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January 2009

01/04/08 - Ralston (“Ralie”) Deffenbaugh knows his way around immigration issues. He is a first-rate lawyer who understands the intricacies of immigration law. But more importantly, for the past 17 years, he has been president of Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, a vantage point for getting inside the hopes and heartaches of refugees and immigrants around the world. In these times of contentious debate over how to handle immigration reform in America, Deffenbaugh has some wise and faith-inspired words to think about with special freshness about the subject.

December 2008

12/28/08 - According to St. Matthew, the magi from the east were guided to the manger of the Christ Child by a star. That star, or whatever bright light may have appeared in the sky to guide these ancient astrologers, has fascinated believers and scientists alike for 20 centuries. David Levy, a lifelong astronomer, comet discoverer, and admirer of the night sky joins this broadcast for some pondering about the much talked about Christmas Star.

 

12/21/08 - For this final edition of a four-part Advent series with great saints of the church, host Peter Marty visits with St. Benedict (c. 480-c.547). Known for his famous “Rule,” a Rule that still guides Benedictine followers today with its teachings on humility, silence, and obedience, Benedict zeroes in on the holy reading of Scripture for this Grace Matters program. He spells out the critical value of hearing Scripture not only with our intellects but also with our hearts.

 

12/14/08 - Juliana of Norwich, who is sometimes called Julian of Norwich (1342-c.1416), joins host Peter Marty for an imaginary conversation. Juliana possessed an unshakable belief in God despite several near-death experiences. Her profound insights on hope were gained from the conviction that one can never know true hope apart from suffering. Juliana’s faith is a testimony to the abundance of grace even in the most difficult periods of life. This is the third of a four-part Advent series.

12/07/08 - In the second of a four-part Advent series, host Peter Marty converses with another absentee guest. This time it is Hildegard of Bingen. The reason for absenteeism is that Hildegard and our other Advent guests are now saints of the Church. In this week’s conversation, Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179) shares medieval life as an outspoken woman. Here is an individual who mixed with popes and emperors. She went on preaching tours. She even authored a medical encyclopedia. Hildegard lived her interesting life from the vantage point of faith.

November 2008

11/30/08 - In the first of a four-part Advent series, host Peter Marty converses with different guests who could not be present for an interview. Each week, the conversation involves one of the great saints of the church. Maximilian Kolbe is this week’s guest. He is the Polish priest who voluntarily took the place of another prisoner at the Auschwitz Concentration Camp when Nazi commanders arbitrarily selected ten prisoners for forced starvation.

11/23/08 - After spending a life immersed in scholarship with Scripture, Phyllis Tickle determined that faith and humility were often left behind among those who study the words of Jesus. She embarked on a thoughtful journey to analyze the different ways that Jesus of Nazareth typically spoke. Five different speaking roles for Jesus surfaced from her work. In this edition of Grace Matters, she discusses some of the interesting twists and turns that Jesus took with his words.

11/16/08 - Everett Worthington is a soft-spoken and gentle man. Professor of psychology at Virginia Commonwealth University, Everett gets to teach about forgiveness, reconciliation and a host of other fascinating subjects. A personally tragic experience – the murder of his mother in the mid-1990s – caused Worthington to examine forgiveness in a whole new way. What he discovered was a fresh priority for the place of humility in shaping one’s life.

11/09/08 - Since her childhood, Kathleen Kennedy Townsend has made a point of trying to put other people first. As the eldest child of Robert and Ethel Kennedy, she assumed an early sense of responsibility for what it means to be civically engaged on behalf of those for whom the systems of justice do not work well. One-time lieutenant governor of Maryland, Kennedy Townsend has a marvelous way of letting her Christian faith inform her commitment to stand up for all who live on the margins of society.

11/02/08 - The life of a refugee is never easy. Fleeing persecution or life-threatening circumstances in one’s own country to find a home elsewhere is next to impossible. Post 9/11 jitters and restrictions in America make the U.S. even less open to immigrants and refugees. Along comes Stormey Denise Burroughs, a young single mother and social worker in Michigan. She takes it upon herself to become the loving foster mother to four teenage boys from Burma.

October 2008

10/26/08 - Deere and Co. is a global giant in agriculture, forestry and construction. Deere’s CEO, Bob Lane, is the mover and shaker behind much of this company’s global expansion. But for all of the airplane miles Lane travels, he is still a very “grounded” individual. His Christian faith is what keeps him grounded. It is a faith that centers on cultivating the fruits of the Spirit and appreciating the undeserved character of grace.

10/19/08 - To live with chronic illness is to live with the reality that one day can be good and fulfilling while the next may be excruciatingly painful. Physical suffering is not fun for anyone; living with it every day demands special spiritual and emotional equipment. Among the more valuable tools in the equipment box is honesty. Retired professor Stephen Schmidt is guest on this edition of Grace Matters to discuss faith and his journey with chronic illness. It is a journey whose high points have been marked by honesty.

10/12/08 - Craig Rennebohm is a chaplain who works the streets of Seattle, ministering to mentally ill people. Many of them are homeless. Rennebohm knows what he is doing. He has firsthand knowledge of chronic mental illness and a commitment to advocate for the welfare of those whose minds do not function as they would wish. In this edition of Grace Matters, host Peter W. Marty explores his own up-close experience with a mentally ill brother, and what it means to trust in a Lord who cares as much about broken lives as whole ones.

10/05/08 - Within 24 hours of the Nickle Mines, PA., shooting that killed five Amish girls in October 2006, the whole world knew of the tragedy. What captivated the most public attention, once the shock of the horror was digested, was the amazing capacity of the Amish people to forgive the killer and serve his family. Donald Kraybill, co-author of the book Amish Grace, joins this edition of Grace Matters to explain how honest forgiveness of the Christ-like variety can only be forged over a lifetime of practice.

September 2008

09/28/08 - Brad and Libby Birky are owners of an extraordinary restaurant in downtown Denver. It’s not a big or ostentatious place. What makes the SAME Café unique is its pricing schedule. There are no prices on the menu; there is no cash register. Patrons pay whatever they can or are willing to pay, even if the payment means an hour of kitchen labor washing dishes or cutting vegetables. For those curious about a venture created So that All God’s people May Eat, this edition of Grace Matters is a “Do Not Miss.”

09/21/08 - There is a craving for community in our world, and people are struggling to fulfill that need. We may be well connected electronically, but this is hardly the same as being emotionally and spiritually connected. Communities are relational places – “the oxygen of human development,” says Peter Benson. Benson is the president of Search Institute, a nonprofit organization providing leadership and resources for the promotion of healthy children, youth, and communities. He is the guest on this edition of Grace Matters.

