For the Life of the World / Yale Center for Faith & Culture

Miroslav Volf, Matthew Croasmun, Ryan McAnnally-Linz, Drew Collins, Evan Rosa
For the Life of the World / Yale Center for Faith & Culture

Seeking and living a life worthy of our humanity. Theological insight, cultural analysis, and practical guidance for personal and communal flourishing. Brought to you by the Yale Center for Faith & Culture.

  1. The Fear to Hope: Ukrainian Pastor on Democracy, Fear, and Abundant Life in the Midst of War / Fyodor Raychynets

    1시간 전

    The Fear to Hope: Ukrainian Pastor on Democracy, Fear, and Abundant Life in the Midst of War / Fyodor Raychynets

    "Do not be afraid of your fears, but cope with them—learn how to deal with them—because unless you do, you cannot live your life abundantly and fully." (Fyodor Raychynets) Evoking courage, resilience, and faith in the face of overwhelming uncertainty, Ukrainian pastor and theologian Fyodor Raychynets returns to *For the Life of the World* three years after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. In conversation with Evan Rosa, Fyodor shares his reflections on fear, freedom, and the emotional and spiritual challenges of living fully in a time of war. He discusses his response to recent global political developments, the struggle of holding onto hope, and the importance of confronting fear rather than suppressing it. Drawing from the Gospel of Mark’s iteration of Jesus walking on water, his own personal grief and therapy, and the lived experience of war, Fyodor sees fear not as something to be avoided or gotten rid of, but as something to understand and face with courage. "We are in a situation where we are scared to hope." "Do not be afraid of your fears, but cope with them—learn how to deal with them—because unless you do, you cannot live your life abundantly and fully." "If I want to say to someone, ‘I love you,’ I say it. If I want to forgive, I forgive. If I want to do something meaningful, I do it now—because tomorrow is never guaranteed." "The enemy wants us to live in fear, to be paralyzed by it. But to live fully is to resist." "When Jesus scared his disciples on the water, he was bringing their fears to the surface—so that they could face them and find true freedom." **Show Notes** Image: “Walking on Water”, by Ivan Aivazovsky, Russia, 1888 Episode Summary - Ukrainian pastor and theologian Fyodor Raychynets reflects on faith, fear, and hope after three years of war. - The role of fear in spiritual and personal transformation. - A biblical perspective on confronting fear, drawn from the Gospel of Mark. - Political and emotional reactions to recent global events impacting Ukraine. - Living fully in the present as an act of resistance against fear and oppression. Faith, Fear, and Freedom - Fyodor Raychynets returns to discuss Ukraine’s ongoing struggle and his evolving faith. - "Fear to hope"—the challenge of holding onto hope when the world is falling apart. - Why fear should be faced rather than suppressed. - The spiritual wisdom of encountering fear: “When Jesus scared his disciples, it was for their good.” - The difference between being reckless, cowardly, or courageous—all of which share the common state of fear. The Ukrainian Perspective on Global Politics - How Ukraine perceives the shifting stance of U.S. foreign policy. - The impact of Zelenskyy’s visit to the Oval Office and international reactions. - The challenge of fighting for democracy when global powers redefine the terms of war. - The fear that democratic values are no longer upheld by those who once championed them. Biblical and Psychological Perspectives on Fear - Mark’s Gospel and the fear of encountering God in unexpected ways. - Fyodor quotes Carl Jung: "Where our fears lie, that is where change is most needed." - Facing fear as a practice of faith and emotional resilience. - The importance of naming fears, localizing them, and even “inviting them in for tea.” - How unprocessed fear can lead to paralysis or aggression. Living in the Present: The Antidote to Fear - Why Fyodor refuses to postpone life until after the war. - "We don’t know what tomorrow brings. So I live today, fully." - A powerful response to fear: doing good, loving openly, and forgiving freely. - The lesson of war: never get used to abnormal things. - Holding onto humanity in the face of devastation. Linked Media References - Mark 6L: 45-52 [Jesus Walks on Water](https://bible.oremus.org/?ql=608897584) - Episode 110 of For the Life of the World [A Voice from Kyiv](https://faith.yale.edu/media/a-voice-from-kyiv-fyodor-raychynets) - Episode 138 of For the Life of the World / [Ukrainian Pastor Speaks Out: Resist Evil, Be Present, and Remember How Little You Control](https://faith.yale.edu/media/ukrainian-pastor-speaks-out) - [Ukraine War Updates - BBC News](https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-60506682) About Fyodor Raychynets Fyodor Raychynets is a theologian and pastor in Kyiv, Ukraine. He is Head of the Department of Theology at Ukrainian Evangelical Theological Seminary, where he teaches courses in Leadership and Biblical Studies, particularly the Gospel of Matthew. He studied with Miroslav Volf at Evangelical Theological Seminary in Osijek, Croatia. Follow him on Facebook [**here**](https://www.facebook.com/fyodor.raychynets). Production Notes - This podcast featured Fyodor Raychinets - Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa - Hosted by Evan Rosa - Production Assistance by Macie Bridge, Alexa Rollow, Zoë Halaban, Kacie Barrett & Emily Brookfield - A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about - Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    54분
  2. What the Devil: Christian Imagination, Morality, and Two-Step Devil / Jamie Quatro

    3월 5일

    What the Devil: Christian Imagination, Morality, and Two-Step Devil / Jamie Quatro

