Monks and Punks

Sander Hicks

Monks and Punks is a podcast about fighting the power with all your heart. Hosted by Sander Hicks, the show explores radical spirituality, nonviolence, punk rock, democratic socialist politics, grassroots activism, and the everyday work of resisting empire — from elections and organizing to culture, music, and building things with your hands. These are long-form conversations and sharp arguments about how people actually challenge power, stay human, and refuse to give up — even when the odds are stacked against them. This is not passive commentary. It’s for listeners who still believe ideas, culture, and organized people can change the world. Fight the Power, With All Your Heart! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. MAR 29

    Father John Dear — Universal Love and the Surrender That Changes Everything

    Father John Dear has spent decades on the front lines of nonviolent resistance — arrested more than 75 times, expelled from the Jesuits, mentored by Archbishop Tutu and Thich Nhat Hanh, and now living in California. His latest book, Universal Love, distills a lifetime of activism into something simpler and more demanding than any political program: the daily, total surrender of personal will to the God of peace. This conversation came at the right moment for me. After the February 22 Historical Jesus event at Fifteenth Street Friends Meeting — which produced some real theological friction alongside its genuine inspiration — I found myself carrying unresolved questions about ego, expectation, and what it actually means to do this work without needing it to go your way. John Dear answered those questions, not with argument, but with testimony. What he described is not passivity. It is the opposite. Gandhi's campaigns, King's marches, Romero's pastoral letters, Dorothy Day's hospitality houses — none of it, John argues, was primarily strategic. It was the fruit of people who had gone deep enough into surrender that their actions flowed from something other than their own ambition or grievance. Andrew Young told him the civil rights movement was not planned the way history remembers it. It was prayer, and training in nonviolence, and showing up every day to ask what God required. We talked about his book's structure — three movements through meditation, nonviolence practice, and the personal and political consequences of actually living in union with the God of universal love. We talked about Will, the young man whose encounter with John during the pandemic changed his career, his vocation, and his understanding of what he was for. We talked about the kingdom of God — whether it is something we build or something we recognize and welcome, already present, already moving. On Ched Myers: his core argument is that Jesus was deliberately building a movement — organizing, sending people out, campaigning for social transformation. John Dear loves Luke 10 for the same reason: the sending of the seventy-two is not a metaphor, it is a mobilization. Both men read the Gospels as a blueprint for mass nonviolent action in the world. Where they differ — and where our conversation lived — is in the question of whose will is driving that action. Myers emphasizes the political and organizational intelligence of Jesus. Dear keeps pulling it back to surrender: the campaign only works if the campaigners have emptied themselves first. We also talked about Christian nationalism, the war in Iran, and the evangelical community's silence on "love your enemies." John did not flinch from any of it. But his consistent answer was the same: the work begins inside. You cannot nonviolently resist what you have not yet faced in yourself. The reign of God is already here. The question is whether you are willing to stop blocking it with your own agenda. For me, this episode is a marker. What John Dear gave me is a cleaner way to hold the work — less gripping, more open. Surrender to the God of peace who is already present, already moving, already inside you. That is the beginning. Everything else follows from there, or it doesn't follow at all. Father John Dear is the author of more than 35 books on peace and nonviolence. His latest, Universal Love, is available now. He hosts the Nonviolent Jesus Podcast — his most recent episode, a conversation with Daniel Hunter, is here: https://beatitudescenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Podcast-S2E64-with-Daniel-Hunter.mp3  Reach him at https://johndear.org Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1h 5m
  2. FEB 1

    More than a Myth: A Brain-Stimulating Look at the Historical Jesus with John Thatamanil

