Episodes
Thursday Apr 07, 2022
REBROADCAST: The Cost of Sacrifice
Thursday Apr 07, 2022
Thursday Apr 07, 2022
To sacrifice for Queen and country is one thing, but would you lay down your life for an enemy?
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This week we are repeating an episode that first aired in 2017 when, like this year, Easter and Anzac Day were very close together.
“Australian service men and women serve for their Queen, their country and their comrades. They do that willingly, and they do that well. But Christ laid down his life for his enemies, which is just an incredible thing to do when I think about it.”
As a member of the Australian Defence Force, and a Christian, Colonel Craig Bickell is all too familiar with the reality – and cost – of sacrifice.
In this episode, we asked him about Easter and Anzac Day, what Christian faith has to offer the profession of arms, and how he remains hopeful even in the face of the darker side of humanity. Also, he shares his own journey of faith involving a girl, warrior’s guilt, and a stained-glass window.
Thursday Mar 31, 2022
A Good Look in the Mirror
Thursday Mar 31, 2022
Thursday Mar 31, 2022
The Enneagram helps us ask questions like: who am I, and is who I am good?
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I strive for perfection. I am prepared for any disaster. I seek out experiences that I know will make me feel happy or excited.
Have you heard people say “I’m a seven” or “oh, that’s because you’re a five” … if you’re not familiar with the Enneagram, a model which describes people in terms of nine interrelated personality types, that will sound like gibberish. And if you’re into the Enneagram, you’re probably very into it!
In this episode of Life & Faith, the CPX team venture into the world of the Enneagram. Simon Smart invites Justine Toh, Natasha Moore, and producer Allan Dowthwaite to take the test, find out their types, and re-examine what they think they know about themselves and their relationships. And Sandra Van Opstal, author of Forty Days on Being an Eight, explains how understanding herself as a “Challenger” has changed her approach to advocacy, parenting, and her own sense of self.
“The Enneagram’s main focus as I understand it is to help us understand our motivations – what's happening on the inside. And so for me, I'm asking the question: who am I, and why do I do what I do? They're questions of intention, questions of identity. Way beyond any label someone could put on us is the question of who are we, and why were we created this way?”
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Explore:
Check out the Enneagram Daily Reflections series from IVP
Take the Enneagram test from Truity
Thursday Mar 24, 2022
Poetic License
Thursday Mar 24, 2022
Thursday Mar 24, 2022
A plumber, a pastor, and a pilgrim forge poems out of what’s right in front of them.
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She will keep you like she keeps the Sabbath.
Did you know that 21 March is World Poetry Day? Do you … care?
In this episode of Life & Faith, we speak to three poets about why they write poetry, and find out how intimately linked to real life their words actually are.
Sit back and enjoy a feast for your ears as Erin Martine Sessions, Drew Jackson, and Jonathan McKeown bring you poems they’ve written about (respectively) an ancient city; about mass incarceration and the fight for justice; about mushrooms and motherhood.
From very different starting points, all three wrestle to give words to the realities of the world around them - however beautiful, overwhelming, devastating, infuriating, or even repulsive.
“Plumbing has really given me a physical connection to both work and my own body that has forced me to come to some kind of reconciliation between this flighty mental side that just wants to remove itself from all the awkward matter and stuff that you have to deal with in the physical world at times … there's a lot of very physically disgusting stuff plumbers get to deal with on a daily basis. So for me, working out some kind of synthesis, which I think is what selfhood is really about … to do that in your own experience is I think part of the process of becoming the self that you are.”
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Explore:
Read more of Erin’s poetry
Check out Drew’s book God Speaks Through Wombs
Check out Jono’s book Genesis
Thursday Mar 17, 2022
Throne and Altar
Thursday Mar 17, 2022
Thursday Mar 17, 2022
From Roman emperors to modern PMs, Life & Faith tackles the fraught relationship between church and state.
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“At the end of the day I am quite happy that the throne-and-altar accommodation was shattered, and that the church does not wield that kind of power.”
Dust-ups between religion and government are rarely out of the news for long. Sometimes church and state seem too cosy, sometimes they’re fiercely at odds. What has this relationship looked like, and how should it look?
In this episode of Life & Faith, Simon Smart and Natasha Moore trek back to the dramatic beginnings of the church-and-state relationship in the West with Emperor Constantine, make a brief stop among the medieval heights of Christendom, and consider some wisdom for all of us living in a post-Christendom world.