09/14/08 - Bruce Weber is a winning NCAA basketball coach. He is also a winsome human being. His unselfish style has shaped the lives of talented young men who happen to need more than just good dribbling technique in life. For the last five years he has led the Fighting Illini of the University of Illinois, including a trip to the Final Four championship game in 2005. Weber’s faith life is an active one, connected with his local Lutheran congregation. Listen in to meet an individual who enjoys taking the needs of others to heart.

09/7/08 - Rabbi Brad Hirschfield joins this edition of Grace Matters to discuss religious fanaticism. Having experienced his own incursion into the world of “being possessed by one’s religion,” Hirschfield made a sudden and dramatic turn in his faith journey. Today he is an important voice for people of all faiths who want to re-examine their most strident assumptions that put other people down. He is author of the book, You Don’t Have to Be Wrong for Me To Be Right: Finding Faith Without Fanaticism.
 

August 2008

08/31/08 - If you are tired of trying to make sense of why certain expressions of religion irritate you so thoroughly, you need to meet Eboo Patel. Chances are good that what is bothering, or even infuriating you, is what Patel calls "religious totalitarianism." Or it could be your own mistaken assumption that no one knows the truth unless they know your version of it. Eboo Patel is an articulate man of faith who is founder and executive director of Interfaith Youth Core – an organization devoted to advancing religious understanding and respect.

08/24/08 - Award-winning author Philip Yancey returns to take a close-up look at the shape of prayer. If you have ever wondered what difference prayer can make in your life, this program is for you. Yancey covers the whole terrain of prayer, tackling some of the biggest questions surrounding its mystery. With program host Peter W. Marty, he explores the importance of relationship and why a meaningful prayer life will never evolve without some genuine hunger on our part to be in God's close company.

08/17/08 - Philip Yancey, popular author and reliable spiritual guide, remains the "go to" person for any memorable discussion on the amazing character of grace. With his candor as a journalist and his honesty as a Christian pilgrim, Yancey outlines both the reliability and the unpredictability of grace. He walks listeners through a love we had not counted on and a kindness we may not think we deserve.

08/10/08 - Among the top tier of scientists in the world, there is Francis Collins. Longtime director of the human genome project that has mapped over 3 billion letters of the human genetic code, Collins is an articulate spokesperson for the glories of science. But he is also a person of deep faith who is not shy to speak about the place of God in biological science. Repudiating both anti-scientific thinking and shallow spirituality, Collins offers a clear-headed way for understanding the beauty of how science enhances one's reading of the Bible.

08/03/08 - If Christians are not careful, we have a dangerous tendency to view the Bible as an exclusively Christian book. Where this perspective exists, we do a serious disservice to both the Jewishness of Jesus and the Jewish roots of our own faith. Wayne-Daniel Berard, professor and author, who was born of a Jewish parent and adopted by a Catholic family, practices his faith today as a Christian and a Jew. He calls on Christians to explore "with open heart and mind" the Jewishness not only of Jesus but of themselves.
 

July 2008

07/27/08 - Spiritual discernment is a big deal. It is the practice of wisdom. It is that capacity for detecting an insight into the character of another person and into the preferred ways of God. Discernment is the hard work that comes for those who aim to love with a discriminating eye and who seek the guidance of the Holy Spirit to see reality for what it is. J. Brent Bill, a retreat leader who has authored the book, Sacred Compass, shares with us the importance of living with discernment.

07/20/08 - The voice of Charles Osgood is as familiar as any in broadcast journalism. Radio host of the “Osgood File,” and anchor of CBS “Sunday Morning,” Osgood is a veteran in the industry. Juggling long hours and balancing radio and TV, he knows the importance of keeping a deadline. We all have deadlines that permeate our lives. Some of them are even spiritual in character. Our challenge is to see these deadlines more as a blessing than a curse.

07/13/08 - If anything takes our breath away in this world full of events we cannot control, it is violence. Nothing cuts to the core of our peace of mind and joy for life like violence. So what can we learn from Jesus that might direct us to a better way? And what about the place of Gandhi’s life and teachings? Terry Rynne, founder of the Marquette University Center for Peacemaking, has studied Gandhi for a long time. He walks us into the difference between active and passive nonviolence.

07/06/08 - Those who follow the tennis world closely know the name Andrea Jaeger. In the mid-1980s she was playing number two in the world on the women’s pro circuit. That was young Andrea. Following a career– ending injury as a teenager, she engaged in a serious refocus of her life. Today she is an Anglican Dominican sister who devotes everything she is to kids who live with life-threatening diseases. It’s quite a life mixing tears, laughter, and a whole lot of fulfillment. (Rebroadcast)
 

June 2008

06/22/08 - Everybody seems to have their own definition for spirituality. But one definition that doesn't work well for those steeped in a biblical tradition is that which treats all things spiritual as inward and invisible. Rodney Clapp out to reclaim an important place for a more physical spirituality that refuses to ignore the body. In all of its messiness and confusion, the body can be a home through which the Lord of creation, incarnation, and resurrection goes to work. Clapp is author of the book, Tortured Wonders: Christian Spirituality for People, Not Angels.

06/15/08 - Dr. Timothy Johnson, longtime medical editor for ABC news, is not afraid to ask the big questions of religion and science. As both minister and physician, he is intrigued by the interplay of two worlds that many people find hopelessly at odds. He brings his incisive mind and spiritual vitality to a conversation about the “hows” of science and the “whys” of faith. (Encore show from 2/18/07)

06/08/08 - Christian faith that does not grow in an individual is not a living faith. Such lifeless or immature faith is certainly not a resource to rely on in the crises of life. This edition of Grace Matters explores the necessity of growing and nurturing the seeds of God’s Word that get planted in our lives. Host Peter Marty explores the strange phenomenon of growing many dimensions in our lives as we age, but leaving our faith presuppositions and knowledge at the third grade level. Jeremy Langford, a communicator for the Jesuit community in Chicago, is guest on the program.

06/01/08 - The most extensive preaching we have from the lips of Jesus is recorded in Matthew’s Gospel account, “The Sermon on the Mount.” Jesus opens this sermon not with command but with blessing. These blessings reveal some of the major themes that dot the ministry of Jesus. They propose that we turn our lives upside and inside out to catch the splendor of God. Martha Stortz, professor of historical theology and ethics at Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary, helps us navigate these blessings, or beatitudes of Jesus.

May 2008

05/25/08 - Stephen Prothero has conducted an interesting study of religious literacy in America. What he has found is that while many people have a deep faith and a gut sense of spirituality, their Biblical and religious knowledge is very scant. In other words, their faith is formed more on feeling and sentiment than accurate knowledge of valued sources. Prothero is chair of the religion department at Boston University and author of the book Religious Literacy.

