The Golden Thread

The Apostle of Charity: How Vincent de Paul Organized Love

23 min · I går
episode The Apostle of Charity: How Vincent de Paul Organized Love cover

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In the muddy streets of 17th century Paris, a peasant-born priest named Vincent de Paul looked at the suffering around him and decided that goodwill alone was not enough. Captured by pirates, sold into slavery, and broken open by a dying man's confession, Vincent emerged with a radical conviction: that love is a verb, and verbs need structure to sustain them. He built the Congregation of the Mission, co-founded the Daughters of Charity with Louise de Marillac, and created what was effectively the first professional humanitarian organization in European history. Two centuries later, a young student named Frdric Ozanam named his new society after Vincent --- and that society now operates in 155 countries with over a million and a half volunteers. Somewhere near you, right now, it is still running. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/apostle-charity-how-vincent-de-paul-organized-love] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=349]

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episode The Apostle of Charity: How Vincent de Paul Organized Love cover

The Apostle of Charity: How Vincent de Paul Organized Love

In the muddy streets of 17th century Paris, a peasant-born priest named Vincent de Paul looked at the suffering around him and decided that goodwill alone was not enough. Captured by pirates, sold into slavery, and broken open by a dying man's confession, Vincent emerged with a radical conviction: that love is a verb, and verbs need structure to sustain them. He built the Congregation of the Mission, co-founded the Daughters of Charity with Louise de Marillac, and created what was effectively the first professional humanitarian organization in European history. Two centuries later, a young student named Frdric Ozanam named his new society after Vincent --- and that society now operates in 155 countries with over a million and a half volunteers. Somewhere near you, right now, it is still running. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/apostle-charity-how-vincent-de-paul-organized-love] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=349]

I går23 min
episode The Apostle of Joy: Philip Neri and the Practice of Delight cover

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

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]

4. juni 202631 min
episode The Voice That Would Not Be Silenced: The Martyrs of Karka cover

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In the summer of 447, three men from a small village near the ancient city of Karka in Mesopotamia were killed for refusing to renounce their faith. Their names were Simon, Abraham, and Ma'na. Almost no one remembers them. But the community they died for --- one of the oldest continuously Christian communities in the world --- is still here, still singing its liturgy in Aramaic, the language of ancient Mesopotamia. Harmonia traces the story of the Church of the East from the persecutions of Yazdegerd II through sixteen centuries of survival, arriving at the Nineveh Plain in 2014 and asking a question as old as empire: why does the powerful so often fear the prayers of the small? Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/voice-would-not-be-silenced-martyrs-karka] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=347]

3. juni 202628 min
episode O God, Set the Prisoners Free --- Ludwig Haetzer and the Four Layers of Liberation cover

O God, Set the Prisoners Free --- Ludwig Haetzer and the Four Layers of Liberation

Ludwig Haetzer was a young Swiss reformer who spent his short life pulling at every container the sacred had been locked inside --- images, sacraments, doctrine, and finally the Trinity itself. Working as a corrector at a printing press in 1520s Germany, he stamped the same motto on every tract and translation he ever published: O God, set the prisoners free. Harmonia walks through the four layers of what that prayer actually meant --- and invites the listener to find where they fit. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/o-god-set-prisoners-free-ludwig-haetzer-and-four-layers-liberation] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=346]

2. juni 202626 min
episode The Vocabulary of a New World: Helena Blavatsky and the Language We Are Still Building cover

The Vocabulary of a New World: Helena Blavatsky and the Language We Are Still Building

In a gaslit New York parlor in 1875, a large, loud, utterly impossible Russian woman held a room full of skeptical Americans completely still. Helena Blavatsky was controversial, frequently dishonest, and sometimes flat-out wrong. She was also one of the most consequential figures in the spiritual history of the modern world. Harmonia reflects on how Blavatsky felt the gap between a world that was becoming one world and the vocabulary available to describe it, and how her imperfect, grandly improvised attempt to fill that gap sent ripples far beyond anything she could have foreseen or intended. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/vocabulary-new-world-helena-blavatsky-and-language-we-are-still-building] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=345]

1. juni 202622 min