347 episodes

Conversations to help us develop a Christian spirituality rooted in love that fosters resilient faith in everyday life

Gravity Commons Podcast Gravity Commons

    • Religion & Spirituality
    • 4.8 • 207 Ratings

Conversations to help us develop a Christian spirituality rooted in love that fosters resilient faith in everyday life

    Terra McDaniel: Rediscovering Lament as a Practice of Hope

    Terra McDaniel: Rediscovering Lament as a Practice of Hope

    We talk with spiritual director Terra McDaniel about how to rediscover the lost practice of lament, so we can heal and hope again. Most people don't know how to process personal or communal mourning and instead struggle to honor our tears, vulnerability, and the full weight of these disillusioning times. But tending our grief is exactly what we need to reimagine a way forward.
    Terra's book Hopeful Lament: Tending Our Grief Through Spiritual Practices makes space for the powerful act of crying out before a loving God and offers provoking reflection questions, embodied practices, and applications for families with children. Learn how to journey gently through suffering.
    Terra McDaniel is a spiritual director for adults and children. She spent two decades as a pastor and ministry leader and earned her MDiv at Portland Seminary. McDaniel wrote More Than Ordinary with Doug Sherman and is a regular contributor to the Companioning Center blog. She lives with her husband in Austin, Texas, with her twin grandchildren nearby.
    You can connect with her and her work on her website.
    Connect with Gravity:
    Leave us a message or ask a question about this or any other episode and we'll answer it on a future episode.Join the Gravity Community to interact with other listeners, and get our list of curated links each week to all things edifying and interesting.Are you interested in advertising on the Gravity Podcast? Contact us at podcast@gravitycommons.com.

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    • 59 min
    The Truth About Deconstruction From Someone Who's In It Now

    The Truth About Deconstruction From Someone Who's In It Now

    Matt posted something on Facebook recently about people who attempt to "police" those going through deconstruction, who seem to:
    equate deconstruction with de-conversion,say people deconstruct so they can sin,say people deconstruct to 'be cool or hip or trendy or for street cred',criticize 'giving up' on the local church, andblame deconstruction on bad teaching.Matt received a response from Aaron Gardner, a friend who is right in the middle of a painful deconstruction process, and we decided to record a podcast conversation about what it's actually like to be right in the middle of deconstruction.
    You can connect with Aaron on his Facebook page for further conversation.
    Connect with Gravity:
    Leave us a message or ask a question about this or any other episode and we’ll answer it on a future episode.Join the Gravity Community to interact with other listeners, and get our list of curated links each week to all things edifying and interesting.Are you interested in advertising on the Gravity Commons Podcast? Contact us at podcast@gravitycommons.com.

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    • 1 hr 21 min
    Jon DePue: Liberating the Gospel from Mere Justification

    Jon DePue: Liberating the Gospel from Mere Justification

    In their new book Beyond Justification: Liberating Paul’s Gospel, Douglas Campbell and Jon Depue address a growing frustration among many Christians of how to understand what seems to be contradictory messages from Paul about the Gospel.
    On one hand, Paul usually talks about a participatory, transformational good news full of freedom, resurrection, love, and being ‘in Christ’. On the other hand, about 10% of the time Paul’s language speaks of retribution, punitive justice, and a conditional transaction at the cross. What to make of this disjunction in Paul’s thought?
    Jon Depue joins us for a provocative conversation seeking a way through this quagmire that has consistently confounded Christians for many years. Making use of historical backgrounds and utilizing a close reading of Paul’s rhetoric and argument in the book of Romans, Doug and Jon propose a compelling and unifying way forward to a clear articulation of Paul’s Gospel.
    Jon DePue is a graduate of Duke Divinity School and has served churches as director of Christian education for several years. He currently works as a learning community support specialist for Indianapolis Public Schools.
    Connect with Gravity:
    Leave us a message or ask a question about this or any other episode and we’ll answer it on a future episode.Join the Gravity Community to interact with other listeners, and get our list of curated links each week to all things edifying and interesting.Are you interested in advertising on the Gravity Commons Podcast? Contact us at podcast@gravitycommons.com.