    Mystics and prophets have reported receiving visions from the Divine for centuries—”Thus saith the Lord…”—Hildegard of Bingen, Teresa of Avila, Ignatius of Loyola, Catherine of Siena, or Julian of Norwich. The list goes on. But what would you think if you met a seer of visions in the present day? Maybe you have. What about a prophet whose visions came like a movie screen unfurled before him, the images grotesque and vivid, all in the unsuspecting backwoods setting of Lookout Mountain, deep in the south of Tennessee. Would you believe it? Would you believe him? The beauty of fiction allows the reader to join the author in asking: What if? That’s exactly what Jamie Quatro has allowed us to do in her newest work of literary fiction, *Two-Step Devil.* What if an earnest and wildly misunderstood Christian is left alone on Lookout Mountain? What if the receiver of visions makes art that reaches a girl who’s stuck in the darkest grip of a fraught world? What if the Devil really did sit in the corner of the kitchen, wearing a cowboy hat, and what if he got to tell his own side of the Biblical story? On today’s episode novelist Jamie Quatro joins Macie Bridge to share about her relationship to the theological exploration within her latest novel, *Two-Step Devil;* her experience of being a Christian and a writer, but not a “Christian Writer”; and how the trinity of main characters in the novel speak to and open up her own deepest concerns about the state of our country and the world we inhabit. Jamie Quatro is the [*New York Times Notable*](https://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/24/books/review/i-want-to-show-you-more-by-jamie-quatro.html) author of [*I Want to Show You More*](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/03/11/broken-vows), and [*Fire Sermon*](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/06/books/review/fire-sermon-jamie-quatro.html). [*Two-Step Devil](https://groveatlantic.com/book/two-step-devil/)* is her latest work and is the winner of the 2024 Willie Morris Award for Southern Writing, and it’s also been named a *New York Times* Editor's Choice, among other accolades. Jamie teaches in the Sewanee School of Letters MFA program. SPOILER ALERT! This episode contains substantial spoilers to the novel’s plot, so if you’d like to read it for yourself, first grab a copy from your local bookstore, then two-step on back over here to listen to this conversation! **About Jamie Quatro** Jamie Quatro is the [*New York Times Notable*](https://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/24/books/review/i-want-to-show-you-more-by-jamie-quatro.html) author of [*I Want to Show You More*](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/03/11/broken-vows), and [*Fire Sermon*](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/06/books/review/fire-sermon-jamie-quatro.html). [*Two-Step Devil](https://groveatlantic.com/book/two-step-devil/)* is her latest work and is the winner of the 2024 Willie Morris Award for Southern Writing, and it’s also been named a *New York Times* Editor's Choice, among other accolades. Jamie teaches in the Sewanee School of Letters MFA program. **Show Notes** - Get your copy of [*Two-Step Devil* by Jamie Quatro](https://groveatlantic.com/book/two-step-devil/) - [Click here to view the art that inspired Jamie Quatro’s *Two-Step Devil*](https://www.notion.so/FAITH-YALE-EDU-Management-be71c0f3a4ae415b8f5afa32f8cb657c?pvs=21) **Production Notes** - This podcast featured Jamie Quatro with Macie Bridge - Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa - Hosted by Evan Rosa - Production Assistance by Macie Bridge, Alexa Rollow, Zoë Halaban, Kacie Barrett & Emily Brookfield - A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about - Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    59분
  3. The Scandal of Giving and Forgiving / Miroslav Volf

    2월 26일

    The Scandal of Giving and Forgiving / Miroslav Volf

    It’s easy to forget how utterly scandalous the concepts of grace and forgiveness are. Grace is an absolutely unmerited, undeserved benevolence. Forgiveness is an intentional miscarriage of retributive justice, ignoring of the wrong by a wrongdoer. In Miroslav Volf’s understanding, forgiveness “decouples the deed from the doer.” Today’s episode features some highlights from Miroslav’s personal reflections about each chapter of his book *Free of Charge: Giving and Forgiving in a Culture Stripped of Grace*, including his thoughts about one of the most painful moments in his family’s history, the death of his 5-year-old brother Daniel when Miroslav was just a small boy. *Free of Charge* was published in 2006, and we just released a 10-video curriculum series through [faith.yale.edu/free-of-charge](http://faith.yale.edu/free-of-charge). It also includes a 48-page discussion guide with new material to help facilitate not just deeper reflection about giving and forgiving, but a viable, livable path toward these core Christian practices. This series is free for Yale Center for Faith & Culture email subscribers. So head over to [faith.yale.edu/free-of-charge](http://faith.yale.edu/free-of-charge) to sign up today. **Production Notes** - This podcast featured Miroslav Volf - Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa - Hosted by Evan Rosa - Production Assistance by Macie Bridge, Alexa Rollow, Zoë Halaban, Kacie Barrett, and Emily Brookfield - A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about - Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    32분
  4. Kendrick Lamar's Political Theology / Femi Olutade

