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. How to Read Simone Weil, Part 3: The Existentialist / Deborah Casewell

    6 小時前

    How to Read Simone Weil, Part 3: The Existentialist / Deborah Casewell

    “All the natural movements of the soul are controlled by laws analogous to those of physical gravity. Grace is the only exception.” … “It is necessary to uproot oneself. To cut down the tree and make of it a cross, and then to carry it every day.” … “I have to imitate God who infinitely loves finite things in that they are finite things.” … “To know that what is most precious is not rooted in existence—that is beautiful. Why? It projects the soul beyond time.” (Simone Weil, *Gravity & Grace*) “That's how the figure of Christ comes into this idea of the madness of love. It's that kind of mad, self emptying act completely. And it's the  one thing, she says, it's the only thing that means that you  are able to love properly. Because to love properly, and therefore to be just properly, you have to love like Christ does. Which is love to the extent that you, that you empty yourself and, you know, die on a cross.” (Deborah Casewell, from this episode) This is the third installment of a short series on How to Read Simone Weil—as the Mystic, the Activist, and the Existentialist. This week, Evan Rosa invites Deborah Casewell, Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Chester, author of *Monotheism & Existentialism,* and Co-Director of the Simone Weil Research Network in the U.K.—to explore how to read Simone Weil the Existentialist. Together they discuss how her life of extreme self-sacrifice importantly comes before her philosophy; how to understand her central, but often confusing concept of decreation; her approach to beauty as the essential human response for finding meaning in a world of force and necessity; the madness of Jesus Christ as the only way to engage in struggle for justice and how she connects that to the Greek tragedy of Antigone, which is the continuation of the Oedipus story; and, the connection between love, justice, and living a life of madness. **About Simone Weil** Simone Weil (1909–1943) was a French philosopher, mystic, and political activist. She’s the author of *Gravity and Grace*, *The Need for Roots*, and *Waiting for God*—among many other essays, letters, and notes. **About Deborah Casewell** Deborah Casewell is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Chester, author of *Monotheism & Existentialism*, and is Co-Director of the Simone Weil Research Network in the U.K. **Show Notes** - Simone Weil’s *Gravity & Grace* (1947) ([Available Online](https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/simone-weil-gravity-and-grace)) - Deborah Casewell’s *Monotheism & Existentialism* - Simone de Beauvoir’s anecdote in *Memories of a Beautiful Daughter*: “Shouldn’t we also get people’s minds, not just their bodies? Weil: “You’ve never been hungry have you?” - Leon Trotsky yells violently at Weil - The odd idolizing of Weil without paying attention to her writing - ”You get a kind of, as you say, a kind of odd idolization of her, or a sense in which  you can't then interact so critically   or systematically with her philosophy, because her figure stands in the way so much, and the kind of the respect that people have.” - Anti-Semitism despite Jewishness - Simone Weil’s relationship to food: an unhealthy role model - “She’d reject anything that wasn’t perfect.” - Extreme germophobe - Expression of solidarity with the unfortunate - Her life comes before her philosophy. Being, you might say, comes before thinking. - Weil’s life of extreme self-sacrifice as “mad”—alienating, insane, strange to the outside world. - “ I think an essential part of, to an essential part of understanding her is to understand that   world is kind of structured and  set up in such a way that it runs without God, without the supernatural, God's kind of abdicated through the act of creation. And as a result, the universe operates through necessity and through force. So left to its own devices, the universe, I think, tends towards crushing people.” - Abandonment vs abdication - People possess power and ability and action—a tension between activity and passivity - Weil’s Marxism and theory of labor and work - Activity becomes sustained passivity - Consent, power, and the social dynamics of force and necessity - I think she sees the best human existence is to be in a state of obedience instead. And so what you have to do is relinquish power over people. - The complexity of human relationships - “She was a very individual person … a singular, individual life.” - *The Need for