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    • 1 hr 33 min
    Scott Coley: How Christian Leaders Became Ministers of Propaganda

    Scott Coley: How Christian Leaders Became Ministers of Propaganda

    The fact that "good evangelical Christians are Republican" seems obvious means the propaganda is working.
    Professor and author Scott Coley helps us understand how evangelicalism became fused with right-wing politics and now presses evangelical theology into the service of authoritarian politics, which he outlines in his new book Ministers of Propaganda: Truth, Power, and the Ideology of the Religious Right.
    Scott M. Coley is a lecturer in philosophy at Mount St. Mary's University. His research interests include philosophy of religion, moral epistemology, and political philosophy.
    Connect with Gravity Commons:
    Leave us a message or ask a question about this or any other episode and we'll answer it on a future episode.Join the Gravity Community to interact with other listeners, and get our list of curated links each week to all things edifying and interesting.Are you interested in advertising on the Gravity Podcast? Contact us at podcast@gravitycommons.com.

    Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/gravity-leadership-podcast/donations

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    • 1 hr 6 min
    Shai Held: Why Judaism is Actually About Love (Not Law)

    Shai Held: Why Judaism is Actually About Love (Not Law)

    A dramatic misinterpretation of the Jewish tradition has shaped the history of the West: Christianity is the religion of love, and Judaism the religion of law. In the face of centuries of this widespread misrepresentation, Rabbi Shai Held, in his book Judaism Is about Love: Recovering the Heart of Jewish Life, recovers the heart of the Jewish tradition, offering the radical and moving argument that love belongs as much to Judaism as it does to Christianity.
    Rabbi Shai Held--philosopher, theologian, and Bible scholar--is President and Dean at the Hadar Institute. He received the prestigious Covenant Award for Excellence in Jewish Education, and has been named multiple times by Newsweek as one of the fifty most influential rabbis in America and by the Jewish Daily Forward as one of the fifty most prominent Jews in the world. Rabbi Held is the author of several books, and is the host of Hadar's newest podcast, Answers WithHeld.
    Connect with Gravity:
    Leave us a message or ask a question about this or any other episode and we'll answer it on a future episode.Join the Gravity Community to interact with other listeners, and get our list of curated links each week to all things edifying and interesting.Are you interested in advertising on the Gravity Podcast? Contact us at podcast@gravitycommons.com.

    Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/gravity-leadership-podcast/donations

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    • 1 hr 1 min
    Susannah Griffith: Forgiveness and Healing After Trauma

    Susannah Griffith: Forgiveness and Healing After Trauma

    In her book Forgiveness After Trauma: A Path to Find Healing and Empowerment, Christian minister and scholar Susannah Griffith explores what the Bible says--and doesn't say--about the biblical call to forgive. She helps readers understand a "trauma-informed forgiveness" that is healing and restorative, framing forgiveness within broader concerns around lament, anger, accountability, release and rebirth, and reconciliation.
    Susannah Griffith (PhD, Vanderbilt University) is an independent scholar whose work focuses on the intersection of biblical studies and trauma. She is also a licensed minister of the Mennonite Church USA, a role she embodies to advocate and care for the marginalized outside the walls of the church. Her first book, Leaving Silence, was a Christianity Today Book Award finalist for Christian discipleship. Griffith resides in Northern Indiana with her husband and three young daughters.
    Connect with Gravity:
    Leave us a message or ask a question about this or any other episode and we'll answer it on a future episode.Join the Gravity Community to interact with other listeners, and get our list of curated links each week to all things edifying and interesting.Are you interested in advertising on the Gravity Podcast? Contact us at podcast@gravitycommons.com.

    Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/gravity-leadership-podcast/donations

    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

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    • 1 hr 4 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
207 Ratings

207 Ratings

Ms Zinnia ,

Consistently amazed!

I love this podcast! It never ceases to amaze me how these podcasts provide exactly the words or resources I need to assist with processing through a specific spiritual issue. I feel a solidarity with these people. I am grateful that they don’t shy away from the hard stuff. My faith continues to be nourished and stretched here.

Rachpach73 ,

Like a candy store

I stumbled on this podcast via someone's recommendation on Instagram. All of the topics and people on here are fascinating. I am so curious about them all I want to just be able to listen to all of them right away.
Thank you for making this podcast! It’s awesome!

If you haven’t already, you’ve got to get Dr. Stephen Backhouse on here as soon as you can!

FrannyZooey ,

Mostly great, but…

I love the guests and topics on this podcast, but many times I have been stopped from sharing specific episodes with others because of the long pre-show chatter and the dad jokes at the end. I feel like you assume everyone listening already knows and loves you and would find it endearing, but when I’m wanting to share with people unfamiliar with your podcast I think it’s a barrier. Most recent episode (Five Challenges) is perfect example, a thoughtful conversation was deflated by Matt’s dad joke. Maybe you could offer extended episodes with chatter and bonus jokes to Patreon subscribers or something? 😬

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