Darrell Smith Teaching Darrell Smith Page
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- Religion & Spirituality
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Darrell Smith is a teacher, writer, liturgist, and integral theologian. Serving both in the church and as the founding director of Chapter 3—an ecumenical, non-profit committed to serving people and the common good—Darrell has been exploring and, at times, protesting faith, religion and spirituality for over twenty years.
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Common Space: Listen to the Trees | Episode 3
DESCRIPTION: Thank you for listening! Don’t forget to subscribe or follow the podcast so you don’t miss a single episode. We need your questions!
Email commonspace@ahumc.org or visit https://ahumc.org/podcasts to submit your faith-related questions.
Email us at podcasts@ahumc.org or visit ahumc.org to learn more about Alamo Heights UMC.
Recommended Resources:
‘God is Not One’ by Stephen Prothero
‘The Trinity and the Kingdom’ by Jürgen Moltmann
‘Learning to Pray’ by James Martin
‘Another Name For Every Thing’ Podcast with Richard Rohr
‘What We Talk About When We Talk About God’ by Rob Bell
‘Open and Relational Theology’ by Thomas Jay Oord
HOSTS:Chris Estus, Ryan Jacobson, and Darrell Smith -
Common Space: Little Books and Libraries | Episode 2
Thank you for listening! Don’t forget to subscribe or follow the podcast so you don’t miss a single episode. We need your questions!
Email commonspace@ahumc.org or visit https://ahumc.org/podcasts to submit your faith-related questions.
Email us at podcasts@ahumc.org or visit ahumc.org to learn more about Alamo Heights UMC.
Recommended Reading:
What Is the Bible? by Rob Bell
Why the Bible Began by Jacob L. Wright
Speaking Christian by Marcus Borg
Hosts: Chris Estus, Ryan Jacobson, and Darrell Smith -
Common Space: It’s Okay to Ask Questions | Episode 1
Thank you for listening! Don’t forget to subscribe or follow the podcast so you don’t miss a single episode.
We need your questions!
Email commonspace@ahumc.org or visit https://ahumc.org/podcasts to submit your faith-related questions.
Email us at podcasts@ahumc.org or visit ahumc.org to learn more about Alamo Heights UMC.
HOSTS: Chris Estus, Ryan Jacobson, and Darrell Smith -
If the Museum Won’t Come to the Mountain, Then the Mountain Will Come to the Museum
Darrell Smith is a teacher, writer, liturgist, and integral theologian. Serving both in the church and as the founding director of Chapter 3—an ecumenical, non-profit committed to serving people and the common good—Darrell has been exploring and, at times, protesting faith, religion and spirituality for over twenty years.
Darrell’s exploration and protest has led him to homeless shelters, recovery groups, and refugee ghettos as well as universities, churches, and prisons. He has supported relief efforts in Central and South America and worked with such organizations as Renovaré, Apprentice, and Kairos Prison Ministry.
Darrell attended the Perkins School of Theology, Wayland Baptist University, the Robert Webber Institute for Worship Studies, and Texas A&M University and holds degrees in English, Speech Communication, Christian Ministry, and Worship Studies. His most recent published work is 2019’s Faith Lies: Seven Incomplete Ideas That Hijack Faith and How to See Beyond Them.
For the last 20 years, Darrell has served at Alamo Heights United Methodist Church in San Antonio, Texas. Darrell is married to Stacy, and they have three children—Nathanael, Samuel, and Abigail. His personal interests include basketball, fitness, kickboxing, music, and good conversation. -
What Is Truth?
Darrell Smith is a teacher, writer, liturgist, and integral theologian. Serving both in the church and as the founding director of Chapter 3—an ecumenical, non-profit committed to serving people and the common good—Darrell has been exploring and, at times, protesting faith, religion and spirituality for over twenty years.
Darrell’s exploration and protest has led him to homeless shelters, recovery groups, and refugee ghettos as well as universities, churches, and prisons. He has supported relief efforts in Central and South America and worked with such organizations as Renovaré, Apprentice, and Kairos Prison Ministry.
Darrell attended the Perkins School of Theology, Wayland Baptist University, the Robert Webber Institute for Worship Studies, and Texas A&M University and holds degrees in English, Speech Communication, Christian Ministry, and Worship Studies. His most recent published work is 2019’s Faith Lies: Seven Incomplete Ideas That Hijack Faith and How to See Beyond Them.
For the last 20 years, Darrell has served at Alamo Heights United Methodist Church in San Antonio, Texas. Darrell is married to Stacy, and they have three children—Nathanael, Samuel, and Abigail. His personal interests include basketball, fitness, kickboxing, music, and good conversation. -
Translating the Transparent Transcendence of Transformation That Transpires in Transfiguration
Darrell Smith is a teacher, writer, liturgist, and integral theologian. Serving both in the church and as the founding director of Chapter 3—an ecumenical, non-profit committed to serving people and the common good—Darrell has been exploring and, at times, protesting faith, religion and spirituality for over twenty years.
Darrell’s exploration and protest has led him to homeless shelters, recovery groups, and refugee ghettos as well as universities, churches, and prisons. He has supported relief efforts in Central and South America and worked with such organizations as Renovaré, Apprentice, and Kairos Prison Ministry.
Darrell attended the Perkins School of Theology, Wayland Baptist University, the Robert Webber Institute for Worship Studies, and Texas A&M University and holds degrees in English, Speech Communication, Christian Ministry, and Worship Studies. His most recent published work is 2019’s Faith Lies: Seven Incomplete Ideas That Hijack Faith and How to See Beyond Them.
For the last 20 years, Darrell has served at Alamo Heights United Methodist Church in San Antonio, Texas. Darrell is married to Stacy, and they have three children—Nathanael, Samuel, and Abigail. His personal interests include basketball, fitness, kickboxing, music, and good conversation.