05/18/08 - According to Holy Scripture, God built rhythm into the universe. Work and rest were meant to be fair players with one another. Something happened to this rhythm along the way, however. Rest got bumped to the periphery and work assumed center stage. Author and minister Wayne Muller reflects on how effectively we keep – and do not keep – the Sabbath commandment. Host Peter Marty looks at the distinctive rhythm of the Christian life.

05/11/08 - Jules and Gedeon are a pair of French-born brothers who enjoy working together. They also happen to be award-winning filmmakers. Not only did they produce the acclaimed documentary “9/11,” containing the only known footage of the first plane striking the first tower of the World Trade Center, they followed that up with a documentary on faith, entitled: “In God’s Name.” This edition of Grace Matters explores the place of terror in American public and private life, and the role of the Christian faith as a response.

05/04/08 - Otolaryngology is an important word, but a mouthful to pronounce. It happens to be shorthand for that branch of medicine that deals with ear, nose, and throat. Dr. Bruce Campbell, head and neck surgeon at the Medical College of Wisconsin, “sees it all” on the cancer ward where he works and in the classrooms where he teaches. Campbell practices a particular kind of medicine that includes a thoughtful inclusion of his own personal faith. His patients are the direct beneficiaries.

April 2008

04/27/08 - Hospital chaplaincy is calm and even in character, though occasionally high adrenaline in crisis moments. But what is a hospital like at nighttime, besides just nurses waking patients up for “checking vitals” when they don’t want to be awakened? And specifically, what does a hospital chaplain see happen at a children’s hospital at night? Host Peter W. Marty asks these sorts of questions of Rev. Stacey Jutila, a hospital chaplain in the Chicago area. Jutila brings valuable perspective to the conversation of illness and wellness, and an important reminder about the place of play in children’s lives.

04/20/08 - We live in a day when individuals from all walks of life are trying to make sense of the intersection between religion and politics. Most of us know we are not enamored with the extremes, where strident know-it-alls dominate the airwaves, but what is the middle ground? Or better said, how can people of faith think deeply about the moral and justice issues of the day? New York Times best-selling author, and faith-based activist Jim Wallis is as poised as anyone to speak about this topic. He is encouraged by a new movement emerging among America’s religious faithful.

04/13/08 - All of us want to live lives of meaning. No person seeks to drift through life with a purposelessness. Yet some individuals have the gift of thinking with clarity on matters of the heart. Some know exactly how to put their faith into words. These are people, by and large, who live and speak with depth, heft and gravity. Bob Abernethy is the executive editor and host of the PBS program "Religion and Ethics NewsWeekly." He joins the program to discuss why lives of meaning matter so much to him.

04/06/08 - Few subjects are more urgent than the crisis of our planet. The stresses we put on the natural resources of planet earth, not to mention the air we breathe and the water we drink, are growing each day. Our personal behaviors and global economies are all contributing to the crisis. Bill McKibben, author and writer-in-residence at Middlebury College in Vermont, is one of nation’s most articulate spokespersons on the environment, climate change and the need for all people to live more lightly. His personal faith powers much of his message.

March 2008

03/30/08 - Joy Newcom is the mother of two boys, one of whom was born with multiple birth defects. That birth and that child has ended up transforming her life. Much of it has been an involuntary transformation, taking her places she never asked to go. But every step of the way, joy keeps giving shape to the transformation. It’s a hard but beautiful story of God working steadfastly with us through the circumstances of our lives.

03/23/08 - In this special Easter Sunday meditation, program host Peter W. Marty ponders the Easter story from St. Mark's Gospel. He takes a candid look at the Christian life lived in light of the resurrection. If Jesus has been raised from the dead, there is no such thing as a standstill Christian. Believing people must be on the move, open to new possibilities. They cannot park their faith in contentment with the past, or in coziness with the present. Living the Christian life well is all about trying to keep up with the risen Christ, who keeps showing up several steps ahead of us.

03/16/08 - Program host Peter W. Marty takes you from a street fair in Palm Springs, California to the dusty road in Jerusalem where Jesus made his final and triumphant entry prior to his death. Along the way, he stops to contemplate the silence of Jesus and what Jesus was willing to absorb. Reconciliation becomes the focus of Jesus' ministry in those final days, as he demonstrates that being in a relationship is much more important than being right.

03/9/08 - God built risk into the universe. It is all over creation. It is part and parcel of the Christian life as well. There is no indication that Jesus of Nazareth promoted a safe life as the highest priority. In fact, his definition of discipleship encourages us to take paths that nobody may have ever walked before. Poet Luci Shaw understands life to be full of adventure and risk, with her own personal life as evidence. She joins the program to help distinguish faith from fear, and both from fanaticism.

03/2/08 - Racism can be a tough thing to get our hands around, especially when the majority white culture struggles to even recognize the many unspoken privileges it enjoys. What does it mean to be born into privilege – not economic wealth, but all of the other perks and comforts that go with unseen advantages of being born white? Tim Wise, an author and anti-racism activist has a sharp mind for thinking creatively about this question. Host Peter Marty reflects on a Biblical word about our tendency to draw distinctions between people.

February 2008

02/24/08 - Have you ever felt over-committed, over-scheduled, over-ambitious, over-eager or over-programmed? Most of us have been there sometime in the last week, or the last year. We "try to do it all" and find that strategy to come up short. In this program, host Peter W. Marty speaks to the limits that God puts upon our lives, not as drawbacks or defects, but as reminders of our mortality and finitude. These limits also happen to afford us an opportunity to draw closer to God. His conversation partner is Carmen Richards, national president of Women of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

02/17/08 - Peter Gomes, Professor of Christian Morals at Harvard University and pastor of the Memorial Church there, is often referred to as one of America's great preachers. In part, this acclaim is due to Gomes' witty use of words, his clever cultural insights, and his deep belief that Christians need transformation in Christ, not conformity to the world. If you have not thought about the transformation of your own spiritual life in a while, and what it would mean to put your life through a major overhaul, this program will get your creative juices flowing.

02/10/08 - Eugene Peterson returns for the second part of a two-part series. Here he discusses the Bible and our use of it. Nobody would seem better poised and more suited to converse about the place of Scripture in our lives than this prolific author and Bible translator. Peterson unwraps the drawbacks to our owning of Bibles, our over-study of Scripture, and our reading (instead of speaking) the Word. He speaks, however, with nothing less than a passionate love for Scripture and the difference it makes in our lives.

02/03/08 - It can be a joy to hear someone who writes extensively and well actually talk about the words that comprise his or her writing. That is the privilege of this edition of Grace Matters. Eugene Peterson, who translated the entire Bible into the contemporary translation, The Message, speaks to different words in the Christian vocabulary. He talks candidly about the power and gift of some words, and the detriment and misuse of others.

