The Golden Thread

The Woman Who Shaped the Creed

19 min · Gestern
Episode The Woman Who Shaped the Creed Cover

Beschreibung

In 451 CE, the largest council in Christian history assembled at Chalcedon to answer a question that had been tearing the church apart for decades. At the center of it was a woman --- Aelia Pulcheria, Eastern Roman empress, consecrated virgin, and one of the most formidable figures of the ancient world. Harmonia traces Pulcheria's remarkable life, from the fifteen-year-old regent who took the reins of an empire, to the empress who convened the Council of Chalcedon and helped define the nature of Christ for fifteen centuries of Christian worship. Along the way, she invites us to consider something quietly profound --- that the faith billions carry today was not handed down from heaven fully formed, but worked out by human hands, in human rooms, by people who were faithful and fallible and utterly determined to get it right. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/woman-who-shaped-creed] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=383]

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Episode The Woman Who Followed Where the Service Pointed Cover

The Woman Who Followed Where the Service Pointed

She crossed the world for love, arrived to find grief, and stayed anyway. In the narrow streets of Swatow, China, Baptist missionary Adele Fielde did something simple and radical: she learned the language of the kitchen, sat down at the table, and began to pay attention. What followed --- five hundred women trained as evangelists, campaigns against foot-binding and forced marriage, a suffrage movement, and a glass nest full of ants at Woods Hole --- was not a series of careers but a single sustained act of service, leading her somewhere new every time she was willing to follow. Harmonia reflects on what happens when commitment to the act of serving runs deeper than commitment to the ideology that sent you. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/woman-who-followed-where-service-pointed] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=384]

9. Juli 202620 min
Episode The Woman Who Shaped the Creed Cover

The Woman Who Shaped the Creed

In 451 CE, the largest council in Christian history assembled at Chalcedon to answer a question that had been tearing the church apart for decades. At the center of it was a woman --- Aelia Pulcheria, Eastern Roman empress, consecrated virgin, and one of the most formidable figures of the ancient world. Harmonia traces Pulcheria's remarkable life, from the fifteen-year-old regent who took the reins of an empire, to the empress who convened the Council of Chalcedon and helped define the nature of Christ for fifteen centuries of Christian worship. Along the way, she invites us to consider something quietly profound --- that the faith billions carry today was not handed down from heaven fully formed, but worked out by human hands, in human rooms, by people who were faithful and fallible and utterly determined to get it right. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/woman-who-shaped-creed] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=383]

Gestern19 min
Episode The Patron of Forgotten People: Jane Frances de Chantal and the Door That Opened Inward Cover

The Patron of Forgotten People: Jane Frances de Chantal and the Door That Opened Inward

In 1601, Jane Frances de Chantal locked the gate at Bourbilly castle and walked away from everything she had built --- a widow at twenty-eight, with four children and a broken heart and a set of obligations she hadn't chosen. What she built next would outlast her by centuries. The Visitation Order she founded with Francis de Sales did something quietly radical: it opened its doors to the women every other religious order had turned away --- too old, too sick, too complicated for the existing structures. Jane's famous response to her critics was not a defense. It was a declaration: I like sick people. I'm on their side. In this episode, Harmonia traces the thread from a cold Burgundy courtyard to eighty-six houses across France, and forward into a world that still produces people standing outside closed doors --- and people who refuse to leave them there. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/patron-forgotten-people-jane-frances-de-chantal-and-door-opened-inward] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=382]

7. Juli 202626 min
Episode The Child on the Boat: Mary Elizabeth Lange and the School She Carried Across Water Cover

The Child on the Boat: Mary Elizabeth Lange and the School She Carried Across Water

She crossed the Windward Passage in the dark as a small child, fleeing a revolution that consumed everything her family had known. She arrived in Baltimore with nothing but her faith, her education, and the memory of what it felt like to be taught. In 1818, Elizabeth Lange opened a school in her own home for children no one else was coming for. In 1829, she founded the Oblate Sisters of Providence --- the first Black women's religious congregation in American history. This is the story of a refugee who looked at her new city, saw the gap, and built something that has outlasted every institution that doubted her. And it is a story about right now. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/child-boat-mary-elizabeth-lange-and-school-she-carried-across-water] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=381]

6. Juli 202618 min
Episode Neither Equal Nor Servant: The Life of Betsey Stockton Cover

Neither Equal Nor Servant: The Life of Betsey Stockton

Born into slavery in Princeton, New Jersey, Betsey Stockton taught herself Latin and Greek in her enslaver's library, sailed to Hawaii as the first unmarried African American woman missionary in the Pacific, opened a school for common Hawaiians who weren't supposed to need one, then taught Indigenous children in Canada and Black children in Princeton for the rest of her life. Her missionary contract described her status in language that had to be invented: neither as an equal nor as a servant, but as a humble Christian friend. Harmonia explores what it means to practice fellowship across difference without waiting for the world to be fair first. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/neither-equal-nor-servant-life-betsey-stockton] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=380]

5. Juli 202625 min