Roots* - “And this is what I do like about Simone Weil—is that she's always happy to let contradictions exist. And so when she describes human nature and the needs of the soul, they're contradictory. They all contradict each other. It's freedom and obedience.” - Creating dualisms - She is a dualist - Simone Weil on Beauty and Decreation - ”Decreation is essentially your way to exist in the world ruled by force and necessity without succumbing  to force and necessity, because in a way there's less  of you to succumb to force and necessity.” - Platonic idea of Metaxu - Weil on the human experience of beauty—” people need beautiful things and they need experiences of beauty in order to exist in the world, fundamentally… if this world is ruled by force and necessity.” - The unity of the transcendentals of beauty and truth and goodness—anchored in God - Weil’s Platonism - Weil as religious existentialist, as opposed to French atheistic existentialist - “ For her, God is the ultimate reality, but also God is love. And so the goal of human existence, I think, is to return to God and consent to God. That's the goal of human life.” - “What are you paying attention to?” - The madness of Christ - The struggle for justice - “Only a few people have this desire for justice, this madness to love.” - Existentialism and Humanism: “Sartre says that  man is nothing but what he makes of himself.” - Making oneself an example - “The real supernatural law, which is mad and unreasonable, and it doesn't try to make accommodations and get on with the world and deal with tricky situations. It's just mad.” - Simone Weil on Antigone and the continuation of the Oedipus story - Summary of the Greek tragedy, *Antigone* - “And so Antigone says, the justice that I owe is not to the city. It's not so that the city can, you know, continue its life and move on. The justice that I owe is to the supernatural law, to these more important primordial laws that actually govern the  life and death situations and the situation of your soul as well. And that's why she does what she does. She's obedient to the unwritten law rather than the written law.” - “The love of God and the justice of God is always going to be mad in the eyes of the world.” - ”The spirit of justice is nothing other than the supreme and perfect flower of the madness of love.” - The mad, self-emptying love of Christ - “That's how the figure of Christ comes into this idea of the madness of love. It's that kind of mad, self emptying act completely. And it's the  one thing, she says, it's the only thing that means that you  are able to love properly. Because to love properly, and therefore to be just properly, you have to love like Christ does. Which is love to the extent that you, that you empty yourself and, you know, die on a cross.” - Does Weil suggest an unhealthy desire to suffer? - “ It hurls one into risks one cannot run. If one has given one's heart to anything at all that belongs to this world. Um, and the outcome to which the madness of love led Christ is, after all, no recommendation for it.” - “But if the order of the universe is a wise order, there must sometimes be moments when, from the point of view of earthly reason, only the madness of love is reasonable. Such moments can only be those when, as today, mankind has become mad from want of love. Is it certain today that the madness of love may not be capable of providing the unhappy masses, hungry in body and soul, with a food far easier for them to digest than our inspirations to a less lofty source? So then, being what we are, is it certain that we are at our post in the camp of justice?” - “ From a loftier view, only the madness of love is reasonable.” - “Only the madness of love can be the kind of love that actually helps people in the world. Fundamentally, that people, even though they know it's mad, and they find it mad, and they would sometimes rather not see it, they need that kind of love, and they need people who love in that kind of way. Even if it's not the majority, people still  need that. And so in some way, the way in which  she is, and the way in which she sees Christ being, is indispensable. Even though the path that you have to go down has nothing to recommend, as she says, in the eyes of the reasonable world, nothing to recommend it. It's the only just thing to do. It's the only just and loving thing to do in the end.” **Production Notes** - This podcast featured Deborah Casewell - Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa - Hosted by Evan Rosa - Production Assistance by Macie Bridge, Alexa Rollow, Emily Brookfield, and 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

