The Christian Jung

What Your Art, Dreams, and Imagination Reveal About the Shadow

22 min · 24. touko 2026
jakson What Your Art, Dreams, and Imagination Reveal About the Shadow kansikuva

Kuvaus

There is a scene from a film that has stayed with you for years. A recurring dream you stopped writing down. A painting, a song, a line from a novel that landed too hard the first time you encountered it and has been quietly waiting in the back of you ever since. You were taught these were distractions. You were taught the imagination was suspect. In this episode of The Christian Jung Podcast, Angela Meer argues that your soul has been speaking to you for years, and that Scripture has always known this. Half of the Bible is given in image, dream, vision, and parable. Joseph received the throne of Egypt through dreams (Genesis 41). Daniel received the architecture of empire through visions (Daniel 7). Joel prophesied that the Spirit at Pentecost would come with dreams and visions, and Peter quoted that promise on the first day of the Church (Joel 2:28; Acts 2:17). Jesus refused to teach in proposition: “He did not say anything to them without using a parable” (Mark 4:34). Angela walks through the Christian imagination as something older than Jung by fifteen centuries: the Desert Fathers’ nepsis (watchfulness of the heart), Ignatian imaginative contemplation, Hildegard of Bingen’s visionary fidelity, and the careful Christian adaptation of what Carl Jung called active imagination. She names the resistance most orthodox Christians feel about this language, and she answers it from Scripture. She also shares her own ongoing practice of illustrated dream journaling and explains, with specific recent dream images, why she draws her dreams instead of writing them. This is week four of the shadow arc, inside the larger work of The Christian Jung, a systematic theology of psychological wholeness for serious Christians whose orthodoxy is intact but whose inner life still needs healing. If you have ever wondered what to do with the images that have stayed with you for years, this episode is for you. Find this week’s free article on Substack at The Christian Jung. The Inner Room companion article teaches three Christian practices for learning to listen, in depth. Subscribe at The Christian Jung on Substack, or visit angelameer.com. Heal Deeply. Walk Holy. Show Notes (brief) Scripture passages discussed: - Genesis 37:5-11; 41:25-32 (Joseph’s dreams) - Daniel 7:1-14 (the vision of beasts and the Son of Man) - Joel 2:28 (the promise of dreams and visions) - Acts 2:17 (Peter at Pentecost) - Habakkuk 2:1-2 (“Write the vision and make it plain”) - Ezekiel 1 (the chariot vision) - Mark 4:34 (Jesus taught only in parables) - Mark 4:35-41 (the calming of the storm, the Ignatian exercise referenced) - Psalm 139:23 (“Search me, O God”) - Psalm 51:6 (wisdom in the inward parts) - Ephesians 3:16-17 (the inner being) - Colossians 1:15 (Christ, the image of the invisible God) Key terms (one-sentence definitions): - Active imagination: Carl Jung’s practice of engaging the images that arise from the unconscious; the Christian adaptation brings these images before God in prayer and keeps Christ as the interlocutor. - Visionary tradition: The long Christian tradition (Hildegard of Bingen, Julian of Norwich, John of Patmos, the prophets) of receiving theological knowing through image. - Imaginative contemplation: Ignatius of Loyola’s method of praying inside a Scripture scene by composing the place, entering the scene, and dialoguing with Christ. - Nepsis: The Desert Fathers’ practice of watchfulness of the heart, considered the foundation of all spiritual discernment. Resources mentioned: - Carl Jung, The Red Book (Liber Novus), the visionary journal Jung kept for nearly two decades - Ignatius of Loyola, The Spiritual Exercises, completed 1548 - Hildegard of Bingen, Scivias, her major visionary work - Hildegard of Bingen, Symphonia armonie celestium revelationum, source of the closing prayer (Spiritus sanctus vivificans) Keywords (for Buzzsprout SEO, 15 items) Christian shadow work, Christian dreams meaning, biblical dream interpretation, Jungian Christianity, Christian imagination, imaginative prayer, Ignatian contemplation Protestant, Christian active imagination, Hildegard of Bingen podcast, Christian visionary tradition, contemplative Christianity, Red Book Jung Christian, inner healing podcast, Christian depth psychology, Desert Fathers nepsis Tags (for Buzzsprout categorization, 7 items) Christianity, Jungian psychology, dreams, imagination, contemplative prayer, shadow work, Christian mysticism Links: - This week’s free article on Substack: The Christian Jung [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - The Inner Room paid article companion [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - angelameer.com [https://angelameer.com/] Heal Deeply. Walk Holy.