January 2008

01/27/08 - Immaculée Ilibagiza returns for the second of a two-part series on the tragedy of the Rwandan genocide of 1994. She is the author of the book, Left to Tell, a gripping narrative of the ordeal that left her family and most of her village dead. In this broadcast Immaculée relives the jail encounter that brought her face-to-face with the killer who stabbed her parents and brother to death. This woman of faith will reawaken the power of forgiveness for all who are seeking a new way of life.

01/20/08 - Immaculée Ilibagiza is an amazing woman. She narrowly escaped death in the Rwandan genocide of 1994 by hiding in the bathroom of her pastor’s house for 91 consecutive days. In this compelling interview, the first in a two-part series, Immaculée gives an inside look at the faith that carried her through a horrific ordeal. She discusses the mystery of hatred and the necessity of Christian hope.

01/13/08 - Jim Autry is a former Fortune 500 business executive, a leadership consultant, poet and author. But he is something else too. He is the loving father of an autistic son. Raising this son has caused Autry to read the healing miracles of Jesus in a way that might surprise many conventional or orthodox Christians. If you are wondering whether or not to believe in miracles, and whether they might be pointing to something larger, this program is for you.

01/06/08 - One of the favorite questions many Christians love to ask is, “Who is saved? Is She? Is He? Am I?” The question grows in interest when people who do not profess Jesus Christ are included in the question. Philip Gulley, a popular author and Quaker minister, has some very important things to say about who gets saved. If grace is true, as a concept, a word, and as the defining characteristic of God, reasons Gulley, then it must be true for ALL people.

December 2007

12/30/07 - For this end-of-the-year program, host Peter W. Marty focuses on the new beginnings that comes to our lives when grace is bestowed on us. Enjoy a New Year interview with guest, Jerry Evenrud. Evenrud is a retired church musician who travels with an extensive art collection of images from the Prodigal Son story in Luke’s Gospel. With the recent publication of a new full-color book with these images from around the world, a book titled "And Grace Will Lead Me Home," Evenrud explores the inexhaustible riches of this story which none of us can escape appreciating.

November 2007

11/25/07 - In a first-ever call-in program to Grace Matters, host Peter W. Marty and program producer Susan Greeley visit about the necessity of grace in a hurting world. They share conversation about the important role this listener-supported program plays in the lives of people across America. Listeners are invited to tune in with their hearts and to call in with their prayers and supportive gifts on this special Thanksgiving weekend program.

11/18/07 - Frankness of speech, spoken in love, is one of many components that can allow for true friendship to flourish. In this second of a two-part series, host Peter W. Marty explores the topic of friendship, following more conversation with the three women of The Faith Club, Ranya, Suzanne and Priscilla visit about their experience of wrestling with, and growing from, stimulating inter-faith discussions they cultivated in their lives. Lifelong friendship among them became one of the lasting benefits of these candid conversations.

11/11/07 - For all the religiosity in America, it is a surprisingly ignorant republic when it comes to understanding religion. Faithful people are quickly at home with the precepts and convictions of their own tradition, but little else. Three women, calling themselves The Faith Club, set about to change this. Meeting in each other’s homes on a weekly basis for several years, Ranya Idliby (a Palestinian-born Muslim), Suzanne Oliver (an Episcopal Christian), and Priscilla Warner (a Reform Jew) covered all sorts of topics, including the limitations of merely tolerating one another.

11/04/07 - Parenting adolescents is becoming a more challenging task with every generation – or so it seems. Cultural and technological forces are complicating every parent’s assignment of raising wholesome kids who live meaningful lives, but mistakes and misperceptions of parents are not helping the picture. Chap Clark, professor of youth, family and culture at Fuller Theological Seminary, has some very astute insights about parenting and kids. His ultimate goal is for every teenager to receive enough guidance and encouragement to know how extraordinary the love of God is.

October 2007

10/28/07 - Among the top tier of scientists in the world, there is Francis Collins. Longtime director of the human genome project that has mapped over 3 billion letters of the human genetic code, Collins is an articulate spokesperson for the glories of science. But he is also a person of deep faith who is not shy to speak about the place of God in biological science. Repudiating both anti-scientific thinking and shallow spirituality, Collins offers a clear-headed way for understanding the beauty of how science enhances one's reading of the Bible.

10/21/07 - One would not expect a prominent CEO of a global firm to weigh in on the importance of mealtime and talk around the dinner table, but Doris Christopher is not your average corporate leader. Founder of the kitchen tools company Pampered Chef, Christopher maintains a rigorous schedule and a high demand for excellence. In the midst of it all, she has never forgotten the place of the Lord in her everyday life, or the value of mealtime as a focal point for our existence.

10/14/07 - Life is difficult. Being human is hazardous to your health. Christianity is no ticket to a "Get Out of Jail Free" card. So what do we make of the hazards of living and of suffering? How do we live creatively within the constrictions of human suffering? Dave Dravecky, former all-star pitcher in the major leagues, is as well positioned as anyone to speak powerfully on how to give birth to hope in adverse times. After an encounter with cancer at the peak of his career, he lost his throwing arm and shoulder to amputation, but Dravecky gained a whole new world of faith through the experience.

10/07/07 - Discipleship is either a meaningful word to help center a life or a "churchy" word that is tired and overused. In this program, host Peter W. Marty explores the meaning of discipleship with Sarah Henrich. Professor Henrich, who teaches New Testament at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minn., has authored a new book on great themes in the Bible. Her rich insights on discipleship, and Peter's five keys for making it a part of everyday life, add up to a memorable program for all Christian people and all those exploring the Christian way.

September 2007

9/30/07 - David Hilfiker did what many people think about, but never have the courage to do. He and his family left comfortable living in a rural community to begin a new life among some of America’s poorest people in an urban ghetto. Few upper-middle class people understand the plight of the poor quite like this physician. He contends that the only way to really know what it means to be poor, and to quit treating “the poor” like a category, is to look them in the eye and get to know them.

9/23/07 - If Christians are not careful, we have a dangerous tendency to view the Bible as an exclusively Christian book. Where this perspective exists, we do a serious disservice to both the Jewishness of Jesus and the Jewish roots of our own faith. Wayne-Daniel Berard, professor and author, who was born of a Jewish parent and adopted by a Catholic family, practices his faith today as a Christian and a Jew. He calls on Christians to explore “with open heart and mind” the Jewishness, not only of Jesus, but of themselves.