    1 小時 6 分鐘
  2. How to Read Simone Weil, Part 2: The Activist / Cynthia Wallace

    12月18日

    How to Read Simone Weil, Part 2: The Activist / Cynthia Wallace

    “What are you going through?” This was one of the central animating questions in Simone Weil’s thought that pushed her beyond philosophy into action. Weil believed that genuinely asking this question of the other, particularly the afflicted other, then truly listening and prayerfully attending, would move us toward an enactment of justice and love. Simone Weil believed that any suffering that can be ameliorated, should be. In this episode, Part 2 of our short series on How to Read Simone Weil, Cynthia Wallace (Associate Professor of English at St. Thomas More College at the University of Saskatchewan), and author of The Literary Afterlives of Simone Weil: Feminism, Justice, and the Challenge of Religion and Evan Rosa discuss the risky self-giving way of Simone Weil; her incredible literary influence, particularly on late 20th century feminist writers; the possibility of redemptive suffering; the morally complicated territory of self-sacrificial care and the way that has traditionally fallen to women and minorities; what it means to make room and practicing hospitality for the afflicted other; hunger; the beauty of vulnerability; and that grounding question for Simone Weil political ethics, “What are you going through?” We’re in our second episode of a short series exploring How to Read Simone Weil. She’s the author of *Gravity and Grace*, *The Need for Roots*, and *Waiting for God*—among many other essays, letters, and notes—and a deep and lasting influence that continues today. In this series, we’re exploring Simone Weil the Mystic, Simone Weil the Activist, Simone Weil the Existentialist. And what we’ll see is that so much of her spiritual, political, and philosophical life, are deeply unified in her way of being and living and dying. And on that note, before we go any further, I need to issue a correction from our previous episode in which I erroneously stated that Weil died in France. And I want to thank subscriber and listener Michael for writing and correcting me. Actually she died in England in 1943, having ambivalently fled France in 1942 when it was already under Nazi occupation—first to New York, then to London to work with the Free French movement and be closer to her home. And as I went back to fix my research, I began to realize just how important her place of death was. She died in a nursing home outside London. In Kent, Ashford to be precise. She had become very sick, and in August 1943 was moved to the Grosvenor Sanatorium. The manner and location of her death matter because it’s arguable that her death by heart failure was not a self-starving suicide (as the coroner reported), but rather, her inability to eat was a complication rising from tuberculosis, combined with her practice of eating no more than the meager rations her fellow Frenchmen lived on under Nazi occupation. Her biographer Richard Rees wrote: "As for her death, whatever explanation one may give of it will amount in the end to saying that she died of love. In going back over the details of her death, I found a 1977 New York Times article by Elizabeth Hardwick, and I’ll quote at length, as it offers a very fitting entry into this week’s episode on her life of action, solidarity, and identification with and attention to the affliction of others. “Simone Weil, one of the most brilliant, and original minds of 20th century France, died at the age of 34 in a nursing home near London. The coroner issued a verdict of suicide, due to voluntary starvation—an action undertaken at least in part out of wish not to eat more than the rations given her compatriots in France under the German occupation. The year of her death was 1943. “The willed deprivation of her last period was not new; indeed refusal seems to have been a part of her character since infancy. What sets her apart from our current ascetics with their practice of transcendental meditation, diet, vegetarianism, ashram simplicities, yoga is that with them the deprivations and rigors‐are undergone for the pay‐off—for tranquility, for thinness, for the hope of a long life—or frequently, it seems, to fill the hole of emptiness so painful to the narcissist. With Simone Well it was entirely the opposite. “It was her wish, or her need, to undergo misery, affliction and deprivation because such had been the lot of mankind throughout history. Her wish was not to feel better, but to honor the sufferings of the lowest. Thus around 1935, when she was 25 years old, this woman of transcendent intellectual gifts and the widest learning, already very frail and suffering from severe headaches, was determined to undertake a year of work in a factory. The factories, the assembly lines, were then the modem equivalent of “slavery,” and she survived in her own words as “forever a slave.” What she went through at the factory “marked me in so lasting a manner that still today when any human being, whoever he may be and in whatever circumstances, speaks to me without brutality, I cannot help having the impression teat there must be a mistake....” [Her contemporary] “Simone de Beauvoir tells of meeting her when they were preparing for examinations to enter a prestigious private school. ‘She intrigued me because of her great reputation for intelligence and her bizarre outfits. ... A great famine had broken out in China, and I was told that when she heard the news she had wept. . . . I envied her for having a heart that could beat round the world.’ “In London her health vanished, even though the great amount of writing she did right up to the time she went to the hospital must have come from those energies of the dying we do not understand—the energies of certain chosen dying ones, that is. Her behavior in the hospital, her refusal and by now her Inability to eat, vexed and bewildered the staff. Her sense of personal accountability to the world's suffering had reached farther than sense could follow.” Last week, we heard from Eric Springsted, one of the co-founders of the American Weil Society and author of *Simone Weil for the Twenty-First Century.* Next week, we’ll explore Simone Weil the Existentialist—with philosopher Deborah Casewell, author of *Monotheism & Existentialism* and Co-Director of the Simone Weil Research Network in the UK. But this week we’re looking at Simone Weil the Activist—her perspectives on redemptive suffering, her longing for justice, and her lasting influence on feminist writers. With me is Cynthia Wallace, associate professor of English at St. Thomas More College at the University of Saskatchewan, and author of *The Literary Afterlives of Simone Weil: Feminism, Justice, and the Challenge of Religion.* This is unique because it’s learning how to read Simone Weil from some of her closest readers and those she influenced, including poets and writers such as Adrienne Rich, Denise Levertov, and Annie Dillard. About Cynthia Wallace Cynthia Wallace is Associate Professor of English at St. Thomas More College at the University of Saskatchewan, and author of *The Literary Afterlives of Simone Weil: Feminism, Justice, and the Challenge of Religion,* as well as **[Of Women Borne: A Literary Ethics of Suffering](https://cup.columbia.edu/book/of-women-borne/9780231173698). About Simone Weil Simone Weil (1909–1943) was a French philosopher, mystic, and political activist. She’s the author of *Gravity and Grace*, *The Need for Roots*, and *Waiting for God*—among many other essays, letters, and notes. Show Notes - Cynthia Wallace (Associate Professor of English at St. Thomas More College at the University of Saskatchewan), and author of *The Literary Afterlives of Simone Weil: Feminism, Justice, and the Challenge of Religion* - Elizabeth Hardwick, [“A woman of transcendent intellect who assumed the sufferings of humanity”](https://www.nytimes.com/1977/01/23/archives/a-woman-of-transcendent-intellect-who-assumed-the-sufferings-of.html) (New York Times, Jan 23, 1977) - [Of Women Borne: A Literary Ethics of Suffering](https://cup.columbia.edu/book/of-women-borne/9780231173698) - The hard work of productive tension - Simone Weil on homework: “Reflections on the Right Use of School Studies with a View to the Love of God” - Open, patient, receptive waiting in school studies — same skill as prayer - “What are you going through?” Then you listen. - Union organizer - *Waiting for God* and *Gravity & Grace* - Vulnerability and tenderness - Justice and Feminism, and “making room for the other” - Denise Levertov’s  ”Mass for the Day of St. Thomas Didymus” - “Levertov wrote herself into Catholic conversion” - “after pages and pages of struggle, she finally says: “So be it. Come rag of pungent quiverings,  dim star, let's try  if something human still can shield you, spark of remote light.” - “And so she  argues that God isn't  particularly active in the world that we have, except for when we open ourselves to these chances of divine encounter.” - “ Her imagination of God is different from how I think  a lot of contemporary Western   people think about an all powerful, all knowing God. Vae thinks about God as having done exactly what she's asking us to do, which is to make room for the other to exist in a way that requires us to give up power.” - Exploiting self-emptying, particularly of women - “Exposing the degree to which women have been disproportionately expected to sacrifice themselves.” - Disproportionate self-sacrifice of women and in particular women of color - Adrienne Rich, *Of Woman Borne*: ethics that care for the other - The distinction between suffering and affliction - Adrienne Rich’s poem, “Hunger” - Embodiment - “ You have to follow both sides to the kind of limit of their capacity for thought, and then see what you find in that untidy both-and-ness.” - Annie Dillard’s expansive attentiveness - *Pilgr

