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    A Thoughtful Faith - Mormon / LDS

    A podcast that seeks to highlight and model thoughtful faith within Mormonism
    en-us409 Episodes

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    Episodes (409)

    Accepting the Shadow and Light of the Church

    Accepting the Shadow and Light of the Church

    The shadow and light of the church are a part of the same story and integrating the suffering and the healing that the church created is part of our necessary preparation for the next part of our journey.

    Acceptance of our past life in church with its blessings is  a wholesome alternative to staying locked in the fight with what has been.  In which case, there's no freedom to move on. 

    379: The Beginning of the End: Gina Colvin

    379:  The Beginning of the End:  Gina Colvin

    This episode opens up the last chapters of my time as host of A Thoughtful Faith Podcast.  I aim to hang up the mic at the end of the 2022.

    The remainder of my time with the podcast will be devoted to faith reconstruction and exploring  how to have a good church ending and an even better spiritual beginning.

    378: When the Church isn't Enough: Tali Aitofi

    378:  When the Church isn't Enough:  Tali Aitofi
    Some years ago, Tali Aitofi found Mormon podcasts and became hooked.  But Tali isn't Mormon, he's Pentecostal.  His faith journey has played out with the hum of Mormon faith crises in the background.

    Tali recently came out as gay; he left his family church, and is currently suffering from a life threatening illness.  All of this has caused deep and searching questions.  

    Tali joins me to talk about his life journey and how the Netflix series Midnight Mass spoke to his larger  questions about church, God, Jesus, shame and forgiveness.

    A Thoughtful Faith - Mormon / LDS
    en-usFebruary 23, 2022

    377: Bright Spark: The Reconciliation of Artist Trevor Southey: A Conversation with Director Nathan Florence

    377:  Bright Spark:  The Reconciliation of Artist Trevor Southey:  A Conversation with Director Nathan Florence

    Painter, now documentary film maker and producer Nathan Florence joins me  to discuss ‘Bright Spark:  The Reconcilation of Trevor Southey’

    For eleven years, artist Nathan Florence documented Trevor Southey's life with his heart and with his lens in order to tell an unfolding story that ended in Trevor’s death in 2015. 

    It’s an unusual documentary but nonetheless affecting because like a painting it constantly unfolds. The film is a soft place among the polarized voices of LDS folk in and out of the church, because it has no agenda beyond the story of art as an expression of the deepest musings of humanity; How it's made;  at what cost; who it's for, and mostly, how does it change lives?

    375: Let's Cancel Christmas! Nicola Petty

    375:  Let's Cancel Christmas!  Nicola Petty

    If you love Christmas, then this episode isn't for you. 

    But, if you or someone you know doesn't approach Christmas with merriment and cheer, then this conversation between me and my good friend Nicola Petty might be worth listening to.

    Both of us are avowed Grinches and as a concession to those who have to put up with our annual disagreeableness we get together for a chat to identify our points of disagreement with the Silly Season.  And we wonder if we need to cancel it next year?

    A Thoughtful Faith - Mormon / LDS
    en-usDecember 31, 2021

    374: Trauma & Moral Injury in Mormonism: Dr. Sean Aaron

    374:  Trauma & Moral Injury in Mormonism:  Dr. Sean Aaron

    At Syracuse University, moral injury is defined as,

    "… the damage done to one’s conscience or moral compass when that person perpetrates, witnesses, or fails to prevent acts that transgress one’s own moral beliefs, values, or ethical codes of conduct."

    In this episode, clinical psychologist Dr. Sean Aaron joins me to discuss moral injury. Many coming from the LDS tradition have been taught to spiritually bypass our gut reactions to practices or doctrines, chalking our doubts up to our personal failings and faithlessness.

    Sean draws on the concept of moral injury to help us understand what is happening when we do so, and how we can trust and respond to our emotions in healthy ways.

    373: The LDS Church's Response to Sexual Abuse: Neville Rochow QC

    373:  The LDS Church's Response to Sexual Abuse:  Neville Rochow QC

    Child sexual abuse in the church is pernicious and confounding. Why anyone purporting to be Christian would sexually abuse a child is beyond the imagination of many. Yet it happens, and far too often to be dismissed.

    The Royal Commissions of Inquiry into Sexual Abuse in Ireland and Australia, and currently being conducted in New Zealand, have resulted in powerful evidence-based recommendations for best practices that keep children safe from predatory behaviour in faith-based institutions.

    Despite the extent, breadth and thoroughness of these inquiries, the Salt Lake church seems largely disinterested in the wisdom and advice originating from any legal jurisdiction or cultural context other than their own.   

    Neville Rochow joins me to discuss how child sexual abuse is managed legally and ecclesiastically in the LDS Church in light of the Royal Commissions of Inquiry.   




    372: The Spiritual Formation of Children: Amanda Suarez and Drew Hansen

    372:  The Spiritual Formation of Children:  Amanda Suarez and Drew Hansen

    Author of the Spiritual Child, Professor of Psychology Lisa Miller writes in ‘The Spiritual Child’:

    “Spiritual development through the early years … provides a protective health benefit, reducing the risk of depression, substance abuse, aggression, and high-risk behaviors.”

    It’s for this reason that the team at Upliftkids have created a resource for parents to help them spiritually nurture their children, regardless of religious persuasion.

    The resources at Uplift Kids help both parents and children find their inner compass by integrating the best of modern science and ancient wisdom that  honour and support the gracious spiritual development and sensitivity of children.

    Amanada Suarez and Drew Hansen join me to discuss the healthy spiritual formation of children.

