Wondering Aloud: A Christian Podcast for Curious Kids

Katie Allred

Wondering Aloud is made for the school commute — designed for kids ages 6 to 11 and the grown-ups riding shotgun (or driving). Each weekly episode is short enough to fit the morning drive, with a few minutes left over for the walk from the car to the school gate. That's on purpose. The best conversations happen there. We believe kids are theologians. Real ones. Not empty vessels waiting to be filled with the right answers, but small, serious people already wondering about God, fairness, suffering, and love. So we don't lecture. We wonder out loud — together. Rooted in the Episcopal and broader mainline Christian tradition — Lutheran, Methodist, Presbyterian, UCC — Wondering Aloud draws on the "I wonder…" pedagogy of Godly Play, the prophetic imagination of liberation theology, and the lived wisdom of a great cloud of witnesses. Saints, activists, ordinary people whose faith showed up in the way they loved their neighbors. We follow the rhythm of the church year, from the quiet waiting of Advent to the wild joy of Easter to the long green growing season of Ordinary Time. What you'll hear: 🌍 News episodes explain what's happening in the world at a kid's level — climate, refugees, justice, kindness — and connect it to a faith principle. We don't pretend hard things aren't hard. But we also don't leave kids feeling helpless. Every news episode ends with one small, real thing a kid can do. 📖 Lesson episodes explore a story, a saint, a scripture, or a question kids actually ask — about death, fear, doubt, friendship, prayer. We treat scripture as living and complex, worth wrestling with, not as a rulebook to memorize. 🕊️ Liturgical episodes mark the seasons of the church year — Advent, Christmas, Epiphany, Lent, Easter, Pentecost — and help families build their own quiet traditions of meaning. What you won't hear: No hellfire. No shame. No "God's plan" platitudes when life hurts. No partisan politics, no us-vs-them, no easy answers dressed up as wisdom. No talking down to kids. Who this is for: Families who love Jesus and ask a lot of questions. Parents who grew up in church and are figuring out how to pass on something true without passing on the parts that hurt. Parents who didn't grow up in church but want their kids to have a thoughtful spiritual vocabulary. Interfaith families. Doubters. The curious and the uncertain. We honor mystery. We're suspicious of certainty. We think Jesus meant what he said about the poor, the outsider, and the kid at the edge of the room. Each episode includes: A gentle threshold — a sound, a breath, a moment to arriveOne core idea (just one — kids don't need three takeaways before 8am)A story, a question, or a small piece of newsA "wondering moment" — a few open questions for the ride or the walkA signature blessing to send you on your way Press play on the way to school. Talk about it after. Or don't. The questions will keep working either way. New episodes weekly. Subscribe so you don't miss the Sunday-night-into-Monday-morning rhythm of wonder, story, and grace. Wondering Aloud — because the best faith starts with a question.

About

Wondering Aloud is made for the school commute — designed for kids ages 6 to 11 and the grown-ups riding shotgun (or driving). Each weekly episode is short enough to fit the morning drive, with a few minutes left over for the walk from the car to the school gate. That's on purpose. The best conversations happen there. We believe kids are theologians. Real ones. Not empty vessels waiting to be filled with the right answers, but small, serious people already wondering about God, fairness, suffering, and love. So we don't lecture. We wonder out loud — together. Rooted in the Episcopal and broader mainline Christian tradition — Lutheran, Methodist, Presbyterian, UCC — Wondering Aloud draws on the "I wonder…" pedagogy of Godly Play, the prophetic imagination of liberation theology, and the lived wisdom of a great cloud of witnesses. Saints, activists, ordinary people whose faith showed up in the way they loved their neighbors. We follow the rhythm of the church year, from the quiet waiting of Advent to the wild joy of Easter to the long green growing season of Ordinary Time. What you'll hear: 🌍 News episodes explain what's happening in the world at a kid's level — climate, refugees, justice, kindness — and connect it to a faith principle. We don't pretend hard things aren't hard. But we also don't leave kids feeling helpless. Every news episode ends with one small, real thing a kid can do. 📖 Lesson episodes explore a story, a saint, a scripture, or a question kids actually ask — about death, fear, doubt, friendship, prayer. We treat scripture as living and complex, worth wrestling with, not as a rulebook to memorize. 🕊️ Liturgical episodes mark the seasons of the church year — Advent, Christmas, Epiphany, Lent, Easter, Pentecost — and help families build their own quiet traditions of meaning. What you won't hear: No hellfire. No shame. No "God's plan" platitudes when life hurts. No partisan politics, no us-vs-them, no easy answers dressed up as wisdom. No talking down to kids. Who this is for: Families who love Jesus and ask a lot of questions. Parents who grew up in church and are figuring out how to pass on something true without passing on the parts that hurt. Parents who didn't grow up in church but want their kids to have a thoughtful spiritual vocabulary. Interfaith families. Doubters. The curious and the uncertain. We honor mystery. We're suspicious of certainty. We think Jesus meant what he said about the poor, the outsider, and the kid at the edge of the room. Each episode includes: A gentle threshold — a sound, a breath, a moment to arriveOne core idea (just one — kids don't need three takeaways before 8am)A story, a question, or a small piece of newsA "wondering moment" — a few open questions for the ride or the walkA signature blessing to send you on your way Press play on the way to school. Talk about it after. Or don't. The questions will keep working either way. New episodes weekly. Subscribe so you don't miss the Sunday-night-into-Monday-morning rhythm of wonder, story, and grace. Wondering Aloud — because the best faith starts with a question.