    1 小時 11 分鐘
  3. How to Read Simone Weil, Part 1: The Mystic / Eric O. Springsted

    12月12日

    How to Read Simone Weil, Part 1: The Mystic / Eric O. Springsted

    This episode is the first of a short series exploring How to Read Simone Weil. The author of *Gravity and Grace*, *The Need for Roots*, and *Waiting for God*—among many other essays, letters, and notes, Weil has been an inspiration to philosophers, poets, priests, and politicians for the last century—almost all of it after her untimely death. She understood, perhaps more than many other armchair philosophers from the same period, the risk of philosophy—the demands it made on a human life. In this series, we’ll feature three guests who look at this magnificent and mysterious thinker in interesting and refreshing, and theologically and morally challenging ways. We’ll look at Simone Weil the Mystic, Simone Weil the Activist, Simone Weil the Existentialist. First we’ll be hearing from Eric Springsted, a co-founder of the American Weil Society and its long-time president—who wrote *Simone Weil: Late Philosophical Writings* and *Simone Weil for the Twenty-First Century.* In this conversation, Eric O. Springsted and Evan Rosa discuss Simone Weil’s personal biography, intellectual life, and the nature of her spiritual and religious and moral ideas; pursuing philosophy as a way of life; her encounter with Christ, affliction, and mystery; her views on attention and prayer; her concept of the void, and the call to self-emptying; and much more. **About Simone Weil** Simone Weil (1909–1943) was a French philosopher, mystic, and political activist. She’s the author of *Gravity and Grace*, *The Need for Roots*, and *Waiting for God*—among many other essays, letters, and notes. **About Eric O. Springsted** Eric O. Springsted is the co-founder of the American Weil Society and served as its president for thirty-three years. After a career as a teacher, scholar, and pastor, he is retired and lives in Santa Fe, NM. He is the author and editor of a dozen previous books, including *Simone Weil: Late Philosophical Writings* and *Simone Weil for the Twenty-First Century.* **Show Notes** - Eric O. Springsted’s [*Simone Weil for the Twenty-First Century*](https://undpress.nd.edu/9780268200220/simone-weil-for-the-twenty-first-century/) - How to get hooked on Simone Weil - “All poets are exiles.” - Andre Weil - Emile Chartier - Taking ideas seriously enough to impact your life - Weil’s critique of Marxism: “Reflections on the Cause of Liberty and Social Oppression”:  ”an attempt to try and figure out how there can be freedom and dignity in human labor and action” - “Unfortunately she found affliction.” - Ludwig Wittgenstein: “Philosophy is a matter of working on yourself.” - Philosophy “isn’t simply objective. It’s a matter of personal morality as well.” - ”Not only is the unexamined life not worth living, but virtue and intellect go hand in hand. Yeah. You don't have one without the other.” - An experiment in how work and labor is done - The demeaning and inherently degrading nature of factory work - Christianity as “the religion of slaves.” - Christianity can’t take away suffering; but it can take away the meaninglessness. - George Herbert: “Love bade me welcome / But my soul drew back guilty of dust and sin” - Weil’s vision/visit of Christ during Holy Week in Solemn, France: “It was like the smile on a beloved face.” - The role of mystery - Weil’s definition of mystery:  ”What she felt mystery was, and she gets a definition of it, it's when two necessary lines of thought cross and are irreconcilable, yet if you suppress one of them, somehow light is lost.” - Her point is that whatever good comes out of this personal contact with Christ, does not erase the evil of the suffering. - What is “involvement in contradiction” - “She thought contradiction was an inescapable mark of truth.” - Contradictions that shed light on life. - Why mysticism is important for Weil: “The universe cannot be put into a box with techniques or tricks or our own scientific methods or philosophical methods. … Mystery instills humility and it takes the question of the knowing ego out of the picture. … And it challenges modern society to resist the idea that faith could be reduced to a dogmatic system.” - “Faith is not a matter of the intellect.” - “Intellect is not the highest faculty. Love is.” - “The Right Use of School Studies” - “Muscular effort of attention” - She wanted to convert her Dominican priest friend into the universality of grace—that Plato was a pre-Chrisitan.” (e.g., her essay, “ Intimations of Christianity Among the Ancient Greeks”) - “Grace is universal.” - How school studies contribute to the love of God - Prayer as attention - Weil on Attention: “Attention consists of suspending our thought, leaving it detached, empty, and ready to be penetrated by the object. It means holding in our minds within the reach of this thought, but on the lower level and not in contact with it. The diverse knowledge we have acquired. Which we are forced to make use of. Above all our thought should be empty waiting, not seeking anything but ready to receive in its naked truth. The object that is to penetrate it.” - Not “detached,” but “available and ready for use” - Making space for the afflicted other by “attending” to them - Love that isn’t compensatory - “The void as a space where love can go” - What is prayer for Simone Weil? - Prayer as listening all night long - “Voiding oneself of secondary desires and letting oneself be spoken to.” - Is Simone Weil “ a self-abnegating, melancholy revolutionary” (Leon Trotsky) - Humility in Simone Weil - “The Terrible Prayer” - Was Simone Weil anorexic? - Refusing comfort on the grounds of solidarity - Self-emptying and grace - Accepting the entire creation as God’s will - Simone Weil on patience and waiting - “With time, attention blooms into waiting.” - “She’s resistant to the Church, but drawing from Christ’s self-emptying.” - God’s withdrawal from the world (which is not deism) - “A sacramental view of the world” - “ The very creation of the world is by this withdrawal and simultaneous crucifixion of the sun in time and space.” - (Obsessive) pursuit of purity in morals and thought - Iris Murdoch’s *The Nice and the Good* - “Nothing productive needs to come from this effort.” - “ She put her finger on what's really the heart of Christian spirituality. … We live by the Word … by our being open to listening to the Word and having that transformed into God’s word.” **Production Notes** - This podcast featured Eric O. Springsted - Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa - Hosted by Evan Rosa - Production Assistance by Emily Brookfield, Alexa Rollow, Zoë Halaban, & Kacie Barrett - 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

