doug Pagitt is the pastor of Solomon's Porch in Minneapolis and the author of Flipped: The Provocative Truth That Changes Everything We Know About God. We talk about many different emergent movements including emergent atheism as well as the progressive evangelical movement. We also talk about "God" and the problem of transactional" religion. It is an exciting time of change and creativity and Doug Pagitt is a forerunner.

May 10, 201529 min

Lloyd Geering, Reimagining God

Lloyd Geering is a Presbyterian minister and scholar from New Zealand. He has written over a dozen books. His latest book is a collection of essays that chronicle his intellectual and spiritual journey, Reimagining God: The Faith Journey of A Modern Heretic. He was tried for heresy in the Presbyterian Church of New Zealand in 1967 for an article he wrote about Resurrection. He was accused of disturbing the peace of the church to which he responded: “I would like to suggest that what my accusers ...

May 04, 201540 min

Wayne Winkler, The Melungeons of Appalachia

Wayne Winkler is the General Manager of WETS and the author of Walking Toward the Sunset: The Melungeons of Appalachia. His picture is in the December 2014 issue of Psychology Today as part of a chapter in a book on DNA and genealogy. He speaks with me about the article, "The Past Is Written on Your Face" by Christine Kenneally, and the fascinating Melungeon history.

Jan 01, 201529 min

Walter Davis and Donald Wagner, Zionism and the Quest for Justice in the Holy Land

Donald Wagner (pictured) is the National Program Director of Friends of Sabeel: North America and Walter Davis is co-chair of the education committee of the Israel-Palestine Mission Network of the Presbyterian Church (USA) and professor emeritus at San Francisco Theological Seminary. They have co-edited Zionism and the Quest for Justice in the Holy Land that explores the theological foundations of political Zionism. The study guide that accompanies this book, Zionism Unsettled, is available at t...

Dec 25, 201429 min

Amy-Jill Levine, Short Stories By Jesus

Amy-Jill Levine is University Professor of New Testament and Jewish Studies at Vanderbilt University. She is editor of the Jewish Annotated New Testament and is author of The Misunderstood Jew: The Church and the Scandal of the Jewish Jesus. Her latest book is Short Stories By Jesus: The Enigmatic Parables of A Controversial Rabbi. She talks with me about the historical Jesus and the stories he told.

Dec 18, 201429 min

Stephen Patterson, The Lost Way

Stephen Patterson is George H. Atkinson Professor of Religious and Ethical Studies at Willamette University. He is Fellow of the Jesus Seminar and is the chair of the steering committee on the Jesus Seminar on Christian Origins. His latest book, The Lost Way: How Two Forgotten Gospels Are Rewriting the Story of Christian Origins shows the diversity of early Christianity and paints a portrait of Jesus as a teacher of wisdom as opposed to a martyr dying for the sins of the world.

Dec 02, 201429 min

Joel Baden, The Historical David

Joel Baden is Professor of Hebrew Bible at Yale University and is the author of The Historical David: The Real Life of An Invented Hero. David is portrayed in the Hebrew Scriptures as one who had a heart for God. The Psalms are credited to him. But the real life guy was ambitious and ruthless. Dr. Baden reads between the lines to uncover a David far more human and thus more interesting than the idealized character of the Bible.

Nov 19, 201429 min

Peter Enns, The Bible Tells Me So

Peter Enns (Blog, Twitter, Facebook) is Abram S. Clemens Professor of Biblical Studies at Eastern University in St. Davids, Pennsylvania. In this latest book, The Bible Tells Me So: Why Defending Scripture Has Made Us Unable to Read It, he takes us on a journey of biblical interpretation as well as a faith journey of wrestling with the Bible and most importantly, God. He writes that the "Bible just as it is isn't a problem to be fixed. It's an invitation." With humor and insight, Professor Enns ...

Nov 14, 20141 hr 52 min

Sea Raven, Theology From Exile

What is the character of God, violent or non-violent? Is justice retributive or distributive? Sea Raven (Twitter) explores these questions and more in her three commentaries on the Revised Common Lectionary, called Theology From Exile. Her latest commentary on the year of Mark is just out! Matthew and Luke were published previously. Join us for a discussion of the interaction of progressive theology and the Christian liturgy.

Nov 06, 201429 min

Ruth Taylor Read, Religion, Politics, and Reproduction

Before Tennessee voters are several amendments to the state constitution. Amendment One will allow the state legislature to make restrictions regarding abortion. My guest is Ruth Taylor Read. We talk about politics, reproduction, and religion.

Oct 23, 201429 min

Presbyterian Church USA Moderator, Heath and Peggy Rada

Dr. Heath Rada was elected moderator of the 221st Presbyterian Church (USA) General Assembly in June of 2014. He and his wife, Peggy, are traveling across the country and around the world as ambassadors for the church. They visited with me in the WETS studio to talk about some of the controversial decisions as well as the hope they see regarding the church of the 21st century.

Oct 16, 201429 min

Linda LaScola, Caught in the Pulpit

This week my guest is Linda LaScola who along with Daniel Dennett, co-authored Caught in the Pulpit: Leaving Belief Behind. This book reports on a study of clergy who are no longer believers. Are these clergy unusual or are they the canaries in the coal mine signaling the demise of institutional religion? While that question may not have a clear answer, you will be intrigued by what Daniel Dennett and Linda LaScola discovered. Linda LaScola was one of the organizers of The Clergy Project and she...

Oct 09, 201429 min

Bill McKibben, Oil and Honey

Bill McKibben is the founder of 350.org and the author of numerous books regarding our planet in peril, including Eaarth and The End of Nature. He talks to me about his latest book, Oil and Honey: The Education of An Unlikely Activist. He also speaks candidly about the destructive role and lack of vision of the fossil fuel industry and of the urgency for each of us to become unlikely activists on behalf of life.

Oct 02, 201429 min

Thomas Hill, NYU Peacebuilder in Iraq

Dr. Thomas Hill has taken 30 trips to Iraq as a peace builder. He is a Clinical Assistant Professor at New York University’s Center for Global Affairs. He has been on Religion For Life twice before to speak of his work between NYU and the University of Duhok. He was there this summer and spoke to me about the new threat from the Islamic State and what he hears from his friends in Iraq.

Sep 25, 201429 min

Marcus Borg, Convictions: How I Learned What Matters Most

Marcus J. Borg has written over twenty books. His influence is widely known in the progressive Christian movement. His latest book, Convictions: How I Learned What Matters Most, is in part a memoir, but much more. He articulates a way of living in the world that seeks to embrace what is best and most wise in the Christian tradition. He returns to Religion For Life to speak with me about progressive Christianity, God, and how one might go about discovering and living what matters most.

Sep 18, 201429 min

Sister Simone Campbell, A Nun on the Bus

Religion, social justice, and public life is the tagline for Religion For Life. The nuns on the bus are at the center of that intersection driving for faith, family and fairness. Sister Simone Campbell of Network, a National Catholic Social Justice Lobby, talks to me about her bus tours to speak on behalf of the 100%. Her book, A Nun on the Bus: How All of Us Can Create Hope, Change, and Community is an uplifting and serious call to get off the couch, rediscover our values and reclaim our democr...

Sep 04, 201429 min

Kiran Singh Sirah, International Storytelling Center

Kiran Singh Sirah is the director of the International Storytelling Center in Jonesborough, Tennessee. He says his family is a mini United Nations as it is a huge mix of religions and ethnicities. He believes in the power of story to unite and to make for peace. He speaks with me about the power of stories, his Sikh religious tradition, and the exciting work of the International Storytelling Center.

Aug 28, 201429 min
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android