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jakson Your Shadow Is Not Only Where the Wounds Are. It Is Also Where the Gold Is. kansikuva

Your Shadow Is Not Only Where the Wounds Are. It Is Also Where the Gold Is.

For five episodes, the shadow has meant one thing: the dark room where you keep what you are ashamed of. This episode turns that over. The shadow is also where you buried the gold. In this episode of The Christian Jung Podcast, Angela Meer teaches the golden shadow, the part of the inner life that holds not your faults but your buried gifts, strengths, and aliveness. She walks through how a gift gets buried, almost never out of cruelty, usually out of the need to belong, and how people of faith then baptize the burial and call it humility. Scripture, she shows, refuses that name. In the parable of the talents the servant buries his gift and states his own reason plainly, “I was afraid” (Matthew 25:25), and the master is not pleased. Angela works through the way God calls people in Scripture, Gideon hailed as a mighty man of valor while he hides in a winepress (Judges 6:12), Moses and Jeremiah reaching for self-diminishment, and the consistent pattern: God names the gold first, while we can only see the hole we buried it in. She brings in Carl Jung’s observation that we hand our disowned gifts to the people we most admire, and his claim that intense admiration is often a map back to our own buried gold. The teaching is anchored by Catherine of Siena, the fourteenth-century mystic and reformer, and her line, “If you are what you should be, you will set all of Italy ablaze.” This episode includes a personal disclosure. Angela tells the story of her own buried gift: a childhood instinct for the supernatural, the miraculous, and the symbolic in Scripture that she was quietly taught was not serious, and that she buried in order to fit in with academic theology. It is the very gift, recovered, that her current work is built on. This is week six of the shadow arc, inside the larger work of The Christian Jung, a systematic theology of psychological wholeness for serious Christians whose orthodoxy is intact but whose inner life still needs healing. If you set a gift down years ago and have wondered about it ever since, this episode is for you. Find this week’s free article on Substack at The Christian Jung, and the Inner Room companion with the three practices for recovering a buried gift. Visit angelameer.com. Heal Deeply. Walk Holy. Show Notes (brief) Scripture passages discussed: •             Matthew 25:14-30 (the parable of the talents, especially 25:25) •             Matthew 5:14-16 (the lamp not hidden under a basket) •             Judges 6:12, 6:15 (Gideon, mighty man of valor) •             Exodus 3:11; 4:10 (Moses, “Who am I?”) •             Jeremiah 1:6 (“I am only a youth”) •             1 Timothy 4:14 and 2 Timothy 1:6 (do not neglect, and fan into flame, the gift) •             2 Corinthians 4:7 (treasure in jars of clay) Key terms (one sentence each): •             The golden shadow: the part of the unconscious that holds buried gifts and positive potential, not only repressed faults. •             Projection: the way we hand our own disowned qualities, including gifts, to other people, then admire or envy them for carrying it. •             False humility: the burial of a God-given gift, mistaken for modesty, which Scripture names as fear rather than virtue. Resources mentioned: •             Carl Jung on the golden shadow and projection, from his work in analytical psychology •             Catherine of Siena, Letter T368, and her Prayer to the Holy Spirit Links: •             This week’s free article on Substack: The Christian Jung [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] •             The Inner Room paid companion article [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] •             angelameer.com [https://angelameer.com] Heal Deeply. Walk Holy. Keywords (15) golden shadow, positive shadow, buried gifts, Christian shadow work, the parable of the talents, false humility, Jungian Christianity, Carl Jung projection, calling and gifts, fan into flame the gift, Christian depth psychology, contemplative Christianity, Catherine of Siena, spiritual gifts Christian, Christian inner healing podcast Tags (7) Christianity, Jungian psychology, shadow work, spiritual gifts, spiritual formation, calling, Christian podcast Links: - This week’s free article on Substack: The Christian Jung [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - The Inner Room paid article companion [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - angelameer.com [https://angelameer.com/] Heal Deeply. Walk Holy.