    59 分鐘
  4. Open the Gates: Immigration & the Book of Revelation / Yii-Jan Lin

    12月4日

    Open the Gates: Immigration & the Book of Revelation / Yii-Jan Lin

    Why do we have countries? Why do we mark this land and these people as distinct from that land and those people? What are countries for? Yii-Jan Lin (Associate Professor of New Testament, Yale Divinity School) joins Matt Croasmun to discuss her new book, Immigration and Apocalypse, which traces the development of distinctly American ideas about the meaning of a country, its borders, and crossing those borders through immigration—exploring how the biblical book of Revelation has influenced our modern geopolitical map. Together they discuss the eschatological vision of Christopher Columbus; the Puritanical founding of New Haven, Connecticut to be the New Jerusalem; Ronald Reagan’s America as “City on a Hill”; the politics of COVID; the experience of Asian American immigrants in the 19th century; and how scripture shapes the American imagination in surprising and sometimes troubling ways. About Yii-Jan Lin Yii-Jan Lin is Associate Professor of New Testament at Yale Divinity School. She specializes in immigration, textual criticism, the Revelation of John, critical race theory, and gender and sexuality. Her book *Immigration and Apocalypse: How the Book of Revelation Shaped American Immigration* (Yale University Press 2024), focuses on the use of Revelation in political discourse surrounding American immigration—in conceptions of America as the New Jerusalem and of unwanted immigrants as the filthy, idolatrous horde outside the city walls. Her book The Erotic Life of Manuscripts (Oxford 2016), examines how metaphors of race, family, evolution, and genetic inheritance have shaped the goals and assumptions of New Testament textual criticism from the eighteenth century to the present. Professor Lin has been published in journals such as the Journal of Biblical Literature, Early Christianity, and TC: A Journal of Biblical Textual Criticism. She is co-chair of the Minoritized Criticism and Biblical Interpretation section of the Society of Biblical Literature, on the steering committee for the Ethnic Chinese Biblical Colloquium, and on the steering committees for the New Testament Textual Criticism and the Bible in America sections of SBL. She also serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Biblical Literature. Professor Lin is a member of the Society of Asian Biblical Studies, the European Association of Biblical Studies, and an elected member of Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas. Show Notes Get your copy of *Immigration and Apocalypse: How the Book of Revelation Shaped American Immigration, by* Yii-Jan Lin Illustration: “John of Patmos watches the descent of New Jerusalem from God in a 14th-century tapestry”—modified and collaged by Evan Rosa Christopher Columbus’s eschatological vision The Book of Revelation and the heavenly city The meaning of “apocalypse” New Haven as New Jerusalem John Davenport (April 9, 1597 – May 30, 1670) was an English Puritan clergyman and co-founder of the American colony of New Haven. Ronald Reagan and America as a “shining city on a hill” America as God’s city Revelation 21, The New Jerusalem “A door that’s always open” 1983 as the “Year of the Bible” Exclusion, open gates, and America’s immigration policy Hospitality Outside the gates “For some reason, the seer doesn't see just an open  landscape. He sees these definite walls and definite  gates, even though they're open.” The book of deeds and the book of life Bureaucracy, and entry and exclusion into heaven The Good Place What was immigration like in the Greco-Roman world? Citizenship lists, registrations, and ways of keeping people out “If Heaven Has a Gate, a Wall, and Extreme Vetting, Why Can't America?“ Steve King's tweet in  2019, “Heaven Has a Wall, a Gate, and Strict Immigration Policy, Hell Has Open Borders.” Disease and exclusion (COVID-19) Disease came from colonizers “Disease as a divine act to clear the land” Chinese exclusion from America Mexican exclusion from America ICE was created to enforce laws explicitly excluding Chinese immigrants Film: An American Tail “The British Invasion” China, Enemy of the West, and the Dragon of Revelation 12 Buddha and the dragon vs the whore of Babylon riding a beast “Do American political ideas about immigration start to frame American theological imaginations about the world to come?” God’s kingdom and “Empire” Fears that feed from theological to political registers “What should a Christian posture towards contemporary questions of immigration be?” Xenophobia and fear of the stranger Finality and satisfaction The theological error of identifying America with the New Jerusalem Production Notes This podcast featured Yii-Jan Lin Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa Hosted by Evan Rosa Production Assistance by Alexa Rollow, Emily Brookfield, Zoë Halaban, and Kacie Barrett 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