9/16/07 - Those who follow the tennis world closely know the name Andrea Jaeger. In the mid-1980s she was playing number two in the world on the women’s pro circuit. That was young Andrea. Following a career ending injury as a teenager, she engaged in a serious refocus of her life. Today, she is an Anglican Dominican sister who devotes everything she is to kids who live with life-threatening diseases. It’s quite a life, mixing tears, laughter and a whole lot of fulfillment.

9/9/07 - If you are tired of trying to make sense of why certain expressions of religion irritate you so thoroughly, you need to meet Eboo Patel. Chances are good that what is bothering, or even infuriating you, is what Patel calls “religious totalitarianism.” Or it could be your own mistaken assumption that no one knows the truth unless they know your version of it. Eboo Patel is an articulate man of faith who is founder and executive director of Interfaith Youth Core – an organization devoted to advancing religious understanding and respect.

9/2/07 - We often speak of rituals as being boring, dull, or even dead. The word ritual is laden with many negative connotations in peoples’ minds. But rituals can drive life. They can even restore life. The Rev. Janet Peterman believes so thoroughly in their power that she has authored a book of sacred rituals for special moments and crises in life. It’s not your average compilation of friendly rituals for easy times, but it is what you or a friend may wish to know about for that trying time that can befall any one of us.

August 2007

8/26/07 - The whole world over seems to know the name Todd Beamer and his now famous words “Let’s roll.” He spoke these words during an extended phone conversation on 9/11, the day Flight 93 went down. Few people know the person who answered that call. Lisa Jefferson is her name. Her life stands as a testimony of great faith and true responsibility in a time of crisis. (Originally broadcast September 10, 2006)

8/19/07 - What do we do when God does not seem to answer our prayers and our Christian faith doesn’t seem to “work?” Where is God when the cry of our hearts hears little more than silence? Gerald Sittser, professor of religion at Whitworth College, brings incredible hope and insight to these questions. His responses carry enormous weight, born as they are out of great personal suffering. (Originally broadcast July 23, 2006)

8/12/07 - What happens when you dress yourself in love can make the difference between a hopeful day and a woeful day. For nationally acclaimed coach Joe Ehrmann, love lived in the right way is exactly what young adolescent males need more than anything else. Meet this ex-NFL great who has a definition of success like you’ve never heard before. (Originally broadcast May 7, 2006)

8/05/07 - Money is a worry, a blessing, and a necessity. But it can also become a god. This may be why the scriptures record one sixth of Jesus’ words as related to money or wealth. Popular radio talk show host and author Dave Ramsey spends his every day thinking about our use and misuse of money. We’ll tap into his wisdom.
(Originally broadcast February 19, 2006)

July 2007

7/29/07 - There is evil in this world, and if it doesn’t hurt or kill, it certainly seeks to dominate and destroy. Evil does not merely reside in other people; it cuts through the heart of every human being. Sometimes it overshadows the astonishing goodness in this world that we must always seek to prize. Lt. Col. Eric Olsen, a military chaplain, joins the program to discuss his tour of duty in Iraq and what it means to minister to young soldiers.

7/22/07 - There is nobody quite like Ken Medema. This composer and pianist, blind since birth, has a passion for God and people that oozes from his music. He fills the big stage and yet transforms the individual heart every time he performs. It all happens through an improvisational style and zest that is truly unique. Grace permeates the faith and music of Ken Medema in a way that is changing the lives of all who hear him.

7/15/07 - Growing up on the streets of Chicago’s South Side can make for a rough life. The pressures of gang life, conformity to crime, and drug abuse are more than most suburbanites know much about. Simba Circle is an ecumenical ministry devoted to helping young African-American males live the life God created them to live, not the hell they see many of their peers experiencing. The Simba ministry works through the faith of adult mentors, spirited rituals, and the woods and meadows of an Iowa camp to make a difference in these endangered lives.

7/8/07 - There is a crisis in the African-American family that will take significant effort to undo. It is a crisis of commitment with many features, a good number of them stretching all the way back to the days of slavery. Robert Franklin, social ethics professor, news commentator and college president, is as well-equipped as anyone to speak with hope about what is needed to reverse negative social trends. His words challenge all of us to rethink where our families are healthy and where they need strengthening.

7/1/07 - Bob Seiple has spent his life working to improve the lives of others around the world. Former president of World Vision, Inc. and one-time U.S. ambassador, this global educator now heads up an organization committed to expanding religious freedom in every country. Our task as Americans, he argues, is to model religious freedom by engaging spiritual humility on a national level, and by delighting in thoughtful forms of religious expression that may not be our own.

June 2007

6/24/07 - Nourishing one’s soul is like nourishing one’s body except that the protein content is a little different. The protein for nourishing one’s soul comes from spiritual food – food that comes in the form of attentiveness, gratitude, simplicity, prayer, mystery, and more. Judith Valente, an on-air correspondent for the PBS-TV program "Religion and Ethics Newsweekly," finds spiritual food grows best in the garden of sacred poetry. She is co-author of the book "Twenty Poems to Nourish Your Soul."

6/17/07 - Most people both inside and outside of Christianity are acquainted with the great commandment to love God with all of our heart, soul, and mind, and to love our neighbor as ourselves. But how many really live the balance of this creed – the priority of both of its dimensions – in a daily way? Scot McKnight, author of the book "The Jesus Creed," describes how significant these words were to Jesus of Nazareth, and how important they deserve to be for shaping our daily lives.

6/10/07 - Former Heisman trophy winner and NFL quarterback Danny Wuerffel knows a lot about acclaim. He couldn’t take to the field without tens of thousands of fans letting him know their appreciation. But Wuerffel, who currently directs a ministry for inner city youth, knows that fame doesn’t add up to much when compared with the truly significant things to which we could be devoting our lives. His definition of success will have all of us rethinking our callings in life.

6/3/07 - Listening can be hard work, but it is also very important behavior. Among other things, listening well frees us from the inner need always to feel we need to make our presence known. In the world of music, a listening ear allows us to be receivers, and to walk into brand new worlds. Emily Saliers, lead singer with the Indigo Girls, and her father, Don Saliers, a church musician and professor of Christian worship, know that being changed by music is like being changed by grace – both require receptive ears and hearts.

May 2007

5/27/07 - In a day when many people don’t know how to make sense of Saturday night folk, pop, or rock music alongside of Sunday morning sacred music, it helps to hear how one family weaves the two realms together. Both secular and sacred music can have a meaningful place in our lives. One doesn’t have to love one genre of music and hate the other. Emily Saliers, lead singer with the Indigo Girls, and her father, Don Saliers, a church musician and professor of Christian worship, do a masterful job of connecting music and spirituality.

