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Life & Faith

Podcast af Centre for Public Christianity

engelsk

Historie & religion

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Growing up as the son of a diamond smuggler. The leaps of faith required for scientific discovery. An actress who hated Christians, then became one. Join us as we discover the surprising ways Christian faith interrogates and illuminates the world we live in.

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581 episoder

episode Richard Glover spent 26 years listening. Here's what he heard cover

Richard Glover spent 26 years listening. Here's what he heard

Author, radio host and columnist Richard Glover talks to Life & Faith about his career, the joys of radio and why ordinary life is so special. Richard Glover was the host of ABC Radio Sydney’s drive program for 26 years, retiring from that role at the end of 2024. He is the author of 18 books including 3 for kids. He has a regular Saturday column at the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age which he’s been doing for over thirty years. He started out as a cadet journo for the Herald and has been a foreign correspondent and news editor there. In all of his work – whether it be on the radio, his weekly column or the books he has written there is an inquisitiveness about the world and other people, a generosity of spirit and good humour. He really is a much loved figure in, especially Sydney’s public life. He speaks to Life & Faith about highlights of his radio career, why communication and humour have been so important to him and what things most nourish his soul. Explore: Richard Glover’s Website: https://www.richardglover.com.au/ [https://www.richardglover.com.au/]

I går - 49 min
episode How to choose well – and to live well – when we’re overwhelmed by choice, with Alan Noble cover

How to choose well – and to live well – when we’re overwhelmed by choice, with Alan Noble

In a world where we are inundated with options, it feels as though everything rides on making the right choice. Enter decision paralysis. LONG From TikTok influencers to productivity bros, there’s no shortage of people today doling out lifehacks. But there’s a difference between generalised advice from online gurus and the specific guidance we want for our lives – especially when we’re faced with weighty decisions, like what to do with our lives, where to live, how to push through a difficult time. Alan Noble, an Associate Professor of English at Oklahoma Baptist University and the author of To Live Well: Practical Wisdom for Moving Through Chaotic Times, has talked to many young people navigating such questions, and understands, firsthand, the anxiety of feeling adrift in a sea of options while also feeling pressured to make the right decision. In this interview with Life & Faith, Alan speaks into the existential overwhelm and choice paralysis people feel, what T.S. Eliot’s image of ‘a heap of broken images’ has in common with the scattered life advice on offer today, and what it would mean to revisit older notions of ‘virtue’ and ‘character’ to help us make sense of how we should live. We also speak with Sofia, Brodie, Jordan, and Ana. Each tells us about a significant life decision, or challenging circumstance, they’ve faced lately, and what they’ve learnt from the experience. Sofia, 22, and Brodie, 21, have transitioned from university study to the workplace. Jordan, 25, tells us about navigating a career setback. And Ana, 43, tells us how life took an unexpected turn when she became a newlywed at 40, and fell pregnant last year. Through their stories, we experience not only the difficulty of choosing well but grappling with uncertainty since, as Alan writes in To Live Well, ‘you can’t wait for certainty before you act’. Along the way, the stories of Ana, Jordan, Brodie, and Sofia each have something to teach us about being courageous – with ‘courage’ or ‘fortitude’ being one of the virtues. Explore Alan Noble’s To Live Well: Practical Wisdom for Moving Through Chaotic Times [https://www.amazon.com.au/Live-Well-Practical-Through-Chaotic/dp/1514002248] His other books On Getting Out of Bed: The Burden and Gift of Living [https://www.amazon.com.au/Getting-Out-Bed-Burden-Living-ebook/dp/B0BFRZ78S3/ref=books_amazonstores_desktop_mfs_aufs_ap_sc_dsk_2?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_w=fvlvL&content-id=amzn1.sym.7072d740-6577-4fd5-88cc-354e874e5d10&pf_rd_p=7072d740-6577-4fd5-88cc-354e874e5d10&pf_rd_r=358-1374768-6269364&pd_rd_wg=XCusS&pd_rd_r=41d63ce0-d640-49f6-b50b-450f4cf68926] You can sign up for his Substack newsletter here [https://substack.com/@oalannoble]

24. juni 2026 - 59 min
episode The Last Dirty Word: ‘Dependence’ cover

The Last Dirty Word: ‘Dependence’

We think we’re fully human when we’re independent of other people. We couldn’t be more wrong, says Leah Libresco Sargeant. Is dependence taboo? We may be happy to lend a hand to others, but we probably squirm at the idea of asking for help ourselves. In a world that prizes autonomy and independence, it feels almost shameful to be dependent. Which is partly why Leah Libresco Sargeant got pushback from her publisher about putting the ‘d’ word – dependence – in the title of her book The Dignity of Dependence: A Feminist Manifesto. (Actually, as she tells Life & Faith, every word in that title proved controversial). The word ‘dependence’ was especially tricky, says Sargeant, because we resist the idea of someone ‘taking from someone else’ without being able to pay them back. But this is the very idea Sargeant, a Catholic thinker and author, is trying to defend: ‘There are periods of our lives where we receive from others and where we can’t pay back, and that’s a normal period of a human life’. Sargeant points out that when we operate with a faulty anthropology – a false picture of the human – then the world only works for those who conform to that false image. If we believe that a full human life is an independent one, we’ll stigmatise dependence. But this is untrue, since every human begins life completely dependent on others. It also leaves out vast swathes of people – including women who, for a variety of reasons, are more exposed to the need of others. Which is partly why our conversation begins with the striking claim Sargeant makes on the first page of her book: ‘The world is the wrong shape for women’. Explore The Dignity of Dependence: A Feminist Manifesto [https://www.dymocks.com.au/the-dignity-of-dependence-by-leah-libresco-sargeant-9780268210335] Leah Libresco Sargeant’s Other Feminisms Substack newsletter [https://substack.com/@leahlibrescosargeant] Interview [https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/06/opinion/women-workplace-feminism-conservative.html] featuring Leah Libresco Sargeant in conversation with Helen Andrews on Ross Douthat’s podcast Interesting Times

10. juni 2026 - 38 min
episode The AI Revolution and the Human Future cover

The AI Revolution and the Human Future

Philosopher Meghan Sullivan on why Christianity has a vital role to play in helping us maintain our humanity in the face of AI. With the AI revolution upon us we all face great uncertainty about the future and what this technology will mean for our lives. There will be plenty that we can be grateful for, perhaps excited about. But there are serious concerns being raised as well. What will this technology mean for future employment, communities and how we understand our humanity? What do faith traditions, and particularly Christianity, have to contribute to this urgent discussion. Meghan Sullivan is a professor of philosopher at Notre Dame university in the U.S. and also the founding director of Notre Dame’s Institute for Ethics and the Common Good [https://ethics.nd.edu/]. Her institute recently received a very large grant to develop a faith-based approach to AI ethics. Here Meghan Sullivan speaks to Life & Faith about what concerns she has about AI, the ways it could go badly, but also why she is optimistic about a future with AI firmly in place. Explore: Notre Dame Institute for Ethics and the Common Good [https://ethics.nd.edu/] (ethics.nd.edu) The Good Life Method [https://www.amazon.com.au/Good-Life-Method-Reasoning-Questions/dp/1984880306]: Reasoning through the big questions of happiness, faith and meaning.

13. maj 2026 - 43 min
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