Rector’s Cupboard Podcast

Rector’s Cupboard

Conversations about hopeful faith and hopeful theology.

  1. 1d ago

    This Week in God: Host Episode

    The final episode of Season 7 of Rector's Cupboard. Do you remember Stephen Colbert's This Week in God segment from the early days of The Daily Show? Inspired by that idea, the hosts gather to reflect on a handful of recent stories from the world of religion. What on earth is happening with Christianity right now? And perhaps more importantly, what kind of faith are these stories inviting us toward? Our conversation explores some of the central convictions of hopeful Christian theology that have shaped Rector's Cupboard from the beginning: that truth does not need fear to defend it, that humility is more faithful than certainty, and that if the "Good News" is truly good, it should be good for everyone—not only for those who consider themselves believers. Enjoy the conversation.   References from this Episode This Week in God Compilation  Stephen Colbert and Ricky Gervais Interview Stephen Colbert and Dua Lipa Interview  “Pope Leo Faces the First Crisis of His Pontificate” New York Times, June 20, 2026 “Southern Baptists vote to advance a formal ban on churches with women pastors” AP News, June 10, 2026 “Where Testosterone and the Bible Are the ‘New Punk Rock'” New York Times, June 26, 2026   Tasting Notes Hello-Bello Recipe, gratitude to Harry at Pub Saint Pierre in Montreal for this wonderful cocktail. Shot of espresso and Campari (shaken no ice) Pour into glass Then add fresh OJ, about juice of half an orange Ice and prosecco, just to top it Orange peel as garnish

    46 min
  2. May 15

    A Conversation About MAID with Ken Bell

    In this episode of Rector’s Cupboard, Allison, Amanda, and Ken sit down for a thoughtful and deeply human conversation about MAID — Medical Assistance in Dying in Canada. Drawing on Ken’s work as a Spiritual Health Practitioner at Lions Gate Hospital, we explore what MAID actually is, how the process works, and why it remains such a difficult and emotional topic for many people, especially within faith communities. Along the way, we talk about suffering, grief, agency, palliative care, and what it means to accompany people through death with compassion and dignity. Ken shares stories from his work with patients and families navigating end-of-life decisions, reflecting on the sacredness, tension, and beauty that can exist even in the hardest moments. This isn’t a debate episode or an attempt to land on easy answers. Instead, it’s an honest conversation about mortality, care, faith, and how we show up for one another when life becomes fragile. References: If you’d like to do some more reading on MAID in Canada, Ken suggests the following resources. This is Assisted Dying, Dr. Stefanie Green (2022) A memoir by a Canadian physician at the forefront of MAID, exploring her experiences and the decisions behind the practice. The Last Doctor: Lessons in Living from the Front Lines of Medical Assistance in Dying, Dr. Jean Marmoreo and Johanna Schneller (2023) Follows one of Canada’s first MAID practitioners, providing stories of patients and families. Unravelling MAID in Canada, Edited by Ramona Coelho and Trudo Lummens (2025) A collection of perspectives from experts exploring the expansion and ethical, legal, and social implications of the practice. The Many Faces of MAID: What to Expect When Someone You Know Chooses Medical Assistance in Dying, Cynthia Clark and Carol Cram (2023) A resource for families, friends, and caregivers dealing with the emotions surrounding a loved one’s decision. Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) Activity Book, KidsGrief.ca, a specialized guide designed to help children understand and navigate the experience of having a loved one choose MAID. Sixth Annual Report on Medical Assistance in Dying in Canada, Government of Canada (November 2025) The annual report on MAID that outlines MAID requests, assessments, and provisions across Canada in 2024.

    59 min
  3. May 1

    A Short History of Evangelicalism: Live Recording

    In this episode, we’re sharing a live recording from one of our Tasting Room Theology gatherings—informal, in-person evenings where we pair something tasty (in this case, doughnuts from Lucky’s Doughnuts) with thoughtful theological reflection. We welcome you into a conversation exploring a short history of evangelicalism—where it came from, what shaped it, and why it continues to matter today. As we trace its early roots, defining ideas, and cultural influence, we reflect on how themes like conversion, biblical interpretation, activism, and separation have shaped both personal faith and the wider world. Along the way, we share some of our own experiences within evangelical spaces—what formed us, what challenged us, and what continues to stay with us. Ultimately, we’re asking what kind of faith is being carried forward, and what it might look like to move toward something more hopeful, grounded in beauty, goodness, and truth. Note: This episode references a visual presentation used during the live event. You can find this presentation here if you’d like to follow along. Materials Referenced in this episode: There are a lot of video and audio clips you can find in the presentation below but here are some of the other things Todd mentioned if you want to do some extra credit work. Goodbye, Babylon – CD Set Minds Wide Shut: How the New Fundamentalisms Divide Us, Gary Saul Morson and Morton Schaprio, 2021 American Apocalypse: A History of Modern Evangelicalism, Matthew Avery Sutton, 2014 Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation, Kristin Kobes Du Mez, 2020 We Don’t Know Ourselves: A Personal History of Modern Ireland, Fintan O’Toole, 2023 Pure: Inside the Evangelical Movement That Shamed a Generation of Young Women and How I Broke Free, Linda Kay Klein, 2018

