Episode 7: Worship, obedience and love
🎙️ Episode 7 — Love, Obedience & the Paradox of God with Simon Wilson
What is love when it can’t be commanded?
What is obedience when it isn’t submission?
And what happens when theology stops giving answers—and starts asking better questions?
In this episode, we’re joined by Simon Wilson [https://canterbury.academia.edu/SWilson], Senior Lecturer in Theology, Philosophy, and Religion at Canterbury Christ Church University, for a wide-ranging, lyrical conversation on love, worship, obedience, paradox, and mystery—as lived experiences rather than abstract doctrines.
Drawing from Christian mystical theology, Eastern Orthodox thought, philosophy, art, myth, and even pantomime (yes, really), we explore love not as sentiment or morality, but as eros—a deep, ontological yearning for communion. A force that does not erase otherness, but dances with it.
Along the way, we question:
*
* Whether love is union, relationship, or both at once
*
* Why paradox may be closer to truth than logic
*
* How obedience emerges from love rather than fear
*
* Why God, if taken seriously, refuses definition
*
* And whether suffering, devotion, and freedom are inseparable companions
This is not an episode that explains God.
It sits with God.
Listens.
Argues.
Laughs nervously.
And keeps going.
Perfect for listeners interested in:
philosophy of religion, Christian mysticism, Eastern Orthodox theology, love and paradox, faith and obedience, myth, art and spirituality, and alternative ways of knowing.
🔗 Useful Links & References
* Simon Wilson
Canterbury Christ Church University – Theology, Philosophy & Religion [https://www.canterbury.ac.uk/people/simon-wilson]
Centre for Kent History and Heritage [https://ckhh.org.uk/our-people/staff-profile/dr-simon-wilson]
* Gregory of Nyssa [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregory_of_Nyssa]
Early Christian theologian and mystic — concept of epektasis (endless longing toward God)
* Dionysius the Areopagite (Pseudo-Dionysius)
Mystical theology, divine mystery, and love as cosmic overflow
* Key Concepts Mentioned
* Eros, Agape, and ancient Greek understandings of love
* Paradox and apophatic (negative) theology
* Love as communion without absorption
* Faith as a way of knowing, not blind belief
* Recommended Reading
* The Life of Moses — Gregory of Nyssa [https://www.britannica.com/topic/Life-of-Moses]
* The Mystical Theology — Pseudo-Dionysius
* The Darkness of God — Denys Turner
If this episode unsettled you, good.
If it contradicts you, even better.
Leave a comment. Love demands response.