Afleveringen
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This dreaded disease seems to strip away everything that makes us, well, us. A chaplain and a psychiatrist remind us of the human at the centre of the diagnosis.
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The âdâ word â dementia â is one that everyone fears. It seems to strip away everything that made that person with the disease the person we once knew. Itâs easy to lose sight of the person, the human at the centre of the diagnosis.
Today, 420,000 Australians live with dementia, a number projected to double in the next 30 years, which makes it a significant and growing health challenge for Australiaâs ageing population.
This episode of Life & Faith brings you two conversations that bring the human at the centre of the dementia diagnosis back into focus. Weâre featuring two interviews Natasha Moore did before going on maternity leave: with Neil Jeyasingam, Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Sydney. Neil is also a CPX Associate.
Natasha also spoke to Ben Boland, a chaplain with 15 yearsâ experience in residential aged care â and whose father lives with dementia.
Explore:
Dementia Australia, the national peak body representing people with dementia, their families, and carers.
Check out CPX's new podcast, The Week At CPX, to keep up-to-date with everything thatâs happening at CPX, plus a bit of commentary on the side.
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Mercy Aiken tells Life & Faith of the joy-filled, yet painful life of Palestinian Christian, Bishara Awad.
Bishara was a child in Jerusalem when his father was shot and killed during the Israeli-Arab war of 1948. The story of his life and that of his family provides a sobering portrait of life in Israel/Palestine during decades of war, violence, tension and dashed dreams for those seeking a peaceful resolution to conflict.
Somehow, Bishara, a Palestinian Christian and community leader, remains unbowed, but also forgiving and empathetic towards his opponents.
His story is told in the book, Yet in the Dark Streets Shining â a Palestinian Story of Hope and Resilience in Bethlehem.
The coauthor of the book is Mercy Aiken â who came into the CPX studio. Mercy was in Australia with the Palestine Israel Ecumenical Network.
The book:
Yet in the Dark Streets Shining â a Palestinian Story of Hope and Resilience in Bethlehem
Palestine Israel Ecumenical Network
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Asuntha Charles has lived in some toughest places in the world. And sheâs loved it.
Long
As a young woman, Asuntha Charles stubbornly defied her culture to advocate for vulnerable women and girls. That determination never left her as she dedicated her life to voiceless people in not only her native India, but places like Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Sudan and Iraq.
Here she tells Life & Faith about her extraordinary life of service and care for people who needed that care most. And we also get an insight into the early influences that shaped her life and contributed to her holding a faith that sustains her even in the face of risk, and heartbreaking losses.
Try listening to this and not be challenged and inspired!
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War correspondent Janine di Giovanni has covered the near-extinction of the ancient Christian communities of the Middle East.
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âTheyâve survived plagues, theyâve survived pillages, theyâve survived raids, theyâve survived purges â and they most recently survived ISIS.â
The Christian communities of the Middle East â in places like Iraq and Syria, Egypt and Palestine â are ancient, and over recent decades have been facing various kinds of existential threat. Janine di Giovanniâs book The Vanishing: The Twilight of Christianity in the Middle East is a work of âpre-archaeologyâ, recording the stories and courage of these communities even as they disappear.
Di Giovanni is a war correspondent and human rights investigator who has covered 18 wars and 3 genocides across her career, bearing witness to the terrible things that happen in our world. In this episode, she talks about visiting churches in war zones, why people stay, and whether faith â including her own belief in God â is strong enough to survive war. She also shares a bit about her current work with The Reckoning Project, a war crimes unit working within Ukraine.
âIt's been an honour to work for 35 years in all these war zones with these extraordinary people. I feel very privileged and lucky every day of my life that I do this work, because ⊠I have a purposeful life.â
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EXPLORE:
The Vanishing: The Twilight of Christianity in the Middle East, by Janine di Giovanni
The Reckoning Project
Sign up for the CPX newsletter here
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CPX writers talk about how theyâre hoping to breathe new life into a very old story.
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Get a glimpse into the CPX writersâ room as Simon, Natasha, Justine and Max talk about what theyâre writing about Easter, or how they go about working out how to write about Easter.