All brought to you from some of our favourite and most eminent voices on the topic: Miroslav Volf (Yale), Teresa Morgan (Oxford), Nick Spencer (Theos), David Bentley Hart, and more. Along with cameo appearances from the perennial classic Yes Prime Minister.
“So the ideal candidate from the Church of England’s point of view would be a cross between and socialite and a socialist?”
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Explore:
Sir Humphrey explains about The Church of England | Yes Prime Minister
Miroslav Volf, On private Christianity [NEEDS LINK]
Teresa Morgan, On the Emperor’s new religion
Teresa Morgan, On the conversion of the Empire
Teresa Morgan, On the double-edged sword, power
Sarah Coakley, On lament
Nick Spencer, On popes and power
David Bentley Hart, On minority Christianity
Joel Edwards, On speaking up
Craig Calhoun, On doubt and certainty
Browse For the Love of God: The Interviews
Thursday Mar 10, 2022
Burnout
Thursday Mar 10, 2022
Thursday Mar 10, 2022
Feel exhausted, cynical, and utterly ineffective at work? There’s a cure for what ails you.
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Jonathan Malesic had always dreamed of being a college professor. The reality, however, didn’t match up to his expectations. It got to the point where he found it difficult to drag himself out of bed to teach a class. Nothing seemed to help: therapy, medication, even extended leave.
So he quit.
Obviously, that’s not the solution for everyone. But in his new book The End of Burnout: Why work drains us and how to build better lives, Malesic reflects on his own experience as well as our “burnout culture” that primes us for exhaustion.
In this interview on Life & Faith, Malesic describes that culture as a toxic combination of deteriorating working conditions – think stagnant wages, the gig economy, the decline of union membership – as well as our overinvestment in work as a source of meaning and purpose (“do what you love”). Then there’s the “badge of honour” in being a “work martyr” – someone so committed to work they’re prepared to sacrifice themselves to the cause.
To plot a path out of burnout, Malesic turns to unlikely sources – like the ora et labora (prayer and work) rhythms of Benedictine monks at Christ in the Desert Monastery in New Mexico. There, the monks tame the “demon of work” by subordinating it to their higher callings.
If you’ve ever felt demoralised about your job, this is an interview that will name your spiritual ills and convince you that there is more to life than work.
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Explore:
Buy Jonathan Malesic’s book The End of Burnout: Why work drains us and how to build better lives
Follow him on Twitter
Sign up for his newsletter
Interested in the Maslach Burnout Inventory? Find more info here.
Thursday Mar 03, 2022
Architecture and the Soul of the City
Thursday Mar 03, 2022
Thursday Mar 03, 2022
Buildings and public spaces tell a story about what our culture values and who belongs.
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This week, Life & Faith channels popular TV program Grand Designs through its focus on the built environment and how our public spaces express ideals and aspirations for our life together.
Our guest is Kamila Soh, who is pursuing a Masters in architectural history at the University of New South Wales.
Kamila recently contributed a column to The Catholic Weekly about 111 Castlereagh, a luxury apartment development in Sydney boasting pristine views of Sydney Harbour, Hyde Park, and St Mary’s Cathedral. She contrasts the cathedral with the glamorous high-rise – where an off the plan penthouse sold for A$35 million in 2021 – and suggests that the church is a genuinely public space while the exclusive development is not.
We also discuss the burning of Notre Dame Cathedral, which revealed the emotional and spiritual connections people feel to place.
Then there’s the growing recognition that we navigate public space via our phones, like posting photos to social media. But what if we need less – not more – stimulation, especially after two years of lockdown and Zoom fatigue? Kamila suggests what we need from public space are spaces for contemplation and opportunities to genuinely connect with each other.
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Explore:
Kamila Soh’s column in The Catholic Weekly
A glimpse of the lifestyle promises of 111 Castlereagh - hit “play film”
Kamila’s article on the way architecture frames our relationships with each other – explored through working from home during lockdown and people’s responses to the burning of Notre Dame Cathedral
Simon’s article on Easter and the burning of Notre Dame Cathedral
Thursday Feb 24, 2022
Murder, mayhem and the road to redemption
Thursday Feb 24, 2022
Thursday Feb 24, 2022
The story of the Hilton Bombing, Evan Pederick, and the Ananda Marga.