    2월 21일

    Kendrick Lamar's Political Theology / Femi Olutade

    Super Bowl LIX was amazing, but not because of the football, or the commercials. It was the 13-minute half-time tour de force of political theology and protest art. Acting like a parable to offer more to those who already get it, and to take away from those who don’t get it at all, the performance was so much more than a petty way to settle a rap beef. But what exactly was going on? Today’s episode is an introduction to the political theology of Kendrick Lamar. Evan Rosa welcomes Femi Olutade, arguably the living expert on the theology of Kendrick Lamar. A lifelong fan of hip hop and student of theology, he’s deeply familiar not just with music Kendrick made, but the influences that made Kendrick, as well as Christian scripture and moral theology. Femi has written incredibly nuanced theological musicological reflections about Kendrick Lamar’s 2017 album DAMN., which won the Pulitzer Prize for Music. Femi joined Dissect Podcast host Cole Cushna as lead writer for a 20-episode analysis of DAMN., offering incredible insight into the theological, moral, and political richness of Kendrick Lamar. About Femi Olutade Femi Olutade is the lead writer for Season 5 of Dissect, an analysis of Kendrick Lamar’s Pulitzer Prize-winning album DAMN. He’s arguably the living expert on the theology of Kendrick Lamar. A lifelong fan of hip hop and student of theology, he’s deeply familiar not just with music Kendrick made, but the influences that made Kendrick, as well as Christian scripture and moral theology. Femi has written incredibly nuanced theological musicological reflections about Kendrick Lamar’s 2017 album DAMN., which won the Pulitzer Prize for Music. Femi joined host Cole Cushna as lead writer for a 20-episode analysis of DAMN., offering incredible insight into the theological, moral, and political richness of Kendrick Lamar. Show Notes Femi Olutade’s Theology of Kendrick Lamar Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl LIX Half-Time Show (Video) Kendrick Lamar’s Half-time Show Lyrics (Full) Season 5 of Dissect: Kendrick Lamar's DAMN. Kendrick Lamar’s Political Theology as a Diss Track to America Super Bowl LIX was amazing, but not because of the football, or the commercials. It was the 13 minute half-time tour de force that Kendrick Lamar offered the world. Uncle Sam introduces the show, the quote “Great American Game.” A playstation controller appears. Is the game football? Video game? Or some other game? Kendrick appears crouched on a car—dozens of red, white, and blue dancers emerge, evoking both the American flag which they eventually form, as well as the gang wars between bloods and crips—or as Kendrick says in Hood Politics, “Demo-crips” and “Re-blood-icans” And what ensues is an intricately choreographed set of layered meanings, allusions, hidden references and Easter eggs—not all of which have been noticed, not to mention explained or understood. You can find links to the performance and the lyrics in the show notes. Femi Olutade on the Theology of Kendrick Lamar Today’s episode is an introduction to the political theology of Kendrick Lamar. And joining me is Femi Olutade, arguably the living expert on the theology of Kendrick Lamar. As a lifelong fan of hip hop, he’s deeply familiar not just with music Kendrick made, but the influences that made Kendrick. Femi has written incredibly nuanced theological musicological reflections about Kendrick Lamar’s 2017 album DAMN., which won the Pulitzer Prize for Music. And I became familiar with Femi’s work in 2021, while listening to a podcast called Dissect—which analyzes albums line by line, note by note. They cover mostly hip hop, but the season on Radiohead’s In Rainbows is also incredible. Femi joined host Cole Cushna to co-write a 20-episode analysis of DAMN., offering incredible insight into the theological, moral, and political richness of Kendrick Lamar, which repays so many replays. Forward, AND backward. Yes, you can play the album backwards and forwards like a mirror and they tell two different stories, one about wickedness and pride, and the other about weakness, love, and humility. If you want to jump to my conversation with Femi about Kendrick Lamar’s Political Theology, please do, just jump ahead a few minutes. Not Just a