Natasha talks about American novelist Marilynne Robinsonâs new book Reading Genesis and how Robinsonâs courteous and unapologetic way of doing âpublic Christianityâ messes with how public conversations about God usually happen.
Max discusses how we may admire heroes for their greatness â like Homerâs Achilles, for example â but we really long for goodness, expressed by saviours who willingly sacrifice themselves for others.
Simon discusses how a quirk of the calendar can put Anzac Day and Easter in proximity to each other, bringing those two events and their focus on sacrifice into conversation.
Justine talks about death denial among the tech titans of Silicon Valley who hope to solve the problem of death. She argues that they express what life feels like if Easter Saturday â the day Jesus lay dead in the grave â is never followed by Easter Sunday â the day that changed everything, according to the Christian faith, because it is the day that Jesus rose to new life.
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Explore:
Natashaâs piece on Marilynne Robinsonâs Reading Genesis
An article Simon wrote linking Anzac Day with Easter
Sign up for the CPX newsletter here
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We explore the spiritual needs of people in intensive care in hospital, or behind bars.
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âI went to see this lady and as soon as I walked in, she actually said, âf*** off, I donât want to have anything to do with you peopleâ.â
Chaplaincy in Australia is contested. If people have had a bad experience with the church or concerned that someone might be trying to manipulate them, a chaplain walking up to say hi might get that response. Not least because people can be very vulnerable if theyâre dealing with a shocking medical episode in hospital or grappling with life in prison.
This Life & Faith episode takes you behind the scenes of two very different environments: the intensive care unit of a major Sydney hospital, and Kirkconnell Correctional Centre in regional NSW. Two chaplains from Jericho Road, a social service organisation linked with the Presbyterian Church in NSW, tell us about what itâs like to care spiritually for people during very difficult times in their lives.
Content warning: there are some challenging stories told in these interviews. This episode is not suitable for children.
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Explore:
Jericho Roadâs Love Your Neighbour course on chaplaincy
Sign up for CPX's regular email newsletter to find out more about our work.
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For decades now in the West, religion has been on the retreat. In places where, 50 years ago, going to church on a Sunday was just what you did, weâve had generations now for whom that would be a very foreign concept.
Justin Brierley is an author and very popular podcaster. For 17 years he hosted a podcast called Unbelievable where he would bring together atheist and Christian thinkers for civil and robust discussion. He presided over conversations with some of the worldâs great minds for these dialogues and modelled a brilliant way to disagree civilly.
Justin has just published a book called The Surprising Re-birth of Belief in God: Why New Atheism Grew Old and Secular Thinkers Are Considering Christianity Again. He detects a shift in the air and the possibility that the thoroughly secular vision of the world might not be cutting it for people today. Is that his imagination or might there be something to this?
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Explore:
Justinâs latest book:âŻhttps://justinbrierley.com/the-surprising-rebirth-of-belief-in-god/
And the podcast at:
The Surprising Rebirth podcast:âŻhttps://justinbrierley.com/surprisingrebirth/
Sign up for CPX's regular email newsletter to find out more about our work.
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Sarah Williams explains how the mother of modern feminism fell off the pages of history.
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After her death in 1906, Josephine Butler was described as one of the âfew great people who have moulded the course of thingsâ. (For the record, she was also described by peers as âthe most beautiful woman in the worldâ.)
Yet how many of us have heard of her? A bit too feminist for later Christians, a bit too Christian for later feminists, this pioneer of the movement against sex trafficking is only now being remembered.
Sarah Williams is an historian at Regent College and a research associate at St Benetâs Hall, Oxford. And over the last few years, she has gotten to know Josephine Butler well â she would even go so far as to call her a friend.
When Natasha Moore asked what she finds so remarkable about Butler, Sarah speaks first about her persistence â the sixteen years she spent working to overturn one law that unjustly discriminated against women.
âI donât think that we lack vision in our culture, but we definitely lack stamina ⊠I think she did it by recognising that she couldnât do it. Does that sound strange?â
For International Womenâs Day this year, meet the woman whoâs been called the mother of modern feminism â and join an ongoing conversation our culture is having about power, justice, gender, and what it means to âchange the worldâ.
