Another Life with Joy Marie Clarkson

Plough
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Oct 11, 2022 • 1h 14min

39: On Secular and Religious Disciplines, and the Theology of the Vow

Susannah and Peter speak with Kelsey Osgood about her piece “The Dance of Devotion.” What’s the difference between a figure skater whose sport requires a strict regimen of training and eating, and an observant Jew whose life is also constrained by specific rules? Why is our society more friendly to the one than to the other? Why are we uncomfortable with the concept of a discipline that’s a matter of obedience to God rather than to a trainer or to one’s own choice of lifestyle fad? Then, they talk with King-Ho Leung about his piece “The One Who Promises.” What’s the difference between a vow and an oath? How have vows been seen in Jewish and Christian thought? He examines the teachings of Philo of Alexandria, of St. Thomas Aquinas, and of Martin Luther in his attempt to understand how our ability to make vows is rooted in God’s own faithfulness, in the nature of language, and in His identification with the Logos, the Word.
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Oct 4, 2022 • 1h 12min

38: Christian Internationalism with John Milbank, and a Bruderhof Journey

Peter and Susannah speak with John Milbank about his reservations about National Conservatism, and the possibilities of Christian internationalism.Christianity makes universal claims, and all our national loyalties and other lesser loyalties are relativized by our loyalty to the Kingdom of God. In light of that, how can we best live out our local and universal commitments in friendship with each other?Then, they speak with Tom and Sue Quinta, a couple who joined the Bruderhof after a long journey through the counterculture of the 1960s.What did it take for a young hippy couple to make lifetime vows to a Christian community, and in what of the non-Christian spirituality they explored did they see the work of the Holy Spirit? How does a vow shape the experience of a life, and how can we understand the uniqueness of Christ in light of the spiritual hungers of the whole of the non-Christian world? 
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Sep 27, 2022 • 1h 5min

37: Vows, Liberty, and Victor Hugo

Peter and Susannah discuss Peter’s lead editorial, “Word Is Bond.” In a culture where keeping our options open is the categorical imperative, how can we become ourselves? Peter argues that the voluntary self-limitation of vows allows men and women to live their lives thoroughly, rather than skimming along the edge of reality.Monasticism, marriage, and the military are forms of commitment that commonly allow people to dig in to their own lives; all three are on the wane. How can we embrace commitment and push back against the ephemerality and weightlessness of the uncommitted life?Then, they welcome their colleague Caitrin Keiper to discuss vows in Victor Hugo’s novel Les Misérables. Both Valjean and Javert, in their different ways, live their lives according to a vow. How do these different commitments lead to each of their ends? And how does grace shape the outcome of each of their vows?
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Sep 24, 2022 • 17min

The PloughRead: Bring Back Hippocrates by Lydia S. Dugdale

Lydia S. Dugdale on the loss of the Hippocratic Oath and the lack of an ethic to explain medicine’s telos.
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Sep 20, 2022 • 28min

The PloughRead: Word Is Bond by Peter Mommsen

Peter Mommsen, editor of Plough, writes that in a culture addicted to endless choice, vows offer a higher freedom.
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Sep 17, 2022 • 20min

The PloughRead: Tradition and Disruption by David Bentley Hart

David Bentley Hart writes that apocalypse, not dogma or tradition, is what gives Christianity grounds for hope in his book Tradition and Apocalypse.
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Sep 13, 2022 • 19min

The PloughRead: The Spiritual Roots of Climate Crisis by Cardinal Peter Turkson

Cardinal Peter Turkson speaks about ecological challenges and how more community may be an answer.
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Sep 10, 2022 • 20min

The PloughRead: The Other Side of Revelation by Hanna-Barbara Gerl-Falkovitz

Hanna-Barbara Gerl-Falkovitz writes on John’s Revelation, apocalypse, fear, and why there is still hope.
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Sep 6, 2022 • 30min

The PloughRead: The Apocalyptic Visions of Wassily Kandinsky by Shira Telushkin

The artwork of Wassily Kandinsky reveals his apocalyptic visions. Shira Telushkin reviews the Around the Circle exhibit of Kandinsky’s art at the Guggenheim.
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Sep 3, 2022 • 12min

The PloughRead: Jesus and the Future of the Earth by Eberhard Arnold

Eberhard Arnold tells how the first Christians viewed the end of the age.

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