Diss Track to Drake, but a Diss Track to America But I wanted to offer a few preliminaries of my own to help with this most recent context of the Super Bowl halftime performance. Because almost immediately, it was interpreted as nothing more than one of the pettiest, egotistical, and overkill ways to settle a rap beef between Kendrick and another hip hop artist, Drake. Some fans celebrated this. Others found it at best irrelevant and confusing, and at worst an offensive waste of an opportunity to make a larger statement before an audience of 133 million viewers. In my humble opinion, both get it wrong. Kendrick Lamar simply does not work this way. If it was the biggest diss track of all time, it wasn’t aimed merely at Drake, but America. And if it was offensive, it was because of its moral clarity and force, striking a prophetic chord operating similar to a parable. Jesus and Kendrick on Prophecy and Parables Parables, according to Jesus, are meant to give more to those who already have, and take away from those who already have nothing (Matthew 13:13). Because, as the prophet Isaiah says, “seeing they do not perceive, and hearing they do not listen, nor do they understand” (Isaiah 6:9). At this point, it’s possible that you’re entirely confused, and if so, I’d invite you to hang with me and lean in. Watch it again, listen more closely. Because rap, according to Jay Z, is a lean-in genre. You can’t understand it without close examination, without contextual, bottom-up, historical appreciation, or without a willingness to be educated about what it’s like to be Black in America. But I guarantee you that in Kendrick Lamar’s outstanding choreographed prophetic theatre, there’s much more going on—”there’s levels to it”—to quote Lamar. You Picked the Right Time, but the Wrong Guy And if you want it clearly spelled out for you—a cleaner, smoother, tighter, more palatable, less subtle social commentary that can be abstracted from history, circumstance, and the genre of rap itself so that it can be rationally evaluated—well, you’re occupying the exact position Kendrick is critiquing, which he prophetically predicts in the very performance itself. As he warns us: The revolution 'bout to be televised You picked the right time, but the wrong guy Still, what was that?? First, it’s public performance art, so just let it land. Watch it again. Notice something new. Submit yourself to it. Let it change you. The Black American Experience in Hip Hop and Kendrick Lamar And if you really want to understand it, you need to be open to the possibility that some social commentary can only be understood in light of certain lived experiences. In this case, at least the Black American experience. And then, rather than demanding that Kendrick explain it to you in your own vernacular, listen to what he’s already said. Lean in an listen to his whole body of work, learn his story, expertly rendered in jaw-dropping lyrical performance. Drive with him through his childhood streets of Compton on Good Kid M.A.A.D. City. Journey with him from caterpillar to butterfly on To Pimp a Butterfly, look in the mirror presented before you in the Pulitzer-prize winning DAMN., hear out his messy psyche laid bare in Mr. Morale and the Big Steppers, take a ride with him in GNX… In the days following Kendrick’s super bowl performance, J Kameron Carter, Professor of African American Studies, Comparative Literature, and Religion at the University of California at Irvine, called for a more in-depth study of the 13-minute performance, noting that: “[B]lack performance carries within it an interrogation of the question of country as the problem and question of US political theology and the legacy of Christian empire.” This episode isn’t meant to close any books or offer a full explanation of Kendrick’s performance, let alone his music, but just to lean in, and to quote Kendrick, “salute truth and the prophecy.” Production Notes This podcast featured Femi Olutade Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa Hosted by Evan Rosa Production Assistance by Macie Bridge, Alexa Rollow, Zoë Halaban, Kacie Barrett & Emily Brookfield A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    1시간 5분
  5. The Psychology of Disaster: The Impact of Calamity on Mental, Emotional, and Spiritual Health / Jamie Aten and Pam King