âWe might imagine that the real centres of power are where powerful people change culture through influencing spheres of culture â media, politics, the law, and so on ⊠And yet whatâs extraordinary about somebody like Josephine Butler or Mahatma Gandhi or any other of the great social reformers that we can think of in history, is that they somehow manage to see that really the margins matter a lot. And that what goes on at the centre, if it fails to understand whatâs going on at the margins, does so at its peril.â
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Pre-order Sarah Williams' biography of Josephine Butler, When Courage Calls.
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Reflections on a human experience thatâs at once routine and exceptional; both very costly and very good.
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Life & Faith has covered many stories relating to birth over the years â incredible stories of courage and heartbreak, difficult decisions, life and death â but weâve never done an episode on birth itself: whatâs amazing about this process, whatâs so hard about it, what makes it so meaningful for so many people.
This year Simon Smart is celebrating a once-every-four-years occasion (yes, he was born on 29 February!) and Natasha Moore is due to head off on maternity leave soon, so Justine Toh joins them for a conversation about birthdays â that is, birth ... days. And midwife Jodie McIver, author of Bringing Forth Life: Godâs Purposes in Pregnancy and Birth, offers some insights on the journey to becoming a parent, including how surprisingly frequently pregnancy and birth â in story and as metaphor â feature in the Bible.
âI think the fact that God chooses birth to help us understand deep spiritual realities about his character and work in the world really gives honour to womenâs bodies, and to these human experiences as well, as we kind of share in the cost of bringing forth life in our own little way.â
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EXPLORE
Jodie McIver, Bringing Forth Life: Godâs Purposes in Pregnancy and Birth
A few other Life & Faith episodes related to birth, touching on disability, loss, infertility, and fostering:
Speak Up, Show Up
Intensive Care
When Life Doesnât Go to Plan
Home Extension
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âŠof which CPXâs Justine Toh is first and foremost.
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In the lead up to Easter, Justine is giving up not only sugar, but her ignorance about all things Lent. She speaks to Catholic theologian Matt Tan, who goes by Awkward Asian Theologian on socials, about Lent and its three-fold focus: giving up, alms-giving, and prayer. They discuss the difficulty of self-sacrifice and the way that, strangely enough, it often proves the easier option over alms-giving, which neednât only include giving to charity, but also intentional, active investment in the lives of others.
Matt also alludes to the way church seasons induct the believer into an entirely different order of time. He cites the work of Neil Postman, who said the clock was originally invented to help monks keep to their daily prayer schedule. In time, however, the clock, went beyond the monastery and conquered the rest of the world. Time is now subdivided into increasingly minute moments that all need to be filled. So, what does it mean to live according to the rhythms of sacred time?
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Explore
Simon Smartâs Ash Wednesday article
Life & Faith episode with Matt Tan on the metaphysics of pornography
Follow Awkward Asian Theologian on Instagram
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20 years on from the founding of Facebook, what role do these platforms play in our lives?
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February 4 marked 20 years since Mark Zuckerburg launched the site that was initially known as The Facebook from his Harvard dorm room, so this seems like a good time to take stock of what social media now looks like, and what our lives look like as a result.
Whether youâre an avid user of Facebook, Instagram, Twitter/X, TikTok, and more, or a social media sceptic, join Simon Smart, Justine Toh, and Natasha Moore for a frank chat about the better and worse of these platforms in 2024. With cameos from Andy Crouch, CPX brand manager (and socials pro) Clare Potts, and recent social media quitter Jess Forsyth, the discussion ranges from whether group chats count as social media to whether the internet is âmade of demonsâ - as well as the advantages (and disciplines) of being an iceberg vs an ocean liner.
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EXPLORE:
New York Times article How Group Chats Rule the World
Philippa Mooreâs article about quitting social media
Paul Kingsnorthâs Substack essays The Universal and The Neon God
Alan Jacobsâ New Atlantis piece
Andy Crouchâs Spiritual Practices for Public Leadership
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Anglican Priest David Pileggi talks about what Christmas means in his town of Jerusalem in the midst of war.