    43 分鐘
  5. Letters to a Future Saint / Brad East & Drew Collins

    11月21日

    Letters to a Future Saint / Brad East & Drew Collins

    “For those of us who are drawn into church  history and church tradition and to reading theology,  there is very little as transformative as realizing that history is populated by women and men like us who tried to follow Christ in their own time and place and culture and circumstances,  some of whom succeeded. … Looking at the saints, they make me want to be a better Christian. They make me want to be a saint.” (Brad East, from the episode) In his recent book, Letters to a Future Saint: Foundations of Faith for the Spiritually Hungry, theologian Brad East addresses future generations of the Church, offering a transmission of Christian faith from society today to society tomorrow. Written as a fellow pilgrim and looking into the lives of saints in the past, he’s writing to that post-literate, post-Christian society, where the highest recommendation of faith is in the transformed life. Today, Drew Collins welcomes Brad East to the show, and together they discuss: the importance of being passed and passing on Christian faith—its transmission; the post-literacy of digital natives (Gen Z and Gen Alpha) and the role of literacy in the acquisition and development of faith; the significance of community in a vibrant Christian faith; the question of apologetics and its effectiveness as a mode of Christian discourse; the need for beauty and love, not just truth, in Christian witness; how to talk about holiness in a world that believes less and less in the reality of sin; the difference between Judas and Peter; and what it means to study the saints and to be a saint.

    54 分鐘
  6. How to Read Henry David Thoreau / Lawrence Buell

    11月13日

    How to Read Henry David Thoreau / Lawrence Buell

    "I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived. I did not wish to live what was not life, living is so dear; nor did I wish to practice resignation, unless it was quite necessary. I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life.” (Henry David Thoreau, Walden) In 1845, when he was 27 years old, Henry David Thoreau walked a ways from his home in Concord, MA and built a small house on a small lake—Walden Pond. He lived there for two years, two months, and two days, and he wrote about it. Walden has since become a classic. A treasure to naturalists and philosophers, historians and hipsters, conservationists and non-violent resistors. Something about abstaining from society and its affordances, reconnecting with the land, searching for something beyond the ordinary, living independently, self-reliantly, intentionally, deliberately. Since then, Thoreau has risen to a kind of secular sainthood. Perhaps the first of now many spiritual but not religious, how should we understand Thoreau’s thought, writing, actions, and way of life? In this episode, Evan Rosa welcomes Lawrence Buell (Powell M. Cabot Professor of American Literature Emeritus, Harvard University) for a conversation about how to read Thoreau. He is the author of many books on transcendentalism, ecology, and American literature. And his latest book is *Henry David Thoreau: Thinking Disobediently,* a brief philosophical biography and introduction to the thought of Thoreau through his two most classic works: “Walden” and “Civil Disobedience.” In today’s episode Larry Buell and I discuss Thoreau’s geographical, historical, social, and intellectual contexts; his friendship with Ralph Waldo Emerson; why he went out to live on a pond for 2 years, 2 months, and 2 days and how it changed him; the difference between wildness and wilderness; why we’re drawn to the simplicity of wild natural landscapes and the ideals of moral perfection; the body, the senses, attunement and attention; the connection between solitude and contemplation; the importance of individual moral conscience and the concept of civil disobedience; Thoreau’s one night in jail and the legacy of his political witness; and ultimately, what it means to think disobediently.

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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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