The Golden Thread

The Courage to Name What You See: Niketas Stethatos and the Age of Saints

27 min · I går
episode The Courage to Name What You See: Niketas Stethatos and the Age of Saints cover

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In eleventh century Constantinople, a monk named Niketas stepped out of the ancient Monastery of Stoudios and did something that earned him a name he would carry for the rest of his life. He told the truth about the Emperor --- publicly, clearly, and without apology. But that act of courage was only the beginning. Niketas spent his long life defending something far more important than political honesty: the living possibility that any human soul, in any age, can turn fully enough toward something greater than itself to be transformed by it. In a city and a century that were beginning to believe the age of saints was finished, Niketas wrote back. The door has not closed. It never has. This episode explores what a saint actually is --- across traditions, across centuries --- and asks what it means for a community to point at its highest aspiration made flesh, and in doing so, tell the truth about itself. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/courage-name-what-you-see-niketas-stethatos-and-age-saints] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=363]

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episode The Courage to Name What You See: Niketas Stethatos and the Age of Saints artwork

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