Coffeepot Fellowship Podcast
Sarah Arthur returns to the podcast as "" is arriving in stores. We laugh our way through episode #140 and back at . Sarah is the author of numerous books and resources on the intersection of faith and great stories. Her first book was the best-selling youth devotional, "," followed by the award-winning "." She's also the editor of the literary guides to prayer series by Paraclete Press, including "" (Jan. 2016). Sarah is a graduate of and , she speaks around the country on the role of stories and imagination in spiritual formation. She lives in Lansing, Michigan, with her young sons,...
info_outline Coffee with Ari MofficCoffeepot Fellowship Podcast
LINKS: Sponsor: ELI Talk: MORE: Founder of , was ordained in 2007 from . She has an undergraduate degree from in Religious Studies, a time when, she says, she got "slightly obsessed with Buddhism." She then went on to Baltimore to complete a Masters Degree in Jewish Education from . She has been the Director of and spends her full-time rabbinate focused on supporting interfaith couples and families who are exploring Jewish life. Her husband is also a Reform Rabbi and they are the proud parents of a 8 year old and 10 year old. She is open to mall walking or meeting for a coffee and...
info_outline Coffee with Eric JacksonCoffeepot Fellowship Podcast
Rev. Eric Jackson's quote from the website jumped out at me. Perhaps it should not be outstanding that a pastor is firmly standing up for transgender people. As humans we shouldn't be surprised anymore that God surprises us with naturally occurring phenomena. It makes sense to be surprised at what the surprise isbut decreasingly so that there is a surprise at all. God has got us beat, hands down, in the creation department. Now can we stop hurting the souls, transgender and everyone else, who are blessings in God's beautifully diverse Creation? This pastor and doctoral student is helping...
info_outline Coffee with Lyvonne Proverbs PicouCoffeepot Fellowship Podcast
Minister Lyvonne “Proverbs” Picou is a preacher, speaker, poet, educator, creative social entrepreneur, and an Emmy-award-winning media producer. A New York City native, Lyvonne is currently a part of the inaugural cohort for the Do Good X Startup Accelerator. nurtures Christian social entrepreneurs who wish to do good in the world. She was also recently profiled as a Millennial Womanist to Watch by . Through her organization, , Lyvonne promotes healthy and safe conversations around religion, sex, and Blackness in order to, ultimately, address the silence in...
info_outline Coffee with Patrick BeaulierCoffeepot Fellowship Podcast
Rabbi Patrick Beaulier is a co-founder of and . He is an author, speaker, pastor, seeker and facilitator. He is the rabbi for , an independent, progressive Jewish community started south of Richmond, VA. Patrick has written or edited several books including Ahavah Rabbah, PunkTorah: The First Anthology and the NewKosher Vegan Cookbook, as well as countless articles for blogs such as PunkTorah and My Jewish Learning. Rabbi Patrick was ordained by , a progressive rabbinical program in Manhattan, founded by the late Rabbi Joseph Gelberman. Patrick is also a member of the Richmond...
info_outline Coffee with Micah ReddingCoffeepot Fellowship Podcast
Micah Redding is the Executive Director of the Christian Transhumanist Association and producer of The Christian Transhumanist Podcast. Micah is from many places including Tulsa, Oklahoma and lives in Nashville, Tennessee with his spouse. What's Christian Transhumanist, you ask? Micah is the right Christian to ask.
info_outline Coffee with Melanie MullenCoffeepot Fellowship Podcast
If you're wondering what a "drag show for the saints" is then this could be your favorite episode of the Coffeepot Fellowship Podcast. Rev. Melanie Mullen lives her life in professional service to God and others as the Director of Reconciliation, Justice, and Creation Care at the Office of the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church. This episode has set a record for the most links within the show notes page. You can find those links and more at coffeepotfellowship.com.
info_outline Coffee with Lisa Sharon HarperCoffeepot Fellowship Podcast
Lisa Sharon Harper confirms here that one reason President Obama was able to create the DACA program was because of a broad coalition of evangelical Christians advocating for major immigration reform? [Full show notes at coffeepotfellowship.com/lisasharonharper] Lisa is the founder and president of FreedomRoad.us, a consulting group dedicated to shrinking the narrative gap.
info_outline Coffee with Stephanie Sorge WingCoffeepot Fellowship Podcast
Stephanie is the pastor at in Harrisonburg, Virginia. Formerly she was the Associate Pastor for Campus Ministry at . She has also served other churches in Kentucky. She is married to Andy Wing, another Presbyterian minister. They have two boys, Isaac and Micah, 4 and 2 years old, respectively. Both Stephanie and Andy are children and grandchildren of pastors. In this interview Stephanie asks those of us not already engaged in self-awakening to take action on our own development. We're invited to encounters with racism. As resources Stephanie recommends the work of , , and the...
info_outline Coffee with Patricia LyonsCoffeepot Fellowship Podcast
The Rev. Dr. Patricia (“Tricia”) Lyons is currently serving on the Bishop’s Staff as Missioner for Evangelism and Community Engagement for the . For 17 years, she was a chaplain, religion teacher, varsity coach and JK-12 Director of Service Learning at St. Stephen's & St. Agnes (Episcopal) School in Alexandria, VA. She has also taught as an adjunct at the , teaching evening and summer courses to masters and doctoral students. Tricia has taught courses in Systematic Theology, C.S. Lewis, Sigmund Freud, Theology and Fiction, and most recently, Christian Themes in Harry Potter. Tricia...
info_outlineGrace Aheron is a force of nature all unto herself. She is wise, courageous and full of faith. Her stories include advocacy for others, leaps of faith, and living into her own being.
I took some time at the beginning of our conversation to make relationship connections. Being introduced to Claire Hitchins and Taylor (Poindexter) Devine helps all of us know Grace and helps the world be a better place. The web of goodness and love I see developing in the Coffeepot Fellowship and United Faith Leaders is a beautiful thing. They are certainly forging new connections. However, they are mostly shining a light on the kinds of interconnectedness, beauty, and strength that already existed. We're truly grateful just to be participants. Do, please, make connections with Claire and Taylor.
Grace promoted Black and Pink, which describes itself as an open family of LGBTQ prisoners and “free world” allies who support each other. Grace asked us especially to become penpals. There are many ways to get involved and support Black and Pink, so definitely dig into their website.
Grace mentioned that Black and Pink also does work toward the abolition of the prison industrial complex with special urgency focused on the violence upon LGBTQ people. I'm glad this abolition came up, even briefly, because Americans (myself included) need to become much more aware of the injustices that are being perpetrated as law enforcement and incarceration. Our nation was on track to radically reduce the number of prisons when our government pivoted toward "law and order" and rapidly increased incarceration rates instead. And, spoiler alert, people of color were - and still are - incarcerated at disproportionately higher rates. So while it may seem instinctively absurd for 21st-century Americans to consider abolition of the prison industrial complex, that is largely a factor of 1) one's age and 2) one's skin color (and not necessarily in that order).
Grace is presently accomplishing all of the good you hear about in the interview while being the "Y00f wrangler" and campus minister at St. Paul's Memorial Church and while living in the Charis Community Cville (Charlottesville, VA) which she founded after working for the Episcopal Diocese of California.
"Nothing about us, without us, is for us." - slogan of South African disability and youth activists / poster by Ricardo Levins Morales
Links:
Sponsor: United Faith Leaders
Interview with Taylor (Poindexter) Devine
University of Virginia (UVa)