5/20/07 - Rob Owen is the president of the National Association of Television Critics, a group of journalists who regularly size up the state of television programming, from the appropriateness of individual show ratings to awards for those shows deemed excellent. Owen also sees his fair share of celebrity gossip and celebrity worship. In a world where most of us have a tendency to want to associate with others whose lives appear more exciting and glamorous than our own, celebrity worship has its limits. Life in Christ has its reasons why. That’s all in this edition of Grace Matters.

5/13/07 - The best way to get to know other people is to meet them where they live their lives. We know this to be true from our local experience. Rick Steves, popular travel host for Public Television, reminds us that it is also true globally. Inspired by the personal belief that “this planet is full of equally precious people,” Steves knows well how to connect his two vocations of being a Christian believer and a travel teacher. It’s a winning combination, as you’ll discover from his passion for being a thoughtful traveler.

5/6/07 - Have you ever wondered about the really complex question: “Why is it that the United States is both the most religious nation in the Western World and yet the most violent?” This edition of Grace Matters takes on the topic of our easy drift toward accepting lethal violence as a way of life. It is both a personal and national dilemma. Philip Wogaman, ethicist and pastor to the Clinton family during their White House years, is guest on the program.

April 2007

4/29/07 - Sara Spoonheim has an exciting job. She partners with Christian, Jewish, and Muslim congregations to look at ways for these faith communities to be responsive stewards of God’s magnificent creation. Combining her own vital faith and passion for life with a commitment to caring for this fragile planet, Spoonheim outlines the beauty of devoting ourselves to the concerns of ecology, justice, and the good life for all.

4/22/07 (Part II) - Award-winning author Philip Yancey returns to take a close-up look at the shape of prayer. If you have ever wondered what difference prayer can make in your life, this program is for you. Yancey covers the whole terrain of prayer, tackling some of the biggest questions surrounding its mystery. With program host Peter W. Marty, he explores the importance of relationship and why a meaningful prayer life will never evolve without some genuine hunger on our part to be in God’s close company.

4/15/07 (Part I) - Philip Yancey, popular author and reliable spiritual guide, remains the “go to” person for any memorable discussion on the amazing character of grace. With his candor as a journalist and his honesty as a Christian pilgrim, Yancey outlines both the reliability and the unpredictability of grace. He walks listeners through a love we had not counted on and a kindness we may not think we deserve.

March 2007

3/25/07 - The fitness craze that is sweeping the country offers more benefit than just simply lowering weight, feeling energetic, and reducing the risk of diseases like diabetes and coronary blockage. As far as Murray Finck is concerned, a discipline of fitness can bring great spiritual blessing as well. This Evangelical Lutheran Church in America bishop cares about stretching the mind, body and spirit in ways that give serious attention to prayer.

3/18/07 - Mother Teresa is credited with saying, “It is a very great poverty to decide that children must die so that we might live as we wish.” Bill Davis has taken the striking power of this statement, posted it on his office wall, and decided it is the perfect inspiration to stop letting poor kids go without health care. He left his surgical practice almost 20 years ago to serve low-income people, and has never looked back. It’s a compelling story of faith ordering one’s deepest commitments.

3/11/07 - The Bible does not say much about building houses, but it has many things to say about what makes for a home. Elizabeth Hausler is well qualified to speak about building houses. She is the founder and director of Build Change, an organization devoted to building earthquake-resistant homes, but she is also well attuned to the requirements for making a home, working hand in hand with the people of Banda Aceh, Indonesia, who dream of a new life.

3/4/07 - It has been said before that, “If I am hungry, this is a physical problem. But if my neighbor is hungry, that is a spiritual problem.” The spiritual problem of people who live with insufficient food, or who are food insecure, has reached staggering proportions. Knute Ogren is a young church worker and musician who decided to record a couple of CDs and donate all of the proceeds to fight global hunger. Like so many others, his contribution is (on its way to) making a significant impact.

February 2007

2/25/07 - People may joke frequently about church potluck suppers. But in one congregation, a few shared meals became the testing ground for an entire cookbook of recipes from the Bible. Anthony Chiffolo and Rayner “Rusty” Hesse put their biblical research and culinary wizardry to work for creating this imaginative resource. They join the program to help uncover the significance of hospitality in ancient times and its place around our tables today. Great food for thought!

2/18/07 - Dr. Timothy Johnson, longtime medical editor for ABC news, is not afraid to ask the big questions of religion and science. As both minister and physician, he is intrigued by the interplay of two worlds that many people find hopelessly at odds. He brings his incisive mind and spiritual vitality to a conversation about the “hows” of science and the “whys” of faith.

2/11/07 - Some people run out of creativity in their’80s as their bodies naturally wear down and their spirits fight to keep up. But not Mary Oyer. This retired professor of music and song leader in the Mennonite Church has a passion for music from around the world, just as she has an undying love for teaching. Put it all together and she will tell you what it adds up to: A very fulfilling life.

2/4/07 - Are you living your own life or the fragments of someone else’s life? At times we follow the temptation to try and assume a different character than the one God most wants us to be. But digging beneath all external appearances, there is a hidden wholeness in each of our lives, planted there by God. Author, speaker, and popular retreat leader Parker Palmer has spent his life tracking the fingerprints of God on the human soul and retrieving the hidden wholeness we all are after.

January 2007

1/28/07 - There are plenty of fairness gaps in the United States system of justice, but nothing like those in countries that detain and imprison people for merely speaking their mind. John Kamm, executive director of the Dui Hua Foundation, has made a life out of working to free Chinese dissidents who disappear from the public eye. His efforts have been both courageous and successful. They remind us in a pointed way of the biblical mandate to pursue justice for others.

1/21/07 - When our bodies get sick, more than pain, disease, or symptoms are involved. Our whole person gets dragged into the illness. Our hopes, dreams, and character strengths and weaknesses become part of the picture. Professor and author Arthur Frank speaks as eloquently as anyone on the difference between treatment and care, illness and disease, and fighting and struggling. Here’s a front line look at illness being part of who we are.

1/14/07 - Sexual and domestic violence are epidemic in American culture. Surprising to many people, however, is the role that Christianity plays in hiding the crisis through silence, or in perpetuating the crisis through a misuse of the Bible. Marie Fortune, founder and senior analyst at the Faith Trust Institute, talks about societal discomfort in addressing this violence. Host Peter Marty looks into one of the more difficult biblical passages involving domination and subjugation.

1/7/07 - Anxiety over scarcity is the prevailing creed in American life, even though many Americans have blessing and abundance beyond measure. Gifted teacher and author Walter Brueggemann takes an inside look at why we behave so anxiously, and why it runs counter to everything God desires or offers. You’ll hear his ideas for taking a generous God much more seriously than we often do.


