Styled Clean: From Toxins to Truth One Thread at at Time
What does it mean to truly belong to the earth — and how does that change the way we live, consume, and create? In this episode of Style Clean, Kathleen sits down with Forrest Inslee, longtime leader at Circlewood, a faith-based nonprofit dedicated to helping churches and communities develop greener faith practices and a theology that puts creation care at the center. Forrest hosts the Earth Keepers Podcast and teaches at the Seminary of the Wild Earth. Together, they explore how a "rewilded heart" can transform our daily choices — including the clothes we buy — and why reconnecting to the land isn't just good environmentalism, it's a spiritual practice. Guest: Forrest Inslee — leader at Circlewood [https://circlewood.org/], host of the Earth Keepers Podcast, and professor of community development with a focus on creation care and faith. In This Episode: * How Circlewood serves diverse church communities in developing creation care practices and a holistic theology * Rachel's story: rescuing earthworms as a profound spiritual practice — and what it reveals about our disconnection from the natural world * The concept of "paying attention to story" — learning the human, ecological, Indigenous, and cultural history of the place you live * Why lasting change starts with your why — rooting practical eco-decisions in a clear internal value system * The "rewilded heart": letting your inner transformation guide sustainable choices rather than trying to do everything at once * Resistance to creation care — both cultural and internal — and why community is the key to moving through it * The evangelical church's history of anthropocentrism and how Forrest worked his way toward a more creation-centered spirituality * The Celtic Christian tradition's "two books of revelation": scripture and nature * How the legacy of missions-focused community development often ignores environmental impact — and why that needs to change * Indigenous wisdom, decolonization of worldview, and learning from communities with more grace for slow, steady change * Practical first steps: go outside, plant a tomato, form a relationship with a spring — and let that be the bridge Resources Mentioned: * Earth Keepers Podcast [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/earthkeepers-a-circlewood-podcast-on-creation-care/id1503271817] — * Ecological Disciple [https://www.ecodisciple.com/] — Circlewood's online journal * Christine Sine's Substack: Walking in Wonder [https://christinesine.substack.com/?utm_source=sidestack.io&utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=directory] * Randy Woodley's books and Substack [https://rwoodley7.substack.com/?utm_source=sidestack.io&utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=directory] * Arocha USA [https://arocha.org/en/] — Churches of Restoration program * People Plant with Purpose — TEN curriculum [https://plantwithpurpose.org/?s=TEN+curriculum] (free for churches) * The Wild Church movement [https://www.victorialoorz.com/](co-founded by Victoria Lourdes) * Eileen Fisher [https://www.eileenfisher.com/a-sustainable-life/first-life.html] — sustainable fashion design Themes: Creation care • Faith & sustainability • Rewilded heart • Slow living • Ethical consumption • Spiritual practice • Indigenous wisdom • Fashion & the earth
13 episodios
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