7. kesä 202619 min
jakson The Contract You Never Signed Is Still Draining You kansikuva

The Contract You Never Signed Is Still Draining You

There is a version of you that everyone has met, and almost no one has questioned. The capable one. The one who is fine. The one who holds it, carries it, and does not need anything back. And it is tired in a way that sleep does not reach. In this episode of The Christian Jung Podcast, Angela Meer names the contract underneath that tiredness, the unwritten agreement that says you will be the strong one, the one who does not need. Most of us never signed it. It was drafted long before we could read it, by a family, a church, a wound, a season when being seen genuinely was not safe. And we have been paying on it ever since. Angela reframes the Pharisee spirit, not as the villain of the Gospels, but as a reflex that lives in the most sincere believers, the part of us that learned the safest way to be a Christian is to be seen doing it well. She traces the fear of being seen back to its origin in Scripture, the hiding that began in the garden (Genesis 3:8-10), and works through Jesus’ words on the cup clean only on the outside (Matthew 23:25-28), the Pharisee and the tax collector (Luke 18:9-14), and the God who looks on the heart rather than the outward appearance (1 Samuel 16:7). She connects this to what Carl Jung called the persona, the mask that is necessary for ordinary life but dangerous when we wear it so long that we lose the self underneath. This episode includes a personal disclosure. Angela speaks openly, as a pastor, about the unwritten contract between a congregation and the one who pastors it, what it has cost her, and the shift she is in the middle of right now: the recognition that she is not responsible for the contract, but is responsible for the long-term, sustainable health of her own soul. She also names how this same shadow shows up for people who are not pastors at all, but who quietly pastor everyone in their sphere. The episode closes with a prayer from Julian of Norwich, the fourteenth-century anchoress whose Revelations of Divine Love is a vision of a God who beholds us with love rather than blame. This is week five of the shadow arc, inside the larger work of The Christian Jung, a systematic theology of psychological wholeness for serious Christians whose orthodoxy is intact but whose inner life still needs healing. If you are tired in a way that sleep does not reach, this episode is for you. Find this week’s free article on Substack at The Christian Jung, and the Inner Room companion with the three practices in full. Visit angelameer.com. Heal Deeply. Walk Holy. Show Notes (brief) Scripture passages discussed: •             Genesis 3:8-10 (the first hiding) •             Matthew 6:1 (righteousness practiced to be seen) •             Matthew 23:25-28 (the cup clean only on the outside, whitewashed tombs) •             Luke 18:9-14 (the Pharisee and the tax collector) •             Psalm 139:1-7, 23-24 (the God who has searched and known us) •             1 Samuel 16:7 (the Lord looks on the heart) •             2 Corinthians 12:9 (power made perfect in weakness) Key terms (one sentence each): •             Persona: Carl Jung’s term for the mask we present to the world, necessary for ordinary life and dangerous only when we identify with it so completely that we lose the self underneath. •             The Pharisee spirit: not a category of villain, but a reflex in sincere believers, the part of us that learned to perform righteousness in order to be safely seen. •             The fear of being seen: the oldest reflex in Scripture, first shown in Adam and Eve hiding in the garden. Resources mentioned: •             Carl Jung on the persona, from his work in analytical psychology •             Julian of Norwich, Revelations of Divine Love Links: •             This week’s free article on Substack: The Christian Jung [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] •             The Inner Room paid companion article [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] •             angelameer.com [https://angelameer.com] Heal Deeply. Walk Holy. Keywords (15) Christian fear of being seen, Pharisee spirit, Christian people pleasing, the persona Jung, Christian performance exhaustion, ministry burnout, pastor burnout, being known by God, Christian shadow work, Jungian Christianity, contemplative Christianity, Christian depth psychology, Julian of Norwich, hiding from God, Christian inner healing podcast Tags (7) Christianity, Jungian psychology, shadow work, spiritual formation, contemplative prayer, ministry, Christian podcast Links: - This week’s free article on Substack: The Christian Jung [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - The Inner Room paid article companion [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - angelameer.com [https://angelameer.com/] Heal Deeply. Walk Holy.

