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Interfaith Voices Podcast (hour-long version)
Summary: Interfaith Voices is the nation’s leading religion news magazine on public radio. We offer weekly analyses of the big headlines alongside lesser-told stories – those of African-American Mormons and atheists in the military, evangelical environmentalists and Muslim feminists. Through these stories, a rough sketch of our country’s religious landscape begins to emerge. It’s a marketplace of beliefs and ideas too complex for sound bites, and too important to ignore. That’s why Interfaith Voices matters.
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- Artist: Interfaith Voices
- Copyright: Copyright 2020
Podcasts:
Reporter Colm Flynn shares reflections after accompanying Pope Francis on a three-day trip to Iraq.
The Fasting Rituals and Prayer Life of Baha'i Jack Gordon
Make Your Voice Heard on High: Prayer and Fasting in a Time of Loss
Everyone Can Pray: Father James Martin on Talking to God
One of the major themes to emerge from the new PBS documentary The Black Church: This is Our Story, This is Our Song is the often-overlooked roles Black women play in strengthening that institution.
Stacy Holman and Shayla Harris describe how they got involved with "The Balck Church" and what they hope its four hours impart about the most powerful institution in Black culture.
Dr. Yolanda Pierce, dean of Howard University’s divinity school, describes how women keep the institution of the Black Church strong and growing, despite being often unwelcome in the pulpit.
Damien Echols talks about his daily practice of magick and how it involves the summoning of angels and archangels, which he calls “putting on the armor of God.”
Dr. Nathan Bjorge responds to Damien Echols’ version of magick and traces its history to the early 20th-century occultist Aleister Crowley.
Damien Echols, one of the West Memphis Three, describes how 17 years on death row for a series of murders he did not commit led him to the practice of “magick.”
How are faith communities engaging in the national discussion on our growing mental health crisis? We speak with Wellbeing Trust CEO Tyler Norris, and mental health advocate Nahid Fattahi.
The leader of a philanthropy dedicated to advancing mental and spiritual health is calling on the Biden Administration to address the growing mental health crisis in America.
Nahid Fattahi was born in war-torn Afghanistan. Those early formative experiences inform her work and advocacy today encouraging Muslim leaders to learn how to support members struggling with mental health.
U.S. House Representative Madeleine Dean and her son Harry Cunnane discuss their new double-memoir, “Under Our Roof” about addiction, faith, and recovery.
Representative Madeleine Dean and her son Harry Cunnane discuss Dean’s newly proposed END Stigma Act,