

Another Life with Joy Marie Clarkson
Plough
How can we live well together? What gives life purpose? How do technology, education, faith, capitalism, work, family change the way we live? Is another life possible? Plough editor Joy Marie Clarkson digs deeper into perspectives from a wide variety of writers and thinkers appearing in the pages of Plough.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 26, 2022 • 16min
The PloughRead: The Adventure of Obedience by Norann Voll
Norann Voll, a Bruderhof member in Australia, took a vow of obedience that included the promise to go anywhere the church needed her.

Nov 22, 2022 • 19min
The PloughRead: Demystifying Chastity by Sr. Carino Hodder, OP
Sister Carino Hodder says the call to chastity applies just as much to spouses and to single people looking for romance as it does to consecrated religious.

Nov 19, 2022 • 22min
The PloughRead: Why I Chose Poverty by Andreas Knapp
Andreas Knapp, a member of the Little Brothers of the Gospel says wealth is not only an unwieldy burden, but is incompatible with love of neighbor.

Nov 15, 2022 • 35min
The PloughRead: A Broken but Faithful Marriage by Dori Moody
Dori Moody relates the story of her grandparents marriage. Even though they separated, they remained faithful to one another.

Nov 12, 2022 • 11min
The PloughRead: A Vow Will Keep You by Randall Gauger
Randall Gauger, a Bruderhof pastor, discusses how lifelong vows make mutual faithfulness possible.

Nov 8, 2022 • 20min
The PloughRead: Victor Hugo’s Masterpiece of Impossibility by Caitrin Keiper
Caitrin Keiper writes of the vows in Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables that brokenness does not erase the hope in any person when the cycle of retribution breaks for grace.

Nov 5, 2022 • 23min
The PloughRead: The Dance of Devotion by Kelsey Osgood
Kelsey Osgood, an Orthodox Jew, writes that we live in an age that glorifies self-care, but any attempt to deny oneself something pleasurable is suspect.

Nov 1, 2022 • 1h 6min
42: Zohar Atkins on Vows in Scripture and the Existentialists, and Listener Questions
Susannah talks with Zohar Atkins, a rabbi and philosopher, about vows in Nietzsche, in other philosophers, and in the Jewish theological tradition.Are vows the origin of private conscience and thus the origin of secularism? Can human vows provide the kind of transcendence and eternity that even existentialists seek? Is it presumptuous to take a vow?Then, Susannah and Peter discuss what they’ve learned from editing the Vows issue of the magazine and doing the Vows season of the podcast.After that, they take listener questions – is it wrong to vow at all? How can we ensure that vows are made in love? And what are the hosts’ favorite cooking spices?

Oct 25, 2022 • 52min
41: The World After Roe
Peter and Susannah have a long conversation with Professor Robert P. George of Princeton University.A veteran of the pro-life movement, Robert P. George reflects on the opportunity that we now have to build just laws that support the wellbeing of mothers and their children, and, echoing Lincoln, of the need to heal the division between pro-life and pro-choice Americans as much as possible, without compromising on what we believe to be right.He discusses his thoughts about the non-libertarian future of pro-life politics, and the need for supporting both private and public aid to mothers and families.

Oct 18, 2022 • 1h 6min
40: Hyperpartisanship and Hippocrates
Peter and Susannah talk to Justin Giboney of The AND Campaign about polarization in American political life. They discuss practical matters: How can we seek common ground without wimping out? How can we work across the aisle?They also talk about the role of the Black church. What is the unique contribution that that tradition can make to our ongoing discussions of the proper interaction between faith and politics?Then, Peter and Susannah speak with Lydia S. Dugdale. There are now no doctors in America who are required to take the Hippocratic Oath; generally, if doctors take an oath at all, it is one of their own devising, which changes from year to year. In a medical culture like this, what is lost? What is the purpose of medicine, anyway? Is there a purpose to it beyond treating patients as customers and giving them what they want?