31. touko 202620 min
jakson What Your Art, Dreams, and Imagination Reveal About the Shadow kansikuva

What Your Art, Dreams, and Imagination Reveal About the Shadow

There is a scene from a film that has stayed with you for years. A recurring dream you stopped writing down. A painting, a song, a line from a novel that landed too hard the first time you encountered it and has been quietly waiting in the back of you ever since. You were taught these were distractions. You were taught the imagination was suspect. In this episode of The Christian Jung Podcast, Angela Meer argues that your soul has been speaking to you for years, and that Scripture has always known this. Half of the Bible is given in image, dream, vision, and parable. Joseph received the throne of Egypt through dreams (Genesis 41). Daniel received the architecture of empire through visions (Daniel 7). Joel prophesied that the Spirit at Pentecost would come with dreams and visions, and Peter quoted that promise on the first day of the Church (Joel 2:28; Acts 2:17). Jesus refused to teach in proposition: “He did not say anything to them without using a parable” (Mark 4:34). Angela walks through the Christian imagination as something older than Jung by fifteen centuries: the Desert Fathers’ nepsis (watchfulness of the heart), Ignatian imaginative contemplation, Hildegard of Bingen’s visionary fidelity, and the careful Christian adaptation of what Carl Jung called active imagination. She names the resistance most orthodox Christians feel about this language, and she answers it from Scripture. She also shares her own ongoing practice of illustrated dream journaling and explains, with specific recent dream images, why she draws her dreams instead of writing them. This is week four of the shadow arc, inside the larger work of The Christian Jung, a systematic theology of psychological wholeness for serious Christians whose orthodoxy is intact but whose inner life still needs healing. If you have ever wondered what to do with the images that have stayed with you for years, this episode is for you. Find this week’s free article on Substack at The Christian Jung. The Inner Room companion article teaches three Christian practices for learning to listen, in depth. Subscribe at The Christian Jung on Substack, or visit angelameer.com. Heal Deeply. Walk Holy. Show Notes (brief) Scripture passages discussed: - Genesis 37:5-11; 41:25-32 (Joseph’s dreams) - Daniel 7:1-14 (the vision of beasts and the Son of Man) - Joel 2:28 (the promise of dreams and visions) - Acts 2:17 (Peter at Pentecost) - Habakkuk 2:1-2 (“Write the vision and make it plain”) - Ezekiel 1 (the chariot vision) - Mark 4:34 (Jesus taught only in parables) - Mark 4:35-41 (the calming of the storm, the Ignatian exercise referenced) - Psalm 139:23 (“Search me, O God”) - Psalm 51:6 (wisdom in the inward parts) - Ephesians 3:16-17 (the inner being) - Colossians 1:15 (Christ, the image of the invisible God) Key terms (one-sentence definitions): - Active imagination: Carl Jung’s practice of engaging the images that arise from the unconscious; the Christian adaptation brings these images before God in prayer and keeps Christ as the interlocutor. - Visionary tradition: The long Christian tradition (Hildegard of Bingen, Julian of Norwich, John of Patmos, the prophets) of receiving theological knowing through image. - Imaginative contemplation: Ignatius of Loyola’s method of praying inside a Scripture scene by composing the place, entering the scene, and dialoguing with Christ. - Nepsis: The Desert Fathers’ practice of watchfulness of the heart, considered the foundation of all spiritual discernment. Resources mentioned: - Carl Jung, The Red Book (Liber Novus), the visionary journal Jung kept for nearly two decades - Ignatius of Loyola, The Spiritual Exercises, completed 1548 - Hildegard of Bingen, Scivias, her major visionary work - Hildegard of Bingen, Symphonia armonie celestium revelationum, source of the closing prayer (Spiritus sanctus vivificans) Keywords (for Buzzsprout SEO, 15 items) Christian shadow work, Christian dreams meaning, biblical dream interpretation, Jungian Christianity, Christian imagination, imaginative prayer, Ignatian contemplation Protestant, Christian active imagination, Hildegard of Bingen podcast, Christian visionary tradition, contemplative Christianity, Red Book Jung Christian, inner healing podcast, Christian depth psychology, Desert Fathers nepsis Tags (for Buzzsprout categorization, 7 items) Christianity, Jungian psychology, dreams, imagination, contemplative prayer, shadow work, Christian mysticism Links: - This week’s free article on Substack: The Christian Jung [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - The Inner Room paid article companion [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - angelameer.com [https://angelameer.com/] Heal Deeply. Walk Holy.