    More Than a Myth: A Brain-Stimulating Look at the Historical Jesus Monks and Punks host Sander Hicks, joined by co-monk Luisa Giugliano, sits down with John J. Thatamanil—one of the most incisive theologians working today—for a sharp, accessible conversation on the historical Jesus. We explore Jesus as a movement figure, not a mythic abstraction—and why that matters now. The conversation ranges from Martin Luther King Jr. and Jesus and the Disinherited (Howard Thurman) to Paul Tillich, liberation theology, and the moral stakes of faith in an age of empire, violence, and institutional collapse. 
Thatamanil brings deep scholarship without jargon. The result is a genuine brain-stimulator for anyone serious about spirituality, justice, or history. Thatamanil is a former president of the North American Paul Tillich Society and the founding chair of the American Academy of Religion’s Theological Education Committee. He teaches at Union Theological Seminary and lectures widely in churches, colleges, and universities.
 Listen here:
https://shows.acast.com/monks-and-punks/episodes/more-than-a-myth-a-brain-stimulating-look-at-the-historical Hear Rev. Dr. John J. Thatamanil live—beyond the podcast—at the following event in NYC and on Zoom: LIVE EVENT — February 22 Let Us Stand With Jesus Against Violent Power A half-day micro-conference rooted in the radical tradition of the historical Jesus, convened in the spirit of Friends. Jesus did not found an empire-friendly religion.
He launched a poor people’s movement grounded in nonviolence, truth-telling, solidarity with the oppressed, and resistance to imperial power. That fire has been dimmed by institutions that bless war, nationalism, and state violence in his name.
 This gathering asks a direct question: What would it mean now to stand with Jesus against violent power—not symbolically, but practically and collectively? 
Together we will: * Examine Christianity’s entanglement with empire * Reclaim Jesus as a nonviolent movement leader * Explore how faith communities can organize with moral clarity amid genocide, militarism, and eroding credibility
 Speakers * Rev. Dr. John J. Thatamanil (Union Theological Seminary) * Amanda Daloisio (Catholic Worker) * Marah Sarji, Palestinian feminist liberation theologian, Christians for a Free Palestine 
Short talks. Q&A. Small-group discussion. Activist sharing. 
Sunday, February 22 | 1–4 PM
Free (NYC + Zoom)
Complimentary Middle Eastern lunch at 12:30 PM Location
15 Rutherford Place, NYC 10003
15th Street Monthly Meeting (Quakers) Sponsored by the Speaker Events Committee 
Please RSVP:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/let-us-stand-with-jesus-against-violent-power-tickets-1980704296871?aff=oddtdtcreator Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    53 min
  3. 12/06/2025

    CCT! The New Primary Challenger to Incumbent Erik Dilan

    Christian Celeste Tate a/k/a “CCT!” is an anti-poverty activist, and Mamdani campaign field leader. He is the fresh new energy badly needed in AD54. CCT is a DSA-endorsed progressive Democratic Socialist candidate taking on the big money real estate interests as represented by Assemblymember Erik Dilan. In this interview, we cover the key issues of affordability for NYC. With the “volunteer army” of DSA, CCT is sure to be a potent challenge to the status quo. In this extended interview, CCT lays out a clear vision for what real representation in AD54 should look like—one rooted in community needs, not developer influence. He discusses the economic pressures driving displacement, the structural inequality families face, and why affordable housing is the defining issue of the district. CCT connects his personal background, his organizing work, and his anti-poverty activism to the broader political movement reshaping New York City. We also break down the dynamics of running against Erik Dilan, a long-time incumbent backed by real estate interests. CCT speaks candidly about voter outreach, diversity within the district, and the lessons organizers learned from the Mamdani campaign. From East New York to Bushwick, he outlines a strategy centered on direct engagement, multilingual outreach, and the consistent presence that residents have been demanding for years. This conversation goes deeper than a typical political interview. It highlights how DSA campaigns are powered by grassroots volunteers, mutual aid energy, and a shared belief in transforming local politics. CCT explains why democratic socialism resonates in working-class communities, why investment in housing and public safety must be community-driven, and how structural fairness—not charity—is the foundation for long-term change. For viewers who care about affordability, housing justice, immigrant rights, and progressive political organizing, this interview offers a grounded and realistic look at what it takes to challenge entrenched power in New York. Get Involved with this Campaign! https://www.cct4nyc.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    43 min

About

Monks and Punks is a podcast about fighting the power with all your heart. Hosted by Sander Hicks, the show explores radical spirituality, nonviolence, punk rock, democratic socialist politics, grassroots activism, and the everyday work of resisting empire — from elections and organizing to culture, music, and building things with your hands. These are long-form conversations and sharp arguments about how people actually challenge power, stay human, and refuse to give up — even when the odds are stacked against them. This is not passive commentary. It’s for listeners who still believe ideas, culture, and organized people can change the world. Fight the Power, With All Your Heart! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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