December 2006

12/31/06 - Not every treasure can be stored in a box. Not everything of value can be itemized in a legal document. Pastor, educator, and author Herbert Brokering outlines how he intends to distribute his lifelong wealth to those whom he loves. His list of “wealth” will surprise even experts who spend their life coaching others on how to leave a legacy of true worth.

12/24/06 - In the cold rain and snow on Christmas night 1914, the unimaginable happened in the trenches of World War I. Young German, French, British, and Belgian soldiers spontaneously threw down their arms and came together across the front lines to exchange gifts, sing carols, eat, drink, and even play soccer. Renowned historian Stanley Weintraub shares a vivid picture of how this forgotten moment in military history proved to be one of the most beautiful Christmas stories of all times.

November 2006

11/26/06 - Mary Nelson knows a whole lot about community organizing and neighborhood revitalizing. For most of her adult life, she has led the powerful Bethel New Life ministry on Chicago’s west side. Through her work, she has seen the deadly nature of the gap between rich and poor wreak havoc. Jesus tells a story about this gap one day. It’s a story that includes all of our names.

11/19/06 - Author and pastor Ted Loder cares a great deal about how we fashion our prayer lives. He has written several books on prayer that are as poetic as they are prayerful. This program’s reflection speaks to the joy contained in one of Loder’s prayers of thanksgiving, in a week when Americans are remembering what it means to live thankfully.

11/12/06
- In this second of a two-part series, featuring conversation with missionary and ex-hostage Gracia Burnham, the subject of forgiveness takes center stage. How do you forgive an enemy who has done unspeakable things? Gracia Burnham is author of several books that address her enslavement in a Philippine jungle, including her latest, To Fly Again: Surviving the Tailspins of Life.

11/05/06 - In the first of a two-part series, missionary Gracia Burnham describes the horror of being a hostage of the Abu Sayyaf in the Philippine jungle for more than a year. But more importantly, she details the Christian hope that kept her going, even after her husband was killed. Gracia Burnham is author of the New York Times bestseller: In the Presence of My Enemies.

October 2006

10/29/06 - If we knew how to approach God, love God, and serve God all by ourselves, there would be no need for companionship on our spiritual journey. But finding our way is a holy enterprise that deserves greater perspective than just our own. The Rev. David Miller, Dean of the Chapel at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, and Director of Spiritual Formation, is in the business of guiding others toward rich spiritual journeys.

10/22/06 - Retired Chaplain of Yale University and Lutheran pastor John Vannorsdall has spent his life shaping sentences into rich meaning. His goal has always been to work the power of God into peoples’ lives. Today we learn Rev. Vannorsdall’s definitions of some key words in the Christian vocabulary.

10/15/06 - American Greg Mortenson isn’t afraid of anything. For 13 years now, this husband and young father has spent half of every year living with Islamic mullahs, village chieftains, and Shiite clerics, in remote Pakistan and Afghanistan. What’s he doing in the mountains where the Taliban dwell? He’s building a better future for children living there, one school at a time.

10/08/06 -
The Rev. Heidi Neumark, author of Breathing Space: A Spiritual Journey in the South Bronx, has many more wild experiences in her 19-year ministry in the South Bronx than can fit between the two covers of a book. Her joy in the Lord, and her deep love of people will breathe new life into all who hear her story.

10/01/06 -
Don Samuels A Minneapolis city councilman, Don knows that biblically, politically, and humanely, racism is no way to live. Don will share his own unique way of responding to the crises of division and hatred.

September 2006

09/24/06 - Mary Ann Brussat, journalist and author of a number of books, including the work titled: Spiritual Literacy, has devoted her energies for three decades to identifying and reviewing resources for people on spiritual journeys.

09/10/06 - Lisa Jefferson is the GTE Airfone Supervisor who took the call from Todd Beamer, a passenger who lost his life on United Flight #93. That call impacted Jefferson in ways she could never have expected but learned to embrace as her calling from God.

09/03/06 - Father Arturo Bañuelas, a Catholic priest serving in the border town of El Paso, Texas, joins us for a conversation about the human dimensions of immigration and the plight of those who suffer most.

August 2006 (Encore Month)

08/27/06 - Karin Gunderson is a harpist with a heavenly touch. Her concert stage is the nearest hospice center. Explore God’s grace in her as she helps others die well.

08/20/06 - Leslie Hunter, a man of enormous faith who reaches inner city Chicago youth through spell-binding poetry, creative group time, and his own supply of God’s overflowing grace.

08/13/06 - Lynn Pauley, mother of five adopted inner-city children.

July 2006

07/30/06 - Gary Harbaugh helps us make sense of how God’s will goes to work in these times of devastation when we’re – frankly – overwhelmed.

07/23/06 - Gerald Sittser, professor of religion at Whitworth College who specializes in the history of Christianity and American religion, though his most popular courses are Introduction to the Christian Faith and Christian Spirituality.

07/16/06 - Curt Riess, a honey entrepreneur who has extensive knowledge of the honey industry and a strong Christian faith that offers a perfect opportunity for re-examining the sweetness of grace, as we know it from the Bible.

07/09/06 - Kathy Holmgren, wife of Seattle Seahawks football coach Mike Holmgren, understands these internal and external dimensions of life extraordinarily well.

07/02/06 - Andy Tecson, a composer and jazz saxophonist, describes his special love for bringing jazz worship into the life of the church.

June 2006

06/25/06 - Dan Lehmann, editor of The Lutheran magazine, and Peter Marty explore six features of churches that delight in living under a large canopy of grace and common purpose.

06/18/06 - Senator George McGovern, a Representative and a Senator from South Dakota, shares his dream for ending this sorry state of affairs.

06/11/06 - Mark Hoffman, the Associate Professor of Biblical Studies. His parish and academic positions reflect his commitment to expressing how Scripture is not simply a resource for scholarly reflection but a life source for Christians and for the Church.

06/04/06 - Barbara Rossing, a professor of New Testament at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago explores the subject of her work on rapture, and some of the dangers that accompany popular books that merge fiction with questionable biblical interpretation.

May 2006

05/28/06 -  Joe Holt, Director of Executive Ethics at Notre Dame University looks at becoming the moral and ethical characters we all want to be.

05/21/06 - Esther Prabhakar, a woman full of grace and faith who has an extraordinary prayer life and ministry, organized around a beautiful concept of prayer journaling.

05/14/06 - Dick Hardel, an absolute “pro” when it comes to underscoring the importance of living with a passionate faith. Hear how his words are full of grace and responsibility in a time when parents and grandparents need to think deeply about what they’re passing along to the next generation.