24. touko 202622 min
jakson Why Good Christians Become Strangers to Themselves kansikuva

Why Good Christians Become Strangers to Themselves

There is a kind of Christian who can recite the Gospel with precision, lead a small group through Romans, weep at worship, and still be a complete stranger to themselves. This episode is for that Christian. The serious one. The one who has read deeply, prayed long, served quietly, and is now sitting with a question they cannot quite ask out loud. Why does my soul feel so far from me when I am working this hard to be near God? In Episode 3, Angela Meer opens the shadow arc of The Christian Jung by naming something many sincere Christians have felt for years without having the words for it. The way certain forms of faith, especially the most devout forms, can quietly require us to leave the very soul Christ came to heal. We trace the pattern of hyper-spiritualization, the slow making of the false self, the cost of a holiness that hides the body and silences the emotion, and the way Jesus Himself named this in His confrontation with the religious leaders of His day. This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me (Matthew 15:8). The Greek word for hypocrite in that passage is hypokrites, a stage actor. Jesus was not naming bad doctrine. He was naming distance from the self. Angela shares her own story for the first time on the podcast. Thirty years of preaching emotional suppression as if it were spiritual maturity, and what that teaching cost her as a woman with Cerebral Palsy trying to live faithfully inside a body she had not been allowed to feel. We turn to Carl Jung, specifically his concept of the shadow as developed in Memories, Dreams, Reflections, and we test it against Psalm 139:23-24, where David asks God into the unsearched parts of himself. We close with three teaching points the listener can carry through the week. This is the opening movement of an eight-episode arc on shadow, dreams, symbol, the Pharisee spirit, the positive shadow, inner resistance, Jesus and the hidden self, and the cost and gift of becoming whole. If you have ever suspected that your faith is asking you to be smaller than the soul God actually made, this is the episode that begins to name why, and what to do about it. Subscribe to The Christian Jung on Substack for the written companion and the Inner Room paid teaching. Full show notes and the article are at angelameer.com. Heal Deeply. Walk Holy. --- Scripture covered * Matthew 15:7-8 (Isaiah's prophecy on lips and heart) * Psalm 51:6 (truth in the inward being) * Psalm 139:23-24 (search me, O God) * Ephesians 3:17-18 (the breadth, length, height, and depth) * Psalm 56:8 (You have kept count of my tossings) Key terms defined * Hyper-spiritualization: the practice of turning every interior experience into a moral verdict before it can become an honest one. * False self: the curated, performance-shaped identity formed when the actual interior life has been deemed unsafe or unspiritual. * Shadow (Jung): everything about ourselves we have decided we are not allowed to be. Not the same as sin. * Nepsis (watchfulness): the Desert Fathers' practice of gentle, undefended attention to what is moving inside us. * Hypokrites (Greek): stage actor. The word Jesus used for the religious leaders whose lips and hearts had separated. Links * Free Substack article: The Christian Jung on Substack * The Inner Room (paid teaching with three practices): subscribe on Substack * Website: angelameer.com Heal Deeply. Walk Holy. Links: - This week’s free article on Substack: The Christian Jung [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - The Inner Room paid article companion [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - angelameer.com [https://angelameer.com/] Heal Deeply. Walk Holy.

