In the evangelical tradition, being papered over with a lot of our evangelical liturgy of god, there's not an actual substance to what we are actually believing god can do or should do. So i'd live your thoughts on sort of the the theological sort of absence of a view of how how christians ought to think in these extraordinary times. Is there anything to that? Yes, i think so. In the last month, say em america's kind of an emotionally immature country like that. We're sort of, we don't know how to kind of process our motions. I have been encouraged in the last week by how many friends, christian organizations, or sending me
David and Curtis talk to Tish Harrison Warren, an author, Anglican priest, and writer for The New York Times. Their conversation about prayer gets very real, as they first talk about prayer in wartime. Then they move back to the American cultural struggles, and discuss the disturbing tendency to compare peace to war and the toxic effect on our lives and hearts.
Show Notes:
-Sign up for Tish Harrison Warren’s newsletter
-And David’s French Press