05/07/06 - Joe Ehrmann, an ex-professional football player, named Man of the Year while playing for the Baltimore Colts. During his football career, Rev. Ehrmann matriculated at Dallas Theological Seminary and Westminster Theological Seminary, and was ordained in 1985.

April 2006

04/30/06 - Kay Fennell a woman who, with her husband, feeds hungry people on Chicago’s Lower Wacker Drive.

04/23/06 - Weston Noble, an internationally known conductor and clinician who has served as a guest conductor for more that 775 music festivals in the United States and abroad. On the program, he explores the joy of leading a college choir for nearly six decades.

February 2006

02/26/06 - Phil Thompson, who takes a piece of raw stainless steel and makes the scriptures come alive through it.

02/19/06 - Dave Ramsey, a popular radio talk show host and author.

02/12/06 - Andy Krey, the Executive Secretary of the Lutheran Association for Maritime Ministry, ministers in coastal ports to seafarers from around the world.

02/05/06 - Peter Mayer, a talented musician who plays lead guitar for the Jimmy Buffett band, and who understands the noun of being Christian.

January 2006

01/22/06 - Martin Doblmeier, the President and founder of Journey Films, combines a lifelong interest in religion with a passion for journalism.

01/15/06 - Bob Erickson is Professor and Chair of the History Department at Pacific Lutheran University who knows the distinction between his Lord and his country.

01/08/06 - Tom Holmes, Director, Samaritan House, helps homeless people thrive in a home filled with love.

01/01/06 - David Briggs is a religion reporter for The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer who has reported on issues of faith and ethics since 1985.


December 2005

12/25/05 - Chaplain Jeanne Olsen who knows the importance of ministry that is all wrapped up in a care for others. She doesn’t lead an abstract ministry, precisely because her Lord is not an abstract Lord.

November 2005

11/20/05 - Mary Fuller who makes crèches out of bread.

11/13/05 - Joe Holt, a business consultant and teacher of ethics and faith in the workplace, has a different idea. Listen in for fresh insights on abundance and abundant life.

11/06/05 - Karin Gunderson is a harpist with a heavenly touch. Her concert stage is the nearest hospice center. Explore God’s grace in her as she helps others die well.

October 2005

10/30/05 - Bill Russell, church historian who will walk us through the ritual and value in Luther’s daily prayer routine.

10/23/05 - Art Simon, founder of Bread for the World, reflects on Jesus’ prayer in light of his own struggle to pray it meaningfully and honestly.

10/16/05 - Wyvetta Bullock, an ELCA Pastor who currently serves as Executive for Leadership Development in the Office of the Presiding Bishop, takes  a look at the gift of forgiveness.

10/09/05 - Rick Rouse, the Executive Director for Church Relations and Continuing Theological Education at Pacific Lutheran University and a pastor who went after the arsonist who burned his Lutheran Church to the ground.

10/02/05 - Sue Gundy, a heavy equipment operator in the taconite mines of Northeastern Minnesota, who makes plenty of time for faith and family beside her 12-hour shifts.

September 2005

09/25/05 - Bob Molsberry, author of Blindsided by Grace has a nightmare to tell that turns out to be real. Hit by an errant truck while bike riding one fine spring day, his life has never been the same since entering a wheelchair. Be prepared to discover extraordinary grace hidden in an ordinary man doing his ordinary best to live with circumstances he never asked for.

09/18/05 - Steve Siler is committed to aiding people in their recovery and healing from devastating experiences. Through his incredible gift of music, he can send the most broken human moments straight into the lap of God.

09/11/05 - Pastor Ann Tiemeyer, the Director at Koinonia – a Lutheran Outdoor Ministry for the past 3 ½ years, develops post-September 11th ministries to the larger New York City area on behalf of Koinonia.

09/04/05 - Leslie Hunter, a man of enormous faith who reaches inner city Chicago youth through spell-binding poetry, creative group time, and his own supply of God’s overflowing grace.

August 2005

08/28/05 - Mark Moller-Gunderson is a pastor on Sunday mornings and doubles as a fire department captain and a member of his town’s rescue squad.

08/21/05 - Gene Hay, a worker at a farm with recovering drug and alcohol addicts and really loves people.

08/14/05 - Gary Harbaugh helps us make sense of how God’s will goes to work in these times of devastation when we’re – frankly – overwhelmed.

08/07/05 - Presiding Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Mark Hanson, brings all kind of clarity to the matter as he steeps his own ministry and leadership in a Word that possesses us.

July 2005

07/31/05 - M. Alexandra George, a leader of The Zoom House in Minneapolis, where families and individuals with limited opportunities make something beautiful out of broken dreams.

07/24/05 - The Rev. Elizabeth G. Maxwell, Associate Rector of the Church of the Holy Apostles in New York, New York.

07/17/05 - The Working Bikes cooperative, a non-profit organization whose mission is to empower communities by engaging in activities that promote environmentalism, public health, and human equality.

07/10/05 - Brenda Meier, a member of  the LWR staff since 2001 who serves as the communication associate for parish projects and partnerships.

07/03/05 - David Pope, a village president in suburban Chicago, discusses the privilege of serving his community.

June 2005

06/26/05 - Dennis Dewey, the Executive Director of the Network of Biblical Storytellers (NOBS) is a self- described “minister of storytelling.”

06/19/05 - Susan MacDonald Bray is a naturalist at Lakeside Nature Center in Swope Park – an 1,800 acre park in the heart of Kansas City, Missouri.

06/12/05 - Linda Schroeder is the Executive Director of Project COPE, an ecumenical ministry in St. Louis, Missouri.

06/05/05 - Mary Ylvisaker Nilsen is an author and teacher with a graduate degree in Literary Non-Fiction from the University of Iowa.

May 2005

05/29/05 - Pastor Dwayne Westermann, of College Lutheran Church in Salem, Virginia, leads what he calls Lutheran Safaris to Tanzania.

05/22/05 - Gerry Iverson is the national coordinator for the organization, Alternatives for Simple Living.

05/15/05 - Pastor Wayne Gordon, pastor and coach who helped a group of inner-city teenagers make a difference in their neighborhood.

05/08/05 - Lynn Pauley, mother of five adopted inner-city children.

05/01/05 - Dr. Shannon Jung, a professor of rural ministry at Warburg Theological Seminary in Dubuque, Iowa, and the director for the Center for Theology and Land.

April 2005

04/24/05 - Ken Beckmann, the owner of Beckmann Violin shop in Mission, Kansas. a craftsman and an award-winning violin maker.

04/17/05 - The Rev. Bob Herhold, a retired ELCA pastor, an award winning journalist, author, and playwright.

04/03/05 and 04/10/05 - Sister Joan Chittister, a best-selling author and well-known lecturer.

 

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