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Anglican priest David Pileggi has lived in Jerusalem for over 40 years. In that time he has seen a lot, but recent events in Israel and Gaza have been as shocking and disturbing as any he has encountered. He talks to Life & Faith about his life in the âHoly Cityâ - what he loves about it and the things he weeps over.
Despite all that has transpired in recent days David Pileggi refuses to despair. As he prepares his Christmas 2023 message for the gathered locals and pilgrims, he remains convinced the story of the baby born down the road in Bethlehem 2000 years ago, remains the best hope for not only that troubled part of the world, but for all of us.
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Christ church Jerusalem is the oldest protestant church in the Middle East
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British journalist David Goodhart on the Anywhere-Somewhere divide challenging national unity abroad and at home.
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Is Australia polarised?
The country is no UK roiled by Brexit, or US torn apart by the election of Donald Trump to the American presidency in 2016. But weâve had our own brushes with polarisation â most recently on the question of an Indigenous Voice to Parliament.
On this episode of Life & Faith, we look at the issue of national division from a sideways angle: could the Anywhere-Somewhere divide explain contemporary polarisation and the gulf in peopleâs instincts?
The terms belong to David Goodhart, author of The Road to Somewhere: The Populist Revolt and the Future of Politics and Head, Hand, Heart: The Struggle for Dignity and Status in the 21st Century.
People in the Anywhere class, Goodhart says, tend to be well-educated, mobile, and cosmopolitan, making up about 20-25% of the national population. Their Somewhere counterparts, on the other hand, tend to be more rooted in their local communities, perhaps more conservative and communitarian, and make up 50% of the population.
Neither worldview is better or worse, he argues, but Anywheres tend to run the country, and donât reliably read the national room. For Goodhart, this explains the cry for recognition of recent populist movements â and raises the question of where someone might seek what Goodhart calls âunconditional recognitionâ.
âThe institutions that gave people unconditional recognition like the family, like the church or indeed the nation, all of these things are weaker and the weakening of that unconditional recognition bears most heavily on the people who are the lowest achievers, as it were, in modern liberal democracies.â
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Explore
Davidâs book The Road to Somewhere: The Populist Revolt and the Future of Politics
Davidâs book Head, Hand, Heart: The Struggle for Dignity and Status in the 21st Century
Davidâs âToo Diverse?â essay for Prospect
Brigid Delaneyâs piece in The Guardian after the 2019 federal election
The LSE blog post on British Parliamentâs âclass problemâ
The SMH report on the backgrounds of Australiaâs federal MPs
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Our cultural narrative says there is no supernatural or transcendent realm. The CPX team wants to break that spell.
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Seen & Heard is back â and this time, the team have disenchantment in their sights, or the belief that there is no more supernatural or transcendent realm to life, that science is the only verifiable path to truth, and that all things religious are debunked, once and for all.
But is this true? The books and films weâve been reading and watching might disagree.
Natasha highlights beloved Australian author Helen Garnerâs encounter with an angel and our flirtation with the supernatural through occasions like Halloween, before taking us through the supernatural stylings of the latest Poirot film A Haunting in Venice, based (extremely loosely) on Agatha Christieâs 1969 novel Halloweâen Party.
Simon has been reading the biography of tennis icon and former World No. 1 Andre Agassi who, it turns out, hated tennis and wrestled with fame, but discovered that helping people is the âonly perfection there isâ.
A world that has cast off religion and the transcendent also leaves behind any account of the good life that goes along with those claims. Yet Agassi discovered that being the best tennis player in the world didnât fulfil him. Only serving others did, which resonates with the Christian claim that the good life is a life lived for others.
And Justine raves about Susannah Clarkeâs novel Piranesi and its vivid portrayal of what the disenchanted view of the world lacks: wonder, deep communion with the world, joy, and hope. Plus, Justine makes a bold claim: Susannah Clarke is the 21st-century successor to C.S. Lewis.
