Associated Church Press Podcast

E5: Canadian Adventist Messenger with Adrianna Joi Lewis

37 min · 26 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio E5: Canadian Adventist Messenger with Adrianna Joi Lewis

Descripción

Rebecca talks with Adrianna Joi Lewis, editorial assistant for the Canadian Adventist Messenger and incoming board member of the Associated Church Press, about faith-based journalism, storytelling, and the evolving role of Christian media in Canada. Lewis shares her journey from aspiring teenage broadcaster to working in her dream role within Adventist communications, reflecting on a calling that led her away from mainstream journalism and toward ministry through media. Together, they discuss the mission of the Canadian Adventist Messenger, a monthly publication reaching Adventist households across Canada with stories of faith, service, and community. The conversation explores how the magazine balances print, digital media, and social platforms to connect with readers across generations, why storytelling remains central to ministry, and how Christian media can promote unity in an increasingly divided world. Lewis also reflects on the power of simple, hopeful communication rooted in compassion, authenticity, and a desire to make faith feel real and accessible to readers of all ages.

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7 episodios

Portada del episodio E7: Pope Leo's AI Encyclical with Chris Gunty of Catholic Review

E7: Pope Leo's AI Encyclical with Chris Gunty of Catholic Review

Rebecca talks with Chris Gunty, associate publisher of the Catholic Review, about Pope Leo XIV’s first encyclical and why the pontiff chose artificial intelligence as the focus of one of the Church’s most significant teaching documents. Together, they unpack what an encyclical is, why this one matters, and how Pope Leo is reframing the conversation around AI—not as a question of technology first, but of human dignity. Gunty explains how the Catholic Review is developing thoughtful practices for using AI in journalism while preserving the human judgment, creativity, and ethical discernment at the heart of reporting. The conversation explores where AI can be a helpful tool, where clear boundaries are needed, and why faith communities have an important role to play in shaping the moral questions surrounding emerging technologies. Rebecca and Chris also discuss the decline of religion reporting in mainstream media, the value of faith-informed journalism, and why keeping humanity at the center of technological change is a challenge that extends far beyond the newsroom.

30 de jun de 202639 min
Portada del episodio E6: Christian Novelist Jessica Brodie of South Carolina United Methodist Advocate

E6: Christian Novelist Jessica Brodie of South Carolina United Methodist Advocate

Rebecca talks with Jessica Brodie, editor of the South Carolina United Methodist Advocate and author of the Dahlia Christian fiction series, about the intersection of journalism, storytelling, and faith. As editor of one of the oldest continuously operating Methodist newspapers, Brodie shares how the Advocate has evolved over her sixteen years of leadership, balancing a print legacy with digital storytelling, video content, and new ways of engaging readers. The conversation explores how faith-based journalism serves communities during times of change, from denominational conflict to moments of renewal and hope. Brodie reflects on the stories readers are seeking today, the importance of highlighting ordinary people doing extraordinary work, and how those real-life encounters inspire the fictional world of Dahlia, South Carolina. Rebecca and Jessica also discuss the creative process behind writing Christian fiction, developing authentic characters, and weaving themes of grace, redemption, and community into compelling stories. Along the way, Brodie shares how her faith has deepened through years of telling the stories of others and why keeping Christ at the center continues to shape her work as both a journalist and a novelist.

9 de jun de 202647 min
Portada del episodio E5: Canadian Adventist Messenger with Adrianna Joi Lewis

E5: Canadian Adventist Messenger with Adrianna Joi Lewis

Rebecca talks with Adrianna Joi Lewis, editorial assistant for the Canadian Adventist Messenger and incoming board member of the Associated Church Press, about faith-based journalism, storytelling, and the evolving role of Christian media in Canada. Lewis shares her journey from aspiring teenage broadcaster to working in her dream role within Adventist communications, reflecting on a calling that led her away from mainstream journalism and toward ministry through media. Together, they discuss the mission of the Canadian Adventist Messenger, a monthly publication reaching Adventist households across Canada with stories of faith, service, and community. The conversation explores how the magazine balances print, digital media, and social platforms to connect with readers across generations, why storytelling remains central to ministry, and how Christian media can promote unity in an increasingly divided world. Lewis also reflects on the power of simple, hopeful communication rooted in compassion, authenticity, and a desire to make faith feel real and accessible to readers of all ages.

26 de may de 202637 min
Portada del episodio E4: Reaching Across Divides with Jason Byassee

E4: Reaching Across Divides with Jason Byassee

Rebecca talks with Jason Byassee, senior minister of Timothy Eaton Memorial Church in Toronto, about what it really means to reach across divides—within faith, culture, and community. Drawing from a career that spans academia, journalism, and pastoral ministry in both the U.S. and Canada, Byassee reflects on navigating tensions between traditions, identities, and institutions. They discuss the role of storytelling in ministry and journalism, why true neutrality may be a myth, and how faith communities can move beyond binaries to deeper understanding. From interfaith relationships to political and cultural divides, Byassee offers a perspective rooted in curiosity, humility, and the belief that the lines separating us are often more fragile—and more permeable—than they seem.

24 de mar de 202647 min