17. touko 202623 min
jakson S2 E3: When Your Shadow Speaks Through Your Judgment kansikuva

S2 E3: When Your Shadow Speaks Through Your Judgment

The person you cannot stop judging is the most accurate map to your own buried self that you currently have. Most of us are walking around with a precision instrument we have been taught to read backwards. This week on The Christian Jung Podcast, we go into projection: the psychological mechanism by which the shadow speaks through your judgment of others. Carl Jung described it across his career, with the most concentrated treatment in Aion (1951). Jesus described it first, and with surgical precision, in Matthew 7:3-5: the speck and the plank. They are not metaphors for general humility. They are a diagnostic claim about how the human heart works. We work through three signatures by which projection surfaces in Christian life: the trait that disgusts you most viscerally, the person you cannot pray for honestly, and the repeated moral confrontation. We anchor in Matthew 7, Romans 2:1, James 4:11-12, and Galatians 6:1. I share a personal story from my own ministry experience: a woman I could not stop judging, whose boldness I despised, until I recognized that the boldness was the most thoroughly buried part of me, and her presence in my awareness was the unintentional service of carrying my own disowned material in front of me. The Inner Room companion piece this week gives you a contemplative protocol for working with your judgments as raw material for formation, with three practices drawn from the Hesychast, Ignatian, and Christian journaling traditions. Available to paid subscribers at angelameer.com/substack. SHOW NOTES Scripture References: Matthew 7:3-5 (the speck and the plank); Romans 2:1 (judgment as self-revelation); James 4:11-12 (the one Lawgiver and Judge); Galatians 5:17 (flesh and spirit at war within); Galatians 6:1 (restoring gently, watching yourself); Jeremiah 17:9 (the heart deceitful); Psalm 51:6 (truth in the inward parts); Psalm 139:23-24 (search me, O God); John 10:10 (abundant life, perissos in Greek); John 17:17 (sanctify them by the truth); 1 Thessalonians 5:23 (whole spirit, soul, and body). Key Terms: Projection (Jungian) is the psychological mechanism by which the contents of the unconscious are perceived as belonging to someone else. Surgical in its accuracy. The shadow's primary mode of self-expression. The Plank is Jesus's name (Matthew 7:3-5) for the corresponding interior wound that produces the heat of judgment we direct at others. The Examen is the Ignatian daily review practice; adapted for projection work to surface where the shadow exited that day. Nepsis is the Hesychast Greek term for watchfulness; the somatic foundation of contemplative attention. Links: Free Substack article angelameer.com/substack | Inner Room (paid) angelameer.com/substack | Prophetic Hubs angelameer.com/hub | Website angelameer.com Subscribe to The Christian Jung on Substack for weekly articles, and find show notes and resources at angelameer.com. Heal Deeply. Walk Holy. Links: - This week’s free article on Substack: The Christian Jung [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - The Inner Room paid article companion [file:///C:/Users/angel/OneDrive/Desktop/LINK] - angelameer.com [https://angelameer.com/] Heal Deeply. Walk Holy.

10. touko 202619 min