
Life & Faith
Growing up as the son of a diamond smuggler. The leaps of faith required for scientific discovery. An actress who hated Christians, then became one. Join us as we discover the surprising ways Christian faith interrogates and illuminates the world we live in.
Latest episodes

Mar 29, 2017 • 15min
A Public Book
Why the Bible is more than a religious text - it’s a book that gives meaning and unites people.
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"The Bible can be a place of unity between Christians and Muslims, Christians of different hues, Christians and non-Christians … it’s a public book around which we can unite."
In the face of scepticism and ignorance in the West, and religious conflict elsewhere in the world, the Bible remains the best-selling non-fiction book in the world. According to The Economist, more than 100 million Bibles are sold or given away every year.
In this episode, Chief Executive of the British and Foreign Bible Society, Paul Williams, explores the enduring impact of the Bible on Western society and culture, and explains renewed interest in the Bible in a “post-secular” Britain. Also, Paul tells how he returned to his Christian faith after his atheistic beliefs were challenged by the trials of life.
"Things did go wrong for me in ways that really provoked me as to whether the beliefs that I was holding to were adequate for when life became difficult."
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Mar 22, 2017 • 23min
Son of a Communist
As Mongolia turned from communism to democratic rule, this man turned from atheism to faith.
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"In Communism, you’re basically living under fear. But whatever I read from the Bible, it gave me this sense of freedom from fear."
When Batjargal Tuvshintsengel was nine years old, he was recruited to read Communist propaganda on Mongolian state radio. Then, in the early 90s, as Mongolia was becoming a democracy and opening up to the rest of the world, Batjargal discovered the Bible and found it so compelling that he turned from atheism to Christianity. Now, he’s running a Christian radio station that aims to spread hope, good values and a sense of belonging throughout Mongolia.
In this episode, Batjargal talks about significant shifts in Mongolia’s cultural, political and religious landscape - and how his own life changed as a result.
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SUBSCRIBE to our podcast on iTunes: http://bit.ly/lifeandfaithonitunes

Mar 15, 2017 • 24min
Two Years to Live
Phil Camden has Motor Neurone Disease but hope lights his path in the shadow of death.
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"It’s strange because for the first little while you’re thinking: at least we found out what it is, we can work on it. But then they tell you there’s no known cause or cure – and you’ll probably be dead within 27 months."
When Phil Camden was diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease, he was told that he would gradually lose the use of his limbs, he would lose the ability to speak and swallow, and there was no known cure or treatment for the disease. Also, he only had two more years to live.
Since then, Phil has outlived the two-year timeline. He still lives with MND, but he also has hope.
In this episode, Phil takes us through the deep valleys of what it means to live with a terminal illness, and how he seeks to bring hope, light and freedom into the MND community – a world that is familiar with despair and fear.
"The process of death freaks me out. I don’t know what I’m going to be like when I can’t roll over in bed, scratch my nose, shower myself, or go to the toilet myself, feed myself … but death itself has lost its sting. It’s lost its power over my life because I truly believe in heaven and eternity. So death, for me, is just entering into another realm of existence and life which is far better than what we could experience here."
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READ Phil’s blog: www.fridayswithphil.com.
SUBSCRIBE to our podcast on iTunes: http://bit.ly/lifeandfaithonitunes.

Mar 8, 2017 • 21min
Street Pastors
Showing love to the vulnerable, drunk and disorderly on the streets of Melbourne.
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“I was never good around drunks. I’d rather just walk the other way, dodge around them and have nothing to do with them. Since I’ve started doing the Street Pastor walks, I’ve grown. I’ve learnt that they’re just ordinary people who have either made a mistake or have gone too far and they need help – and we’re in a position to be able to give them that help.”
Doug’s a Street Pastor in Melbourne. Most Saturday nights, he heads out with a team of volunteers to patrol Melbourne’s nightclub scene and, basically, help people who need help. They hand out bottles of water to sober people up, give thongs to those with sore feet from high heels, give blankets to the cold, help people get home safely, comfort the distraught, defuse potentially difficult situations, and protect the vulnerable.
In this episode, walk with the Street Pastors along one of Melbourne’s busiest entertainment districts, Brunswick Street, and hear more from Street Pastors coordinator Andrew Satterley, as well as the Yarra Police Inspector, about the difference the Street Pastors are making in the local community.
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FIND OUT MORE about Street Pastors in Australia: www.streetpastors.org.au.
SUBSCRIBE to our podcast: http://bit.ly/lifeandfaithonitunes.

