Things Not Seen Podcast

"Things Not Seen" talks with people of faith who are working to make sense of why we are here and how we can all live together despite our deep differences in belief. The show is hosted by Dr. David Dault, and features guests from a broad spectrum of public life, with in-depth conversations about real struggles at the intersection of faith and culture.

Religion & Spirituality
Society & Culture
News
76
#2307 - Building Beloved Community: Jacob L. Go...
We welcome back to the show philosophers Jacob Goodson and Brad Elliott Stone to talk about their recent book, co-authored with Pastor Philip Rudolph Kuehnert, Building Beloved Community in a Wounded World
58 min
77
#2306 - Parables for the Queer Soul: Rolf R. No...
In his recent book, Hearts Ablaze: Parables for the Queer Soul, our guest Rolf Nolasco looks at ten selected parables of Jesus, that expand the scope of interpretation of each story to highlight God's extravagant welcome of all people.
56 min
78
#2305 - Dignity and Responsibility: Anthony M. ...
In his recent book, Cathonomics, our guest Anthony M. Annett draws on economics, Catholic social thought, philosophy, climate science, and psychology to show how readers of all faiths and backgrounds can work together to create a more just economy.
57 min
79
#2304 - Practice of the Presence: Carmen Aceved...
Our guest, Dr. Carmen Acevedo Butcher, talks about her powerful translation of Brother Lawrence's The Practice of the Presence, and how she helped this ancient classic find a new voice for contemporary readers.
60 min
80
#2303 - All the White Friends I Couldn't Keep: ...
Our guest Andre Henry talks about his journey into "artivism" - a mixture of activism and artistry aimed at revolutionary change and decolonization. We talk about his recent book All the White Friends I Couldn't Keep, and his invitation to work on behalf of the safety and joy of Black lives
57 min
81
#2302 - The Reshaping of the American Church: B...
In his recent book, Reorganized Religion, our guest, veteran religion reporter Bob Smietana, offers an in-depth and critical look at why people are leaving American churches and what we lose as a society as it continues.
62 min
82
#2301 - An Imaginary of Infinite Possibility: D...
Author and educator David Dark returns to Things Not Seen to discuss the reframed and expanded edition of his book, Life's Too Short to Pretend You're Not Religious.
58 min
83
#2252 - The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams...
Our guest, jazz musician Deanna Witkoski, has written a spiritual biography of Mary Lou Williams, whose life and music helped to shape American Jazz and influence Catholic liturgy in the 20th Century
58 min
84
#2251 - Meeting the Magi: Eric Vanden Eykel
In his recent book, The Magi, our guest Eric Vanden Eykel examines the birth of the Magi story; its enrichments, embellishments, and expansions in apocryphal writing and early Christian preaching; its artistic expressions in catacombs, icons, and paintings and its modern legacy in novels, poetry, and music.
52 min
85
#2250 - The Human Quest for Meaning: Brian Schm...
Our guest, Dr. Brian Schmisek, explores the many ways that we look to the world to find prophecies and signals for how we are meant to live. He talks with us about his recent book, Signs, Superstitions, and God's Plan.
54 min
86
#2249 - Love Is the Center: Lewis V. Baldwin
Martin Luther King Jr. said and wrote as much or more about the meaning, nature, and power of truth as any other prominent figure in the 1950s and '60s. Our guest, Lewis V. Baldwin, draws on King's published and unpublished sermons, speeches, and writings, in his recent book, The Arc of Truth, to explore King's lifelong pilgrimage in pursuit of truth.
57 min
87
#2248 - Christ's Distressing Disguise: Jon M. S...
Our guest Jon M. Sweeney returns to our show to talk about his recent book, Teresa of Calcutta: Dark Night, Active Love.
56 min
88
#2247 - Receiving the Gift of Our Mortality: Ja...
Popular speaker and award-winning author James K. A. Smith returns to our show to explain that we must reckon with the past in order to discern the present and have hope for the future. In his recent book, How to Inhabit Time, Smith brings together popular culture, biblical exposition, and meditation, he helps us develop a sense of "temporal awareness" that is attuned to the texture of history, the vicissitudes of life, and the tempo of the Spirit.
52 min
89
#2246 - Hope in Our Bodies: Maryann McKibben Dana
Rev. Maryann McKibben Dana returns to our show to talk about her recent book, Hope: A User's Manual. She reflects on the surprising place where hope is often found--in the messiness of our imperfect, flawed, beautiful human bodies.
55 min
90
#2245 - Notes of a Native Daughter: Keri Day [R...
Our guest, Princeton Seminary professor Keri Day, talks about her recent book, Notes of a Native Daughter. In it, she challenges the norms and assumptions of theological education and invites readers to a revolutionary hope.
61 min
91
#2244 - Materializing the Bible: James S. Bielo
Our guest, anthropologist James Bielo, talks to us about his work studying the ways in which individuals and communities bring their Bibles to life through performance, rituals, and physical objects
56 min
92
#2243 - Taking the Bible Seriously, Not Literal...
In her recent book Race & Rhyme, our guest Love Lazarus Sechrest invites listeners to explore biblical narratives in ways that enliven and ethically inform our present conditions. She discusses her method of associative hermeneutics in this far-ranging conversation about race, theology, and repairing the broken world.
57 min
93
#2242 - Beauty Moves the Human Heart: Nichole M...
In her recent book, The Aesthetics of Solidarity, our guest, professor Nichole M. Flores, explores how Our Lady of Guadalupe has been used as a symbol in democratic campaigns ranging from the Chicano movement and United Farm Workers' movements to contemporary calls for just immigration reform.
56 min
94
#2241 - A New View of Kierkegaard: Robert C. Ro...
Our guest Robert C. Roberts offers a new and revolutionary reading of the Christian philosopher, Soren Kierkegaard. Roberts suggests that it is virtue ethics, rather than existentialism, that holds the key to Kierkegaard's thought.
49 min
95
#2240 - Evangelical Anxiety: Charles Marsh
In this riveting spiritual memoir, our guest Charles Marsh tells the story of his struggle to find peace and the dramatic, inspiring transformation that redefined his life and his faith.
59 min
96
#2239 - Dearest Sister Wendy: Robert Ellsberg
Our guest, Robert Ellsberg, publisher of Orbis Books, joins us to discuss his friendship with Sister Wendy Beckett -- a friendship based on several hundred letters, exchanged on an almost daily basis, during the last three years of Sister Wendy's life. Initially they dealt with lives of saints, the meaning of holiness, and the spiritual life, but they soon expanded into a deep and intimate exchange that encompassed our whole lives, the subject of love, suffering, joy, and the presence of grace in everyday life.
55 min
97
#2238 - Repairing What Race Broke in the World:...
Our guest Lisa Sharon Harper takes us on a four-century journey through the history of her family, showing us how it entwines with the broken history of race in America.
57 min
98
#2237 - Ethics for a Digital Age: Kate Ott
Our guest Kate Ott discusses her recent book, Sex, Tech, & Faith, inviting readers into a realistic conversation about ethics in the 21st century
57 min
99
#2236 - A Mirror for Evangelicals: Anthea Butle...
In her 2021 book, White Evangelical Racism: The Politics of Morality in America, our guest Dr. Anthea Butler traces the long history of connections between American Evangelicalism and anti-Black racism
54 min
100
#2235 - A Landscape Loud with Lament and Loss: ...
Our guest Kelley Nikondeha invites us to re-read the stories of the Old and New Testament through the lens of the so-called "Fifth Gospel": the lands of Israel and Palestine. Nikondeha encourages us to consider the imperial politics behind the Gospel narratives, both when they were first written, and now.
56 min