Anne Snyder, a visionary and advocate for a whole-person revolution, joins the podcast to discuss her hopes for personal and communal wholeness. They explore topics such as character, moral formation, tribalism, and the root ideas of democracy. Anne shares her journey towards a hard-won wholeness rooted in a persevering hope.
Embracing the interconnectedness of head, heart, and helping hands is key to becoming a whole person.
True integration requires understanding the complex interplay between diverse perspectives, overcoming cynicism, and embracing a sense of shared humanity.
Deep dives
The Concept of Whole-Person Revolution
Ann Snyder discusses the idea of a whole-person revolution rooted in Christian social thought and public theology. The concept of a whole person entails recognizing the multifacetedness of human beings, embracing the interconnectedness of head, heart, and helping hands. Snyder emphasizes the importance of character, virtue, and moral formation in building a whole person. She also explores the need for integration and functional unity in various aspects of life, including mental health, politics, the family, and the church. The pursuit of wholeness involves weaving together personal and communal elements to create a society that honors human dignity and fosters personal and societal well-being.
The Longing for Integration in Fragmented Societies
Snyder addresses the societal fragmentation and longing for integration that exists in contemporary culture. She highlights the challenges faced in areas such as politics, education, and the shaping of young children for the future. The desire for integration and functional unity can be seen as a response to the fractious nature of our times. Snyder emphasizes the need to address fragmentation at both the individual and societal levels. She suggests that true integration requires understanding the complex interplay between diverse perspectives and experiences, overcoming cynicism and distrust, and embracing a sense of shared humanity.
The Role of Ritualized Presence in Countering Cynicism
Snyder discusses the impact of cynicism and the importance of countering it with consistent, ritualized, embodied presence with others. She reflects on her experience with a close-knit community that cultivated radical mutuality and deepened relationships through regular shared meals and celebrations. Snyder notes that the absence of such relational encounters, as seen during the COVID-19 pandemic, can contribute to the rise of cynicism and the loss of communal understanding. She suggests that encountering one another with openness and curiosity, rather than turning inward, is key to counteracting cynicism and nurturing a sense of belonging and human connection.
Human Dignity as the Core Value of Public Theology
Snyder emphasizes that human dignity is the primary value informing public theology and moral discourse. Rooted in Christian social thought, comment magazine seeks to promote a deep concern for the human condition and the potential for personal and communal wholeness. Snyder highlights the importance of recognizing the interconnectedness of society and the individual, as well as the need to apply the law of love to the complexities of social and national life. Through an exploration of the moral realities and challenges of our world, public theology aims to foster a sense of rootedness and love that transcends political polarization and fosters a humanizing vision for society.
Imagine a future that brings personal and communal wholeness, a commitment to truth even when it hurts, and the beauty of pursuing integration in the wake of fragmentation. Anne Snyder joins Evan Rosa to talk about her vision and hopes for a whole-person revolution that honors our moral complexity, holds us accountable to virtue, and seeks a robust form of love in public life.
In this conversation they discuss: the meaning of wholeness and what it could mean to become a whole person; the importance of character, virtue, and moral formation; our need to come to terms with violence—listening to the language of threat and safety and preservation and protection; tribalism, fear, and moral realities; the ideas at the root of democracy; the connection between cynicism, distrust, and a feeling of threat and need to survive; and Anne describes a hard-won wholeness rooted in a sober and persevering hope that doesn’t die.
Prior to leading Comment, she directed The Philanthropy Roundtable‘s Character Initiative, a program seeking to help foundations and business leaders strengthen “the middle ring” of morally formative institutions. Her path-breaking guidebook, The Fabric of Character: A Wise Giver’s Guide to Renewing our Social and Moral Landscape, was published in 2019. From 2014 to 2017 Anne worked for Laity Lodge and the H.E. Butt Foundation in Texas, and before that, the Ethics and Public Policy Center, World Affairs Journal and The New York Times. She is a Senior Fellow of The Trinity Forum and a Fellow at the Urban Reform Institute, a Houston-based think tank that explores how cities can drive opportunity for the bulk of their citizens. She has published widely, including The Atlantic Monthly, the Washington Post, Bittersweet Monthly and of course Comment, and now serves as a trustee for Nyack College. Anne spent the formative years of her childhood overseas before earning a bachelor’s degree from Wheaton College (IL) and a master’s degree from Georgetown University. She currently lives in Washington, D.C.
Show Notes
“Whole person revolution”
Individual whole person as head, heart, and helping hands.
We are porous to our contexts
The individual as a part of a greater whole.
Exploring fear in our societies to understand the other
Wholeness must be considered on the granular level and broad scale
A “hard won” wholeness
Healing relational divides and brokenness
Curling inward around oneself
Watching cynicism arise in the vacuum of encounter
Production NOtes
This podcast featured Anne Snyder
Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa
Hosted by Evan Rosa
Production Assistance by Macie Bridge, Alexa Rollow, and Tim Bergeland