    2월 12일

    The Psychology of Disaster: The Impact of Calamity on Mental, Emotional, and Spiritual Health / Jamie Aten and Pam King

    Disaster preparedness is sort of an oxymoron. Disaster is the kind of indiscriminate calamity that only ever finds us ill-equipped to manage. And if you are truly prepared, you’ve probably averted disaster. There’s a big difference between the impact of disaster on physical, material life—and its outsized impact on mental, emotional, and spiritual life. Personal disasters like a terminal illness, natural disasters like the recent fires that razed southern Californian communities, the impact of endless, senseless wars … these all cause a pain and physical damage that can be mitigated or rebuilt. But the worst of these cases threaten to destroy the very meaning of our lives. No wonder disaster takes such a psychological and spiritual toll. There’s an urgent need to find or even make meaning from it. To somehow explain it, justify why God would allow it, and tell a grand story that makes sense from the senseless. These are difficult questions, and my guests today both have personal experience with disaster. Dr. Pam King is the Peter L. Benson Professor of Applied Developmental Science at Fuller School of Psychology, and the Executive Director the Thrive Center. She’s an ordained Presbyterian minister, and she hosts a podcast on psychology and spirituality called With & For. Dr. Jamie Aten is a disaster psychologist and disaster ministry expert, helping others navigate mass, humanitarian, and personal disasters with scientific and spiritual insights. He is the Founder and Executive Director of the Humanitarian Disaster Institute Wheaton College, where he holds the Blanchard Chair of Humanitarian & Disaster Leadership. He is author of A Walking Disaster: What Surviving Katrina and Cancer Taught Me about Faith and Resilience. In this conversation, Pam King and Jamie Aten join Evan Rosa to discuss: - Each of their personal encounters with disasters—both fire and cancer - The psychological study of disaster - The personal impact of disaster on mental, emotional, and spiritual health - The difference between resilience and fortitude - And the theological and practical considerations for how to live through disastrous events. About Pam King Pam King is Executive Director the Thrive Center and is Peter L. Benson Professor of Applied Developmental Science at Fuller School of Psychology & Marriage and Family Therapy. She hosts the [With & For podcast](https://thethrivecenter.org/podcast/), and you can follow her [**@drpamking**](https://twitter.com/drpamking). About Jamie Aten Jamie D. Aten is a disaster psychologist and disaster ministry expert. He helps others navigate mass, humanitarian, and personal disasters with scientific and spiritual insights. He is the Founder and Executive Director of the Humanitarian Disaster Institute and Disaster Ministry Conference and holds the Blanchard Chair of Humanitarian & Disaster Leadership at Wheaton College. And he’s the author of [*A Walking Disaster: What Surviving Katrina and Cancer Taught Me about Faith and Resilience](https://www.jamieaten.com/walkingdisaster).* Show Notes - [Humanitarian Disaster Institute](https://www.wheaton.edu/academics/academic-centers/humanitarian-disaster-institute/) - [Spiritual First Aid](https://www.spiritualfirstaid.org/) - Jamie Aten’s [*A Walking Disaster: What Surviving Katrina and Cancer Taught Me about Faith and Resilience*](https://www.jamieaten.com/walkingdisaster) - [The Thrive Center](https://thethrivecenter.org/) at Fuller Seminary - Pam King’s personal experience fighting fires in the Eaton Fire in January 2025 - 5,000 homes destroyed - 55 schools and houses of worship are gone - “Neighborhoods are annihilated …” - Jamie Aten offers an overview of the impact of disasters on humanity, and the human response - 1985: 400% increase in natural disasters globally - Japan 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami - Haiti 2010 earthquake - Physical, emotional, spiritual - Infrastructural impacts that set up disasters - USAID support - Jamie Aten’s experience during Hurricane Katrina - Personal disasters - Jamie Aten’s experience with colon cancer - “Evacuation Impossible” - Impact of disaster on personal sense of thriving - Thriving vs surviving - Understanding trauma - Collective traumatic events - The historically Black multigenerational community in Altadena - What constitutes thriving? - Thriving as adaptive growth: with and for others - Self-care is not just me-care, but we-care. - Trauma brain and the cognitive impacts of disaster - The psychological study of disaster: grapefruit vs beachball - [Humanitarian Disaster Institute](https://www.wheaton.edu/academics/academic-centers/humanitarian-disaster-institute/) - [Spiritual First Aid](https://www.spiritualfirstaid.org/) - A rupture of meaning making - Place and spirituality and the impact of disaster on sense of place - Bethlehem pastor Munther Isaac’s “Christ in the Rubble” - Finding meaning in both the restructuring or rebuilding, but also in the rubble itself - Hope embodied in service - Everything is a cognitive load - Miroslav Volf and Ryan McAnnally-Linz’s *The Home of God: A Brief Story of Everything* - Psychological and trauma-informed care - ”One of the things that we found was that when people received positive spiritual support, that they reported lower levels of trauma, lower levels of depression and lower levels of anxiety.” - Bless CPR - BLESS: Biological, Livelihood, Emotional, Social, Spiritual - “What’s the most pressing need?” - Spiritual health - Spirituality and our ultimate sources of meaning - Transcendence - Lament as a practice for dealing with disaster - Prayer or sacred readings - Meaning making and suffering:  Elizabeth Hall (Biola University) and Crystal Park (University of Connecticut) - Baton Rouge Flood 2016 - Navigating suffering - Religion in disaster mental health - Faith as a predictor for resilience - Meaning making outside of religion - Mr. Rogers: “Look for the helpers” - Best disaster preparedness: “Get to know your neighbor.” - “Proximity alone is not what it takes to become a neighbor.” - Neighbors helping neighbors - Managing burnout in helpers - “Spiritual self-aid” instead of “self-care” - Self-care is like surfing - “God holding the fragmented pieces of me” - “God’s love is with me.” - Spiritual fortitude in personal and natural disasters Production Notes - This podcast featured Jamie Aten and Pam King - Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa - Hosted by Evan Rosa - Production Assistance by Macie Bridge, Alexa Rollow, Zoë Halaban, Kacie Barrett & Emily Brookfield - A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about - Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    58분
  6. Our One and Only Earth: Environmental Ethics, Climate Change, Biodiversity, and Consumption / Ryan Darr & Ryan McAnnally-Linz