    55 min
  4. Apr 17

    Addiction, Faith, and the Whole Person with Dr. Quentin Genuis

    Faith always has a public facet. It is lived out in the public sphere, in our day-to-day lives, our families and friendships, in those we encounter as we walk down the street, as we think about how the most vulnerable amongst us are treated and valued in society. We see this in the current interactions between religious and political leaders, as we touch on in our introductory conversation, and in how subjects like addiction are talked about, particularly in understandings of faith. We are please to welcome Dr. Quentin Genuis, emergency physician at St. Paul’s Hospital, ethicist, and author of Recovering People: Addiction, Personhood, and the Life of the Church. Bringing together his hospital work and theological degree, Quentin shares stories and insights shaped by close encounters with people living with addiction. Together, we explore how common frameworks, seeing addiction as either a matter of choice or purely a disease, fall short. Instead, Quintin offers a “personal model,” one that takes seriously the full humanity of each person. Addiction, in this view, is often a search for good things: belonging, peace, joy, and healing—but sought in ways that ultimately do not lead to life. What might it mean to move beyond labels and diagnoses, to see the whole person in front of us?   References “Trump vs. The Pope,” The Daily, April 16, 2026 “Trump’s Christlike image is filled with sloppy symbolism,” The Washington Post, April 13, 2026

    1h 3m
  5. Mar 20

    Reckoning with Faith with Barrett Sprowson

    When you think back on your religious past, are there memories that make you cringe or worse? Perhaps you recall speaking in ways that you now find upsetting or even abhorrent. Maybe it’s a youth group skit that you remember with embarrassment. For many people, there are more troubling aspects of their religious past. Looking back, we might realize that we were part of a high-control religious system that fostered, and sometimes hid, abuse. Coming to terms with the past may mean walking away from faith altogether. It may also mean a kind of growth in faith: still believing, but believing very differently than before. Barrett Sprowson now lives in Vancouver, but he grew up in Zimbabwe. In 2024, the Archbishop of Canterbury resigned over an abuse scandal in the Church of England. Barrett was a teenager at a camp in Zimbabwe where the abuser, John Smyth, assaulted multiple victims. Smyth had abused minors years earlier in England, but the case was covered up. For Barrett, the camp in Zimbabwe was part of his Christian discipleship and formation. He now sees Christian faith differently than he did then. It is not only about coming to terms with proximity to an abuser, but also about grappling with how certain ways of understanding faith and the world can be shaped more by control and rigidity than by growth in compassion and love for all people. Referenced in this episode: See No Evil, two-part documentary released on Channel 4 in the UK, December 2025

    1h 6m
  6. Mar 6

    Theological Healing with Dr. Marty Folsom

    In this episode, the phrase “theology matters” is not a slogan but a warning. The ways we imagine God shape the ways we live in the world, how we see the world around, how we see the people around us. At the moment, political leaders are explaining a real military conflict in theological language. One side denounces religious fanaticism while, at the same time, voices within its own ranks speak about war as part of God’s plan for Armageddon. It raises an unsettling question: what kind of theology leads people to speak about violence this way? In this conversation we explore a different theological path. Our guest is Dr. Marty Folsom, whose writing makes the work of Karl Barth more accessible to modern readers. Through Barth’s theology, Folsom points toward what might be called theological healing. Instead of beginning with fear, separation, and the need to draw hard lines between insiders and outsiders, Barth begins with something else; the hospitality of God. Creation, in this vision, is not the act of a distant ruler but the act of a host who makes space for relationship. Humanity exists not primarily as isolated individuals but as people created for connection, with God and with one another. Even freedom, in this account, is not freedom from others but freedom for relationship, responsibility, and love. It is a very different starting point than the kinds of theological ideas that so often dominate the public arena. When theology becomes distorted, the consequences can be enormous. But good theology—clear, thoughtful, grounded in the character of God—can also heal. And perhaps, in a world where bombs still fall and religious language is used to justify violence, that kind of theological healing is needed more than ever.   Prior Conversations with Marty Folsom: Vol 2 in Marty’s Church Dogmatics for Everyone – The Doctrine of God Vol 1 in Marty’s Church Dogmatics for Everyone Marty also has a new book out on the Psalms, The Psalms: A Sanctuary for the Soul   References: “Secretary of State Marco Rubio Remarks to Press” March 3, 2026 “US troops were told war on Iran was ’all part of God’s divine plan’, watchdog alleges”, The Guardian, March 3, 2026 Brian Zahnd, on war before Christ returns, March 3, 2026

    1h 6m

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Conversations about hopeful faith and hopeful theology.

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