

In Good Faith
BYUradio
Discover how God is working in the world and in our lives. Strengthen community by connecting with people of different faith traditions. Celebrate commonality and honor difference as believers share the wisdom and sacred stories, faith journeys, and life experiences that connect them to the Divine.
Host Steven Kapp Perry talks with believers from all walks of faith—Catholic and Episcopalian, Buddhist and Baptist, Jewish and Hindu, Presbyterian and Seventh Day Adventist, Muslim and Latter-day Saint— sharing their personal experience with the sacred and the divine. Sundays on BYUradio—and be sure to subscribe to the podcast!
Host Steven Kapp Perry talks with believers from all walks of faith—Catholic and Episcopalian, Buddhist and Baptist, Jewish and Hindu, Presbyterian and Seventh Day Adventist, Muslim and Latter-day Saint— sharing their personal experience with the sacred and the divine. Sundays on BYUradio—and be sure to subscribe to the podcast!
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 25, 2018 • 56min
Ep 47. Danny Duncan Collum
"When the picket lines went up at all the downtown stores [to boycott stores which wouldn't serve black people], there were white priests and nuns on the picket line and I remember seeing that and thinking that there's another way to be Christian, this is the real deal."
From his origins in Mississippi, writer and teacher Danny Duncan Collum has always wanted to change the world for the better, through activism and his writing, but more than anything, through seeking the presence of God in his life.
Check out Danny's books (including his novel, White Boy) at:
https://www.amazon.com/Danny-Duncan-Collum/e/B001K8ISDC
And see some of his online writing at:
https://www.uscatholic.org/authors/danny-duncan-collum
https://sojo.net/biography/danny-duncan-collum
Danny Duncan Collum

Nov 18, 2018 • 58min
Ep 46. Melissa Dalton-Bradford
"..If we want true friendship with God, we can't run away from the requirement that God--in kindness, in an effort to become our friend, to become our confidant, so we can have trust in Him--allows us to be pushed by the vicissitudes of mortality to the extremities of experience."
In a life that includes moving twenty-plus times, most of them internationally, author and activist Melissa Dalton-Bradford has learned that home is a concept more than a place, and that we connect to each other--whatever our religion or nationality or languages--in the deepest places; our sorrows and our faith.
(See the fruits of some of Melissa's efforts with refugees at: https://tsosrefugees.org/ )
Melissa Dalton-Bradford

Nov 11, 2018 • 56min
Ep 45. Rabbi Sam Spector
"One of the wonderful things about being a Rabbi is you get to be a part of people's stories...the joy and the sorrow."
Rabbi Sam Spector shares his perspective on learning to "see holiness" in other people, whatever their backgrounds, as fellow children of the creator. He speaks personally about visiting the Western Wall in Jerusalem, and what he asks people who state a disbelief in God and in prayer.
And, in the aftermath of the recent Pittsburgh Synagogue shooting, he talks about the reasons for such acts, and what we can each do to prevent them.
(pc/Jacob Frazier)
Rabbi Sam Spector

Nov 4, 2018 • 58min
Ep 44. Joshua Hill, Buddhist priest
Is Buddhism a life path, a philosophy, or a religion? The short answer is, "Yes." The longer answer is, "It depends."
Joshua Hill, from the Tiep Hien Zen order shares his own path, and how he helps prisoners, addicts, and mental health patients to detach from the turmoil of a troubled mind and find peace in observing experiences, including suffering, from a quieter place. It's information and a practice we can all use, whatever our beliefs.
Joshua Hill

Oct 28, 2018 • 54min
Ep 43. Dr. Emily Christensen, Chaplain and Counselor
After all she's been through, chaplain and counselor Emily Christensen still finds meaning in choosing faith over bitterness. She shares how she prepares to be with people under stress, and how her earliest communion with God while sitting on a swing set as a child laid the foundation for her mature belief.
Find the book “Keeping Kyrie” at: https://www.emilychristensenphd.com/books/?fbclid=IwAR09cqoOe1403rFZGKH5yZ_kIKl868pn8Q4UAcmH0tG4F8Oyuax-WY03Ptg (Also on Amazon, iTunes, and Audible)
Follow Emily's blog at: http://housewifeclass.com/
Dr. Emily Christensen

Oct 14, 2018 • 58min
Ep 42. Dr. Oliver D. Crisp
Dr. Oliver Crisp is from the UK originally, but teaches at the Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, CA. In this episode he explores being both a theologian and a believer, how he's seen the hand of God in his and his family's life, and touches on the connection between the arts and religion.
Dr. Oliver Crisp

Sep 9, 2018 • 59min
Ep 41. Daniel Stone
“I realized that God sometimes tells us to do something, but then it doesn’t really pan out the way we think it’s going to, but then it drives us to do something else, and then it works out.”
Daniel Stone's earliest experiences with God were as simple as asking to be made well from a cold, but they laid the foundation for a trust that has allowed him to be led through uncertain paths to the destination he felt drawn to all along.
Author Daniel Stone

Jul 22, 2018 • 51min
Ep 40. Dr. Darin Davis, Baylor University
Dr. Darin Davis may be the Vice President of Mission at Baylor University, but much of his spiritual energy comes from being the pastor at Blue Ridge Baptist Church near Waco, TX. He shares the moments that changed the course of his life, and tells of the "real deal Christians," like his "Grandma" Grace, who helped make them happen.

Jul 15, 2018 • 52min
Ep 39. Dr. Jean P. Kelly
Dr. Jean Kelly, of Otterbein Unversity, calls herself a "cradle Catholic," yet it was experiences in her adult life that lead her to increased devotion. She explains finding peace through "lectio divina," or sacred reading, and tells her students who go out in the world to serve, that "if they feel a little uncomfortable, they're probably in the right place."

Jul 8, 2018 • 56min
Ep 38. Rabbi Benny Zippel
“Every day there are more and more kids that come to this world, and that feel enveloped by a sense of darkness, and I feel that my calling is to break through this cloud, with the light of their inner connection with God.” - Rabbi Benny Zippel
Whether leading Chabad Lubavitch of Utah for over 25 years, or tending to troubled youth with Project Heart, Rabbi Benny Zippel has a sense of mission for connecting people to God and helping each person discover their inherent meaning and purpose.