i think that is a game set match, and that's just the end of discourse. And if we collapse the difference between m like war and n and these ideas, we end at making all our ideological enemies into moral monsters. i wanted to unpack that, ami, because i think i have an answer to why that is. I w i want a newance that cause, i think we both get attacked by both sides. And we do. Particularly in my own denomination. People in my institution,. em have been got ther way to be kind of as cruel as possible to me. But when i am attacked, i tend to, not always, and this is not always,
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