    2월 7일

    Our One and Only Earth: Environmental Ethics, Climate Change, Biodiversity, and Consumption / Ryan Darr & Ryan McAnnally-Linz

    How should we treat our one and only home, Earth? What obligations do we have to other living or non-living things? How should we think about climate change and its denial? How does biodiversity and species extinction impact human beings? And how should we think about environmental justice, the rights of animals, and the ways we consume the natural world? In this episode, Ryan McAnnally-Linz welcomes Ryan Darr (Assistant Professor, Yale Divinity School) to reflect on some of the most pressing issues in environmental ethics and consider them through philosophical, ecological, and theological frameworks. Together they discuss: - What and who matters in environmental ethics: Only humans? Only sentient animals? Every life form? The inorganic natural world? - The significance and difference between global and individual scale of climate issues - The ethics of climate change denial - Environmental justice and moral obligations to the environment—the question of what we owe to animals and the rest of the natural world - The importance of biodiversity and the impact of species loss and extinction - The ethics of eating animals - The problems with human consumption of the natural world - And the impact of cultivating a wider moral imagination of our ecological future About Ryan Darr Ryan Darr Ryan Darr is Assistant Professor of Religion, Ethics, and Environment at Yale Divinity School. His research interests include environmental ethics, multispecies justice, structural injustice, ethical theory, and the history of religious and philosophical ethics. He is currently writing a book that defends an account of environmental and multispecies justice as a framework for thinking ethically about the crisis of biodiversity loss and mass extinction. He is also developing an ongoing research project exploring the relationship between individual agency and responsibility and structural justice and injustice with a particular focus on environmental and climate issues. His first book, The Best Effect: Theology and the Origins of Consequentialism, was published by the University of Chicago Press in 2023. The book offers a new, robustly theological story of the origin of consequentialism, one of the most influential views in modern moral theory. It uses the new historical account to intervene in contemporary ethical debates about consequentialism and about how ethicists conceive of goods, ends, agency, and causality. Prior to joining the YDS faculty, Ryan held postdoctoral fellowships at the Princeton University Center for Human Values (2019-22) and the Yale Institute of Sacred Music (2022-24). Show Notes - Get your copy of Ryan Darr’s The Best Effect: Theology and the Origins of Consequentialism (https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/B/bo208041496.html) - Complex ethical questions about climate change - Enmeshed in environmental systems - A crash course in environmental ethics - Which entities should we be thinking about ethically? - Are human beings the most important morally and ethically speaking? - What about animals, plants, or other kinds of life? - What about other species of animals - Anthropocentrism: Only humans matter. - Sentientism: Only sentient animals matter - Biocentrism: Every life form matters - Can we apply justice and rights to animals? - The polar bear on melting ice was the poster child for climate change; but this was a mistake because the effects on human beings is massive. - “All of us are affected.” - “We’re all vulnerable to climate change. …. kidding themselves and need to think more about this.” - Global south - Climate negotiations: Who needs to lower emissions and how? And how do we adapt? - Massive overwhelm at the scope of environmental problems: “Only massive changes can make a difference.” But “I have to change my life.” - How should we navigate the scale issue? - Don’t let large scale or small scale issues or changes eclipse the other. - Political action is crucial - “We need people willing to respond in the ways they can, where they are.” - Climate change denial - “There’s a lot of money flowing here.” Fossil fuel interests and others muddy the waters and create conflicts - “If it’s the case that millions of lives are at stake … I don’t see how some doubt - Reasons why people might deny climate change - “It’d be nice if climate change wasn’t real, but …” - Environmental justice and injustice - Toxicities released into the natural environment - Conservation and biodiversity loss - Approximately 8 million species on earth - It’s standard to lose a handful per million per year - Generally, you’re supposed to get more species on earth, short of a mass extinction event - But extinction rate is something like 100x to 1000x faster - Defaunation—reduction of fauna on earth - Measuring the biomass of various species (Humans make up 30% of the world’s biomass.) - Changes linked to colonialism and global capitalism - Why would God have created such a diverse species - Thomas Aquinas on why God created a world full of biodiversity: to reflect God’s extensive perfection - “On this view, the world is show less - What are the ethics of - Example: Wolves were intentionally eradicated in America, because “who wants a wolf in their neighborhood.” - Justice-oriented “Rights” and what we owe to each other, versus non-justice - Do we have obligations to animals? - Example: Kicking a Cat - “The Incredulous Stare” - Jainism and “ahiṃsā” (non-injury, no-harm, or non-violence toward all life forms, down to microbes) - “I’m inclined to think that I have obligations to almost all animals.” - At least “animals who are sentient”—desires, frustration of desires, pain, etc. - Is it permissible to eat meat? - Factory-farmed meat (effectively tormented) - Animal life has become commodity—valuable solely because of its use and with no regard for their well-being. - Consumers, Producers, and Wendell Berry: How should social roles relate to each other? - “Any question about justice have to begin from concrete social positions.” - Maintaining action and creativity - Practical recommendation for action to align our lives with our values - “I read fiction and short stories that tell stories of human beings in futures drastically affected by climate change as a way to open up my imagination to what’s possible.” - Dystopian narratives: leading to a sense of futility and hopelessness. - “I don’t think we know where anything is headed.” - “Humans have lived through upheaval so many times, and have found ways. … ‘People kept on baking bread as the Roman Empire fell.’” - Yale Divinity School class: “Eco-Futures”—imagining lives lived well in painful situations - If not hope, a sense of determination to do what can be done with the time that we have. - Kim Stanley Robinson's *The Ministry for the Future*: a technocratic novel about politics and policy solutions - Short fiction on *Grist*—[Imagine 2200: Write the Future](https://grist.org/climate-fiction/imagine-2200-contest-submissions/) - Margaret Atwood, *Everything Change* Production Notes - This podcast featured Ryan Darr and Ryan McAnnally-Linz - Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa - Hosted by Evan Rosa - Production Assistance by Macie Bridge, Alexa Rollow, Zoë Halaban, Kacie Barrett, and Emily Brookfield - A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about - Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    47분
  7. Divine Hiddenness / Deborah Casewell