Mar 1, 2017 • 19min
The Long Shadow of Slavery
A confronting - and deeply personal - look at the roots of racial division in the US.
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"We still live under the long shadow of the plantation. Indeed, freedoms have been spread to a larger group of people over time, but that spread has been at the cost of ongoing oppression of black people in ways that have become very apparent thanks to video cams and cell phones that betray the brutality of the police state that we sometimes live in as black people.”
Trayvon Martin. Michael Brown. Alton Sterling. These are names familiar across the world: the names of African-American men – three of many – who died after being shot by white men. Those who shot them have all been acquitted of their deaths, sparking national outrage and re-igniting the old debate on racial profiling and civil rights.
In this episode of Life & Faith, we asked Professor Alfred J Raboteau from Princeton University, an expert in the African-American religious experience, to walk us through the history of race relations in the US, and the deep roots of racial division – from the plantations to the Black Lives Matter movement today.
But he’s not just an expert – Professor Raboteau has lived the reality of racism as well:
"My father was killed by a white man in Mississippi, three months before I was born. The white man who killed him was never tried. He claimed self-defence and he wasn’t indicted even. … When I was 17 and getting ready to go off to college, [my mother and stepfather] sat me down and, for the first time, explained to me what had happened. They said, ‘The reason we didn’t tell you before was we didn’t want you to grow up hating white people’.”
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This interview was recorded for our documentary, For the Love of God: How the church is better and worse than you ever imagined. Sign up for the Director’s Pass for more behind-the-scenes sneak peeks: http://www.fortheloveofgodproject.com.
SUBSCRIBE to Life & Faith on iTunes: http://bit.ly/lifeandfaithonitunes.

Feb 22, 2017 • 16min
Healing After Abortion
Putting aside the politics to talk about the real struggles some men and women face after abortion.
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"It’s usually surrounded with secrecy, it’s not something they talk about casually like they would that they’re going to go get a breast implant and there’s a bad job done or a botched surgery. Because of the shame that a lot of the women do feel, it’s not inherently experienced as an empowering act, it’s something that they just don’t want a lot of people to know."
Abortion is an incredibly politicised issue, and a hotly debated topic. It seems like everyone has something to say about the "right to life" or the "right to choose" - or both.
Often hidden from view are those who have been through abortion, and how some of them - men and women alike - struggle with the decision they have made.
In this episode, we hear from some of these people, and from Dr Theresa Burke, a psychologist who has dedicated her life to helping those who’ve been impacted by abortion. She shares some of her confronting early experiences of being a counselor, and how they led her to start Rachel’s Vineyard, a retreat for women and men who are seeking help for depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress, and grief in the wake of abortion.
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If you or someone you know is experiencing trauma or distress after having an abortion, we strongly urge you to seek support. In Australia, the Abortion Grief and Pregnancy Crisis Hotline is 1300 363 550.
Rachel’s Vineyard operates in 84 countries around the world, and 37 languages. For more information about Rachel’s Vineyard, visit: www.rachelsvineyard.org.
SUBSCRIBE to Life & Faith on iTunes: http://bit.ly/lifeandfaithonitunes.

Feb 15, 2017 • 20min
Silence
A Jesuit priest finds himself in an unexpected role as consultant on a Martin Scorsese film.
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"What would you do for them? Pray? And get what in return? Only more suffering. The suffering only you can end, not God. I prayed too, Rodrigues, it doesn’t help. Go on. Pray. But pray with your eyes open."
These are the words of Father Christavao Ferreira from the film Silence. Based on a novel by Shūsaku Endō, Martin Scorsese has been wanting to tell this harrowing tale of Portuguese Jesuit priests in 17th-century Japan for more than 30 years. Liam Neeson plays Father Ferreira, a Jesuit who recants his faith after facing torture. Andrew Garfield and Adam Driver play two younger Jesuits on a mission to find their mentor and, just like Ferreira, they have to wrestle with the question of whether or not to renounce their faith in order to save their own lives – or the lives of others.
While this story is fictional, it has roots in the very real history of Christianity in Japan, a country where hundreds of thousands of Christians were brutally suppressed for 250 years.
In this episode of Life & Faith, we speak with Father James Martin, a Jesuit priest who acted as a consultant on the film and a spiritual advisor to the actors. Father Jim even led Andrew Garfield through the Spiritual Exercises – a compilation of meditations, prayers, and contemplative practices developed by St Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Jesuits – to prepare the actor for his role as Father Rodrigues.
He also tells us why the movie is particularly poignant for him ("It’s about Jesuits that are my heroes, the martyrs of Japan") and why it’s a movie for everyone about real spirituality:
"I think fake spirituality is, 'if you only believe in God, nothing will go wrong', or 'if something goes wrong, all you have to do is believe in God and pray and everything will be fine'. I think real spirituality is, 'you can believe in God and things may go wrong … and then what?' What do you do when you’re a devout person, and things go terribly wrong or you have tragedy? You don’t just say, 'oh everything will be fine, God’s in charge' – I mean that is true, eventually everything will be fine and God is in charge – but where does your faith come in? And that’s really the question that this movie poses: what do you do in these difficult situations as a person of faith?"
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Find more from Father James Martin on Facebook and Twitter.
SUBSCRIBE to Life & Faith on iTunes.

