The Golden Thread

The Moon Before the Sun

26 min · Gisteren
aflevering The Moon Before the Sun artwork

Beschrijving

In 945, a Viking-born princess named Olga became regent of Kievan Rus' after her husband was murdered by a neighboring tribe. She answered that murder with a revenge so total it passed into legend --- including a story about sparrows carrying fire home to a burning city that has been told for a thousand years. But the more important fire Olga carried was a quieter one. A decade after the siege, she traveled to Constantinople and returned baptized --- the first ruler of her land to convert to Christianity. Her son refused to follow. Her mission, by every visible measure, looked like failure when she died in 969. Thirty years later, her grandson Vladimir made Christianity the state religion of Kievan Rus', in an echo of what Constantine had done six centuries earlier at Nicaea. This episode explores the pattern that repeats itself across civilizations and centuries --- the single turned conscience that prepares the ground for a transformation it will not live to see --- and asks what it means to hold your place on the arc of history in a world that has not yet caught up to what you are carrying. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/moon-sun] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=378]

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Alle afleveringen

100 afleveringen

aflevering The Moon Before the Sun artwork

The Moon Before the Sun

In 945, a Viking-born princess named Olga became regent of Kievan Rus' after her husband was murdered by a neighboring tribe. She answered that murder with a revenge so total it passed into legend --- including a story about sparrows carrying fire home to a burning city that has been told for a thousand years. But the more important fire Olga carried was a quieter one. A decade after the siege, she traveled to Constantinople and returned baptized --- the first ruler of her land to convert to Christianity. Her son refused to follow. Her mission, by every visible measure, looked like failure when she died in 969. Thirty years later, her grandson Vladimir made Christianity the state religion of Kievan Rus', in an echo of what Constantine had done six centuries earlier at Nicaea. This episode explores the pattern that repeats itself across civilizations and centuries --- the single turned conscience that prepares the ground for a transformation it will not live to see --- and asks what it means to hold your place on the arc of history in a world that has not yet caught up to what you are carrying. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/moon-sun] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=378]

Gisteren26 min
aflevering Standing as witness to justice artwork

Standing as witness to justice

In 1656, a Quaker schoolteacher from Bristol named Barbara Blaugdone found herself on a storm-tossed ship in the Irish Sea, surrounded by frightened men who had decided she was the cause of their troubles. She was not thrown overboard. But that moment captures something essential about who Barbara was --- a woman who spent fifty years seeing injustice clearly, identifying who had the power to change it, and going to stand in front of that person and say so. She was whipped, imprisoned, banished, and fined. She kept going back. This episode explores the spiritual practice of witness --- what it costs, what it changes, and who is carrying it forward in your world right now. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/standing-witness-justice] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=377]

2 jul 202624 min
aflevering The Girl Whose Name Was Written Down artwork

The Girl Whose Name Was Written Down

In 1894 San Francisco, a young girl named Tien Fuh Wu was carried out of a gambling den on Jackson Street, covered in burns, with no birthday, no papers, and no legal existence the world was prepared to recognize. She had been sold by her father, smuggled across an ocean, and absorbed into a system so normalized it barely registered as cruelty. What happened next --- what she did with the life she was given back --- is a story about the most radical act a human being can perform: insisting, in the face of everything, that every person counts. Narrated by Harmonia, who was there, and who has never forgotten. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/girl-whose-name-was-written-down] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=376]

1 jul 202627 min
aflevering The Woman Who Built Her Own Tomb: Sayyida Nafisa and the Weight of True Authority artwork

The Woman Who Built Her Own Tomb: Sayyida Nafisa and the Weight of True Authority

In ninth century Cairo, a woman descended from the Prophet's household built a tomb within her own home and prayed in it daily while still alive. Sayyida Nafisa was a scholar of hadith whose learning drew students from across the known world --- including al-Shafi'i, founder of one of the four great schools of Sunni jurisprudence, who requested that she lead his funeral prayer. Her story is a clear-eyed demonstration that inherited privilege and genuine authority are not the same thing, and that the distance between them is something each of us has to fill ourselves. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/woman-who-built-her-own-tomb-sayyida-nafisa-and-weight-true-authority] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=375]

30 jun 202618 min
aflevering The Woman Who Would Not Look Away artwork

The Woman Who Would Not Look Away

In 1880, a woman named Anna Kingsford walked across a stage in Paris to receive a medical degree that had taken six years to earn in an institution that never quite believed she belonged there. She was the only woman in the room. She was also the only graduate who had completed the entire curriculum without harming a single living creature. Anna Kingsford was a Victorian mystic, a medical doctor, a vegetarian pioneer, and an animal welfare advocate who spent her short life insisting on something the world was not yet ready to hear: that science and conscience are not opposing forces to be balanced against each other, but part of the same pursuit of the same reality. She died at forty-one, largely forgotten. The world she helped build caught up anyway. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/woman-who-would-not-look-away] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=374]

29 jun 202629 min