    1월 23일

    Divine Hiddenness / Deborah Casewell

    Are you there God? It’s me… Why is God hidden? Why is God silent? And why does that matter in light of faith, hope, and love? In this episode, philosopher Deborah Casewell joins Evan Rosa for a discussion of divine hiddenness. Together, they reflect on: Simone Weil’s distinction between abdication and abandonment Martin Luther’s theology of the cross The differences between the epistemic, moral, and existential problems with the hiddenness of God The terror, horror, and fear that emerges from the human experience of divine hiddenness The realities of seeing through a glass darkly and pursuing faith, hope, and love And finally, what it means to live bravely in the tension or contracdition between the hiddenness of God and the faith in God’s presence. About Deborah Casewell Deborah Casewell is Associate Professor in Philosophy at the University of Chester. She works in the areas of philosophy and culture, philosophy of religion, and theology & religion, in particular on existentialism and religion, questions of ethics and self-formation in relation to asceticism and the German cultural ideal of Bildung. She has given a number of public talks and published on these topics in a range of settings. Her first book. *Eberhard Jüngel and Existence, Being Before the Cross*, was published in 2021: it explores the theologian Eberhard Jüngel’s philosophical inheritance and how his thought provides a useful paradigm for the relation between philosophy and theology. Her second book, *Monotheism and Existentialism*, was published in 2022 by Cambridge University Press as a Cambridge Element. She is Co-Director of the AHRC-funded Simone Weil Research Network UK, and previously held a Humboldt Research Fellowship at the University of Bonn. Prior to her appointment in Bonn, she was Lecturer in Philosophy at Liverpool Hope University and a Teaching Fellow at King’s College, London. She received her PhD from the University of Edinburgh, my MSt from the University of Oxford, and spent time researching and studying at the University of Tübingen and the Institut Catholique de Paris. Show Notes - Mother Teresa on God’s hiddenness - *Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light*, edited by the Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk - What does it mean for God to be hidden? - Perceived absence - Simone Weil on God’s abdication of the world for the sake of the world - The presence of God. This should be understood in two ways. As Creator, God is present in everything which exists as soon as it exists. The presence for which God needs the co-operation of the creature is the presence of God, not as Creator but as Spirit. The first presence is the presence of creation. The second is the presence of decreation. (He who created us without our help will not save us without our consent. Saint Augustine.) God could create only by hiding himself. Otherwise there would be nothing but himself. — Simone Weil, in *Gravity and Grace,* “Decreation” - Abdication vs. Abandonment - A longing for God, who is hidden, unknown, unperceived, and mysterious - Martin Luther’s theology of the cross - “Hidden in the suffering and ignominy of the cross.” - “God is powerful but chooses not to be in relation to us.” - Human experiences of divine hiddenness - Three ways to talk about hiddenness of God - 1) epistemic hiddenness:  ”if we were to grasp God with our minds, then we'd be denying the power of God.” - Making ourselves an idol - The Cloud of Unknowing and “apophatic” or “negative” theology (only saying what God is not) - 2) Moral hiddenness of God: “this is what people find very troubling. … a moral terror to it.” - 3) Existential hiddenness of God: “where the hiddenness of God makes you feel terrified” - Revelation and the story of human encounter or engagement with God - “Luther is the authority on the hiddenness of God in the existential and moral sense.” - The power of God revealed in terror. - “God never becomes comfortable or accommodated into our measure.” - ”We never make God into an object of our reason and comfort.” - Terror, horror, and fear: reverence of God - Marilyn McCord Adams, *Christ & Horrors—*meaning-destroying events - “That which is hidden terrifies us.” - Martin Luther: “God is terrifying, because God does save some of us, and God does damn some of us.” - The “alien work of God” - “Is Luther right in saying that God has to remain hidden, and the way in which God has to remain hidden  has to be terrifying? So there has to be this kind  of background of the terrifying God in all of our relations with the God of love that is the God of grace that, that saves us.” - Preserving the mystery of God - We’re unable to commodify or trivialize God. - Francis Schaeffer’s *He Is There and He Is Not Silent* - “Luther construes it as a good thing.” - Suffering, anxiety, despair, meaninglessness - Humanity’s encounter with nothingness—the void - “Interest in the demonic, or terror, as a preliminary step into a  full religious or a proper religious experience of God.” - Longing for God in the Bible - Noah, Moses, David - “The other side of divine hiddenness is human loneliness.” - Loneliness and despair as “what your life is going to be like without God.” (Barton Newell) - Tension in the experience of faith - 1 Corinthians 13:12:  ”Now we see through a glass darkly, but then face to face. Now I know in part, but then I shall know even as I also am known.” - Faith, hope, and love abides in the face of epistemic, moral, and existential hiddenness of God. - The meaning of struggling with the hiddenness of God for the human pursuit of faith, hope, and love - “Let tensions be.” - ”But you've always got to keep the reality of faith, hope, and love, keep hold of the fact that that is a reality, and that can and will be a reality. It's, it's, not to try and justify it, not to try and harmonize it, but just to hold it, I suppose. And hold it even in its contradiction.” Production Notes - This podcast featured Deborah Casewell - Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa - Hosted by Evan Rosa - Production Assistance by Emily Brookfield, Alexa Rollow, & Zoë Halaban - A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about - Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    36분
  8. We the (Chosen) People: Christian Nationalism Now / Eliyahu Stern & Philip Gorski

    1월 8일

    We the (Chosen) People: Christian Nationalism Now / Eliyahu Stern & Philip Gorski