Feb 8, 2017 • 21min
Another Day in Paradise
Facing the death penalty, Myuran Sukumaran chose to create art that pointed to redemption and hope.
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"This is a story of redemption. This is a story about a person who, under really extreme circumstances, changed the way that he was living his life."
On April 29, 2015, Myuran Sukumaran was executed by firing squad in Indonesia. He had been arrested 10 years earlier for smuggling heroin, and was part of the group of Australian drug mules who came to be known as the Bali Nine.
In the years between his arrest and execution, Myuran completely turned his life around. He became a Christian, an artist and a model prisoner. At Kerobokan jail in Bali, he ran an art studio, and taught English and computer skills to his fellow death row inmates.
"I expected them to be very rough around the edges," says Christie Buckingham, Myuran’s pastor, mentor and friend. "I did not expect them to be as reformed as they were … and I was totally inspired by them, wowed by them, as a matter of fact."
In this episode, Christie describes her first meeting with Myuran, how she helped him navigate the last few years of his life, and the promise she made to him to keep fighting against the death penalty. Also, Michael Dagostino, Director of the Campbelltown Arts Centre, walks us through a new exhibition of Myuran’s artworks, Another Day in Paradise.
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VISIT the Another Day In Paradise exhibition: http://bit.ly/CACAnotherDayInParadise
PURCHASE I Shall Be Free by Phil Davidson: http://apple.co/2jTr1Eb
SUBSCRIBE to Life & Faith on iTunes: http://bit.ly/lifeandfaithonitunes

Feb 2, 2017 • 17min
Things You Cannot Prove
Alister McGrath, one of the world’s leading historians of science, explodes some common assumptions about science, religion, and atheism.
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"I am very skeptical about these simplistic arguments that we only believe what we can prove. It’s not right. We can prove shallow truths, but the deep truths which give life meaning and value – they lie beyond proof."
Alister McGrath, the Chair of Science and Religion at the University of Oxford, describes his personal experience of faith as a "gradual movement" from atheism to Christianity. In fact, it was his scientific training that led him to faith in the first place!
In this episode, Professor McGrath tells how and why he stepped out of his comfort zone of atheism into the exciting "world of faith". He also navigates a couple of key moments in the history of science – including the scientific revolution and the birth of Darwinism – to uncover the influence of Christianity in unexpected places.
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This interview was for our forthcoming documentary, For the Love of God: How the church is better and worse than you ever imagined. SIGN UP for the Director’s Pass for a look behind the scenes: www.fortheloveofgodproject.com.
SUBSCRIBE to our podcast on iTunes: http://bit.ly/lifeandfaithonitunes

Dec 22, 2016 • 20min
Life & Faith: Nativity
An unwed mother-to-be. A husband contemplating a quickie divorce. A host of glorious angels visit a group of lowly shepherds. A star appears and a group of wise men follow it.
Laurel Moffatt tells us why the Nativity story still surprises, and delights, her today – and how she turned it into a play.
“It’s a whole series of scenes that are just bizarre and delightful and kind of hilarious and wonderful,” Laurel says. “It’s the best story we have.”
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“Born Is The King” will be playing in Sydney on Christmas Eve 2016 at the 4pm Kids’ Carols event at The Garrison Church (60 Lower Fort Street, Millers Point). For more details, visit: www.churchhillanglican.com/whats-on.
PURCHASE “Born Is The King”: http://bit.ly/2gDxbJ8
LISTEN to Life & Faith online: http://bit.ly/lifeandfaithbycpx
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