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On Feb 13 1978 a bomb exploded at the front of the Hilton Hotel in Sydney. It had been planted in a garbage bin and as a truck emptied the bin it exploded, killing two garbage collectors and a police officer guarding the entrance to the hotel lounge.
Ten years later, Evan Pederick turned up to a Brisbane Police station and confessed to the bombing. What followed was an incredible tale of conspiracy theories, trials, appeals, re-trials, claims of false convictions and the extraordinary situation of Pederick having to try to prove his guilt!
Evan Pederick’s journey to prison and beyond involved an attempt to come to terms with his crimes and culminated in him becoming an Anglican Priest.
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Imre Salusinszky's book: The Hilton Bombing: Evan Pederick and the Ananda Marga
Thursday Feb 17, 2022
Full House
Thursday Feb 17, 2022
Thursday Feb 17, 2022
Young, married, and living in community housing with 28 men.
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When the pandemic hit, plenty of us reassessed our lives: changing jobs, leaving relationships, taking up a new hobby.
Jayden and Mikyla Battey, a married couple in their 20s, did their own soul-searching and, as a result, decided to move into community housing with 28 men who are at risk of homelessness and face mental health issues and challenging life circumstances.
They were looking for a deeper way of living alongside others. They’ve found that as House Managers at Hamer Court, an affordable housing initiative run by the group Servants.
In this Life & Faith episode, Jayden and Mikyla talk about the joys and the difficulties of living with vulnerable people, and what it’s like for those on the margins to find a home with each other. We also get a glimpse of what extended lockdowns meant for the residents of Hamer Court who were already socially isolated to begin with.
For Jayden, this way of life is a calling. “My understanding of the way that Jesus has called us to live our life is one where we dig deep and lean into the messy relationships. If I always kept difficult people at arm’s length, then I never have to face the reality of my own impatience and the brokenness in my own heart,” he said.
“When you live with a group of people who test you and call out your BS and tell you when you’re not loving them – well, then you realise that you have to actually rely on God to be the patient, kind, and loving person that everyone likes to think they are.”
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Explore:
The article Jayden wrote for the ABC
Servants
Thursday Feb 10, 2022
Sink or Swim? An American family in Australia
Thursday Feb 10, 2022
Thursday Feb 10, 2022
New York Times Australian Bureau Chief Damien Cave on learning to live like an Australian.
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Damien Cave has been the New York Times Australian Bureau chief in Australia since 2017. In that time he has thrown himself into life here, embracing (and being embraced by) the Surf Life Saving community and all the vulnerability and humility required to do that. He says he has learnt extremely important life lessons he didn’t know he needed and has come to love and appreciate his adopted home.
With a journalist’s sharp eye, Cave analyses Australia's attitude to risk, community and identity and finds some insights that he says have made his life immeasurably better. This is not the voice of an idealistic tourist, but someone who, by immersing himself in the Australian way of life, has come to recognise its strengths and shortcomings and ultimately, what makes it special.
Here Cave speaks to Life & Faith about risk, community, vulnerability and humility.
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Book: Into the Rip: How the Australian way of risk made my family stronger, happier … and less American
Thursday Feb 03, 2022
Forgiving the unforgivable
Thursday Feb 03, 2022
Thursday Feb 03, 2022
Leila and Danny Abdallah explain how they found a way to forgive the driver who killed their three children.
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For i4give week, we bring you a conversation with Danny and Leila Abdallah. On Feb 1st 2020 the Abdullahs experienced an unspeakable tragedy when three of their children, Antony (13), Angelina (12), and Sienna (8), along with their cousin Veronique Sakr (11), were killed when a drunk and drug-affected driver lost control of his vehicle and crashed into the group of children.
The Abdallahs shocked the world when they declared their forgiveness for the driver and refusal to hate him.
The i4give initiative, taking place each year on the anniversary of the tragedy, encourages people to search their hearts and find someone to forgive.
For Life & Faith Simon Smart talks to Leila and Danny about where they found the strength to forgive, the power of forgiveness and what they hope to achieve by urging us all to forgive.
“Forgiveness has allowed us to heal and to grow together as a family. Forgiveness has given us the freedom from anger and resentment and bitterness.” (Leila Abdallah)
https://www.i4give.com/
Check out CPX's other podcast
Richard Johnson Lectures
The Richard Johnson Lecture is an annual public event that seeks to highlight Christianity’s relevance to society and to positively contribute to public discourse on key aspects of civil life. www.richardjohnson.com.au