    Is America a nation Chosen by God? A New Jerusalem and Shining City on a Hill? What is the shape of Christian Nationalism today? Now 4 years past Jan 6, 2021 and anticipating the next term of presidential office, Yale professors Eliyahu Stern and Philip Gorski join Evan Rosa for a conversation about religion, politics, and the shape of Christian nationalism now. Together they discuss what religion really means in sociological and historical terms; the difference between religions of power and religions of law or morality; the American syncretism of pagan Christianity (perhaps captured in the Qnon Shaman with the horns and facepaint); the connection between nationalism and the desire to be a Chosen People; the supersessionism at the root of seeing the Christian conquest of America as a New Jerusalem; and how ordinary citizens come to adopt the tenets of Christian Nationalism. Eliyahu Stern is Professor of Modern Jewish Intellectual and Cultural History in the Departments of Religious Studies and History and his current project is entitled *No Where Left to Go: Jews and the Global Right from 1977 to October 7.* Philip Gorski is Frederick and Laura Goff Professor of Sociology at Yale University and is author of *The Flag and the Cross: White Christian Nationalism and the Threat to American Democracy* (with Samuel Perry) as well as *American Covenant: A History of Civil Religion from the Puritans to the Present.* Special thanks to our production assistant Zoë Halaban for pitching this conversation. About Eliyahu Stern Eliyahu Stern is Professor of Modern Jewish Intellectual and Cultural History in the Departments of Religious Studies and History. Previously, he was Junior William Golding Fellow in the Humanities at Brasenose College and the Oriental Institute, University of Oxford. He is the author of the award-winning, *The Genius: Elijah of Vilna and the Making of Modern Judaism* (Yale University Press in 2012). His second monograph *Jewish Materialism: The Intellectual Revolution of the 1870s* (Yale University Press, 2018) details the ideological background to Jews’ involvement in Zionism, Capitalism, and Communism. His courses include The Global Right: From the French Revolution to the American Insurrection, Secularism: From the Enlightenment to the Present, Modern Jewish Intellectual History, The Holocaust in Culture and Politics. He has served as a term member on the Council on Foreign Relations and a consultant to the Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw, Poland. Currently, he is a member of the Academic Advisory Board of the Center of Jewish History. His latest project is entitled No Where Left to Go: Jews and the Global Right from 1977 to October 7. About Philip Gorski Philip S. Gorski is a comparative-historical sociologist with strong interests in theory and methods and in modern and early modern Europe. He is Frederick and Laura Goff Professor of Sociology at Yale University. His empirical work focuses on topics such as state-formation, nationalism, revolution, economic development and secularization with particular attention to the interaction of religion and politics. Other current interests include the philosophy and methodology of the social sciences and the nature and role of rationality in social life. He’s author with Samuel L. Perry of *The Flag and the Cross: White Christian Nationalism and the Threat to American Democracy*, as well as *American Covenant: A History of Civil Religion from the Puritans to the Present.* Show Notes - Trump: [“I’m a nationalist.”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sazitj4x6YI&lc=UgwwZ2v5OF1a0ek8evx4AaABAg) - Increased ownership and proud identification as Christian Nationalism - Eliyahu Stern, *No Where Left to Go: Jews and the Global Right from 1977 to October 7* - The human practice of religion - “ The way one person will invoke Christianity will be something very different than say the way a church or the way another person or another religious figure is going to invoke that term.” - Humility and a leap - “ The History of the Sacred from Babylon to Beyoncé” - Religion vs “The Sacred” - ”Western nationalism itself is, the offspring of a Christian supersessionist appropriation of Judaism.” - “A new chosen people” - The Deep Story Philip Gorski tells in *The Flag and the Cross* - Pagan understandings of nationalism - “The Deep Story runs something like this. America was founded as a Christian nation. The founders were Orthodox Christians. The founding documents were based on quote, biblical principles or perhaps even divinely inspired. The United States has a special role to play. In history as an exceptional or chosen nation in order to carry out that mission, it's been blessed with unique power and prosperity. But the project, the mission, and also the prosperity and the power are all increasingly endangered by the presence of non-whites, non-native born people, non-Christians on American soil.” - Covenantal logic - The tendency to see oneself as “Chosen” - England, Netherlands claiming the mantle of Chosenness for political purposes - “Jews are sitting around the world and they're trying to figure out how to *unchosen* themselves.” - Supersessionism and the interpretation of the Old Testament - The Promised Land Story: American Conquest - The Exemplary Story: A Shining City on a Hill - How do we gather and absorb political narratives like Christian Nationalism? - How is Christian Nationalism passed on? - Larger network of international Christian Nationalisms - The Arms Race or Game of Thrones that Nationalisms assume - Russian Christian Nationalism and recovering a “Christian Civilization” - Christian Nationalism is a political strategy - “ I don't think anybody … believes for a second that Donald Trump, or Vladimir Putin, or for that matter, Viktor Orban are serious Christians by any reasonable definition of that term.” - “White-supremicism in more acceptable garb.” - Losers of free market economics - Free Market Capitalism and erosion of social bonds and relationships - Strong borders, blood and soil - Fear of immigrants - Trust - What is the deeply felt need of someone who comes to identify as a Christian Nationalist? - Human needs threatened by social instability and inequality - Lip service for the sake of power - What “Christian” does next to “Nationalism” - [Trump embraces Nationalism for himself](https://www.politico.com/story/2018/10/22/trump-nationalist-926745) - Globalism vs Nationalism - Second Iraq War as a mistake - “Proponents are not religious in the conventional sense” - “ When we're talking about Christian nationalism, we have to first and foremost recognize that we're talking about a different understanding of Christianity than what Americans are accustomed to seeing as the dominant understanding of what that term signifies.” - The crucial distinction between Religions of Power and Religions of Morality - Powerful protector - “Modern-day Cyrus”—The comparison between Trump and the biblical figure of Cyrus - What is religion? What kind of religion is operative in Christian Nationalism? - ”It is not just centered in evangelicalism anymore.” - First Things and Catholic Integralism - New Apostolic Reformation - Dominion Theology - “This is about occupying institutions, seizing power, and using the state to impose a particular vision and a particular hierarchy.” - Jan 6, 2021 - Rising paganism in America - “How could Christians embrace Trump?” - Merging of Shamanism and Christianity on Jan 6 - Trancendental versus immanent versions of Christianity - Neo-paganism and magical understandings of the world - Concerns and hope as Trump takes office in January 2025 - Further toward the politics of grievance and victimization - “Trump as a backstop” - Israel’s reliance - Can Trump negotiate international peace? - “The cynical side of me says  my greatest hope lies in Trump's failures.” - Hope for more careful, nuanced conversations about Christian Nationalism Production Notes - This podcast featured Eliyahu Stern and Philip Gorski - Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa - Hosted by Evan Rosa - Production Assistance by Zoë Halaban, Macie Bridge, Alexa Rollow, and Emily Brookfield - A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about - Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    58분
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Seeking and living a life worthy of our humanity. Theological insight, cultural analysis, and practical guidance for personal and communal flourishing. Brought to you by the Yale Center for Faith & Culture.

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