The Golden Thread

The Apostle of Joy: Philip Neri and the Practice of Delight

31 min · 4 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Apostle of Joy: Philip Neri and the Practice of Delight

Descripción

In the anxious, buttoned-up world of Counter-Reformation Rome, a cheerful priest named Philip Neri walked the streets every day with a book of jokes in his pocket. Not because everything was fine --- he had held enough suffering in his hands to have no illusions --- but because he had understood something the centuries keep forgetting: that joy is not a circumstance, not a temperament, not a reward for sufficient seriousness. It is a practice. Chosen daily, carried deliberately, available to anyone willing to pick it up. Harmonia tells the story of the man history calls the Apostle of Joy, and asks what it might mean to put something in your own pocket tomorrow morning. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/apostle-joy-philip-neri-and-practice-delight] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=348]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Golden Thread!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

100 episodios

episode The Chronicler and the Elephant artwork

The Chronicler and the Elephant

In 1255, an elephant arrived in London for the first time in over a thousand years, and a monk named Matthew Paris stood among the astonished crowd, then went home to draw it from memory. Harmonia uses this small, delightful moment to open a larger story about medieval chronicles and the monks who, page by costly page, decided what was worth recording for the future. Through Matthew's access to kings and his willingness to write honest, sometimes unflattering accounts, the episode explores why the powerful have always chosen to be part of the record rather than absent from it, and asks a pointed question for today: in a world where words cost nothing and are produced without end, who is still making the quiet choice to write down what is true enough to last? Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/chronicler-and-elephant] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=369]

Ayer20 min
episode The Canal That Ran Again: Ghazan Khan and the Faith to Rebuild artwork

The Canal That Ran Again: Ghazan Khan and the Faith to Rebuild

In this episode, Harmonia travels to Persia in the early 1300s, where a repaired irrigation canal becomes the doorway into the story of Ghazan Khan, the Mongol ruler whose conversion to Islam reshaped how he saw his responsibility to the land and people he governed. Through currency reform, fair taxation, and the patient rebuilding of water systems shattered by his ancestors' conquests, Ghazan modeled a kind of repair rooted not in grand gestures but in steady, faith-driven responsibility. Harmonia draws this thread forward to today, inviting listeners to see the broken and unfinished places in their own lives and world not as evidence of an ending, but as the next chapter still being written. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/canal-ran-again-ghazan-khan-and-faith-rebuild] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=368]

23 de jun de 202617 min
episode The Price of Silence: Charles Marshall and the Birth of Religious Freedom artwork

The Price of Silence: Charles Marshall and the Birth of Religious Freedom

In the summer of 1787, fifty-five men met behind closed windows in Philadelphia to build something the world had never seen before. Harmonia was in the room. She watched them come heartbreakingly close to getting it right --- and then watched them leave without the one protection that mattered most. To understand why that moment terrified her, she takes us back a century to England, and to a physician named Charles Marshall whose only crime was sitting in a room and praying. The story of the early Quakers is not a story of heroic resistance. It is a story of systematic, state-sanctioned cruelty directed at people who simply refused to let the government own their conscience. And it is the story of how that refusal crossed an ocean, built a city, and found its way into twenty-six words that changed what human governance could mean. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/price-silence-charles-marshall-and-birth-religious-freedom] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=367]

22 de jun de 202630 min
episode The Man Who Saw the Light: Symeon the New Theologian artwork

The Man Who Saw the Light: Symeon the New Theologian

In tenth-century Constantinople, a young man from the Byzantine nobility walked away from a promising court career after a chance encounter with an unordained monk --- and spent the next thirteen years living a double life, praying in secret while the city slept. Then the light came. Not as metaphor, not as feeling, not as theological proposition --- as event. Symeon the New Theologian would spend the rest of his life insisting on what he had seen, driving thirty monks to rebellion, surviving exile, and writing some of the most passionate spiritual poetry in Christian history. He died largely forgotten. One manuscript survived. Three centuries later, Gregory Palamas found it --- and the testimony of one stubborn man arrived exactly when the church needed it most. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/man-who-saw-light-symeon-new-theologian] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=366]

21 de jun de 202624 min