    371: The LDS Church & Its Business: Neville Rochow QC Part 2

    371:  The LDS Church & Its Business:  Neville Rochow QC Part 2

    Australian barrister Neville Rochow QC has offered the LDS Church legal advice over the years and has appeared for the church at parliamentary committees on the question of religious freedom.   For two years, he also represented the church at the European Parliament in Brussels.

    He has been intimately involved in the church’s legal concerns and is well versed in how its legal machinery works, particularly internationally.

    In part two of this series, Neville joins me to discuss the LDS Church and its financial activities. 

    370: The Church and its Legal Machinations Part One: Neville Rochow

    370:  The Church and its Legal Machinations Part One: Neville Rochow

    Australian barrister Neville Rochow QC has offered the LDS Church legal advice over the years and has appeared for the church at parliamentary committees on the question of religious freedom.   For two years, he also represented the church at the European Parliament in Brussels.

    He has been intimately involved in the church's legal concerns and is well versed in how its legal machinery works, particularly internationally.

    In part one of this series, Neville joins me to discuss the LDS Church and its legal machinations.  In this episode he offers an overview of the relationship between the US church in the international legal arena.

    368: The Illegitimacy of Jesus: Mark Crego

    368:  The Illegitimacy of Jesus:  Mark Crego

    Mark Crego and I met around eight years ago, fellow sojourners in the quest to understand our shared faith in the LDS church.  We had a similar curiosity about the spiritual life and consequently we both completed a Masters degree:  He in theology and me in ministry.   Having taken a Christian formation path we find ourselves similarly interested in the necessity of the divinity of Jesus.  Was he literally, biologically the Son of God? 

    Neither of us think so.

    This conversation is not new.  Jane Schaberg  is one scholar who tackled the question front on, and she paid dearly for it. 

    Mark and I come to similar conclusions, that the divinity of Jesus has more to do with claims of power,  authority and Empire than it has to do with biology.  For Mark and I, the illegitimate, fatherless Jesus who God chose as his son is a far more spiritually enlivening and plausible alternative.

    367: The Law of Chastity or Sexual Ethics?: Linkhart, Ross & Mangelson

    367:  The Law of Chastity or Sexual Ethics?:    Linkhart,  Ross & Mangelson

    While the Mountain Saints speak of the Law of Chastity being the iron clad rule that anything sexual should happen in marriage, the Praire Saints have a statement of Sexual Ethics.

    The Statement of Sexual Ethics is the distillation of years of discussion with church leaders across the world and continues as a living document up for discussion and debate.

    Community of Christ Apostle Robin Linkhart and former LDS members and now Community of Christ Ministers, Brittany Mangelson and Nancy Ross join me to have the conversation about sex  from the perspective of two very different restoration traditions.

     

    366: Breaking Up Well: Dr. Nicola Petty

    366:  Breaking Up Well:  Dr. Nicola Petty

    When I began questioning the LDS Church, I did not expect the Stake Relief Society president to join me. Nicola Petty went from orthodox and loyal member guided by the priesthood to a Stake Relief Society President who had been woken up by the Ordain Women movement. It was in this capacity that I watched her press priesthood button after priesthood button advocating intelligently and determinedly for the women in our stake. And then, when the church was no longer reconcilable, rather than spit the church out, Nicola planned her exit well, and took up the challenge to build a new life. Her’s is a story of integrity, integration, and extraordinary grace for a church she once loved deeply but no longer sees as essential to her human becoming.  

    This is a personal story of breaking up well. 

    365: Sealed: A Memoir by Katie Langston

    365:  Sealed:  A Memoir by Katie Langston

    Born and raised a devout Mormon in Utah, Katie Langston chronicles her unexpected conversion to orthodox Christianity with candor and theological depth. Her remarkable debut memoir explores themes of religious fundamentalism, mental illness, and family belonging—culminating in her surprising and liberating encounters with the grace of God in Jesus Christ.

    Gina and Katie dive deep into the question of faith and family.

    364: Death By a Thousand Cuts: Ordinary Mormon Trauma: Lindsay Hansen Park

    364:  Death By a Thousand Cuts:  Ordinary Mormon Trauma:  Lindsay Hansen Park

    We were made for tenderness, gentleness, openness, authenticity, vulnerability, compassion and caring.  We are threaded through with the strands of genuine goodness.  Our true selves, our inner landscapes are beautiful and potentiated for wholeness, fullness and love.

    Mormon trauma is most profoundly felt into being culturally, or institutionally permitted to be our true selves but to live in this highly controlled world where we are treated as potentiated for evil and best kept managed, where the greatest virtue is obedience. 

    Mormon trauma is experienced as death by a thousand cuts, from the way that policy and doctrine  is dropped to way we serve, teach and lead, to the way we are with each other and in our families, to the stories we tell about the world beyond Mormonism.

    Lindsay Hansen Park joins me to discuss the ordinariness of Mormon trauma.

    Why the RLDS Reformed but the LDS Didn't: Prof. David Howlett

    Why the RLDS Reformed but the LDS Didn't:  Prof. David Howlett

    Some people say that Community of Christ is just LDS lite. This simply isn't true.

    Despite their common roots, you would be unlikely to find two more differently wired faith traditions than the Community of Christ (RLDS) and the LDS (Mormons).

    To discuss how this came to be and why the RLDS set about revising and reforming their church in the 1960's while the LDS took on a renewed commitment to restoration fundamentalism and American political conservatism, Professor of American religion, David Howlett from Smith College joins A Thoughtful Faith Podcast.