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Explore
Helen Garner describing her angelic encounter at the 2018 Sydney Writersâ Festival (from 30 mins)
Sean Kellyâs column mentioning Hilary Mantelâs possibly demonic encounter
Trailer for A Haunting in Venice
Natashaâs article on Halloween, published in the Sydney Morning Herald
Andre Agassiâs Open: An Autobiography
The Guardianâs interview with Susannah Clarke
Piranesi by Susannah Clarke
Wikipedia entry on the real-life Piranesi, the 18th-century architect and artist
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A new book tells the stories of people whose encounters with New Atheism set them on the path to Christianity.
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âHe said, Iâve been a scientist all my life and I was an atheist â quite a happy atheist, you know, I wasnât particularly looking for other worldviews. Until I read The God Delusion in 2006. And that really shook my faith in atheism.â
Itâs around 15 years ago that the so-called New Atheism â represented most prominently by the âFour Horsemenâ Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris, Daniel Dennett and of course Richard Dawkins â had its heyday. The conversation they instigated gave many people permission to fully and publicly embrace disbelief in God; perhaps even a strong belief that religion was harmful and should be done away with.
For others, encountering the work of the New Atheists had quite the opposite effect. A new book, Coming to Faith Through Dawkins: 12 Essays on the Pathway from New Atheism to Christianity, edited by Alister McGrath and Denis Alexander, tells the stories of people for whom, paradoxically, New Atheism became a doorway to Christian faith.
In this episode of Life & Faith, co-editor Denis Alexander explains how the book âwrote itselfâ and why itâs not meant to be a triumphalist read. And contributors Johan Erasmus and AnikĂł Albert explain why the New Atheism had such a significant â and contrary â impact on their lives.
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Buy Coming to Faith Through Dawkins: 12 Essays on the Pathway from New Atheism to Christianity
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This week marks 60 years since the death of CS Lewis and that seems like an appropriate moment to return to a very popular episode from a couple of years back.
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A lot of people know the date 22nd of November 1963 because that's the date that President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. That dramatic event overshadowed another death that same day on the other side of the Atlantic â the death of the beloved writer and public Christian CS Lewis, best known still today for his Narnia stories. It's 60 years this week since Lewis's death and that seems like an appropriate moment to return to a very popular episode from a couple of years back. In 2021 we marked 80 years since the origins of Lewis's book, Mere Christianity, which in an unlikely turn of events became one of the most influential books of the past century. Mere Christianity and Lewis's other writings have only grown in popularity since his death in 1963, and this episode goes some way to explaining why.
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Seeing war up close and surviving nonetheless leaves its mark.
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Andrew Hastie would not be the first person to join the defence force out of both a hunger for adventure and deep-seated sense of duty.
After a distinguished career in the army, including being an officer in the elite Special Air Service (SAS), Hastie speaks to Life & Faith about the experience. He explains why he joined up, his gruelling entry into the SAS and his three tours of Afghanistan.
Here we learn about the Afghan people Andrew worked with, the pressure and intense experience of engaging an enemy in an unfamiliar land and culture, and the toll of responsibility when the stakes are so high. This is a raw and honest assessment of the cost of war, the ethics of battle and the weight of the hard-won lessons of the combat zone.
What can faith offer to those experiencing the wounds of moral injury so prevalent in those who have been taken out of civilian life and placed into the extreme environment of war?
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Hope feels scarce, but itâs not lost â and itâs within our power to be people of hope.
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âI certainly have clients who are in their twenties who are saying to me, I will not have children because look at the world! So, the question is, where is the vision of hope?â
Clinical psychologist Leisa Aitken gets that hope seems in short supply right now. Daily headlines are a barrage of bad news â of wars and rumours of wars, politics in breakdown, the life support systems of the earth in crisis. Rising rates of poor mental health among the young show that the next generation is struggling. The future doesnât seem all that bright.
We need collective action to address the worldâs growing disorder. But who do we need to be in the face of our present hope crisis?
Leisa has been researching hope for the past decade. In this interview, fresh from her 2023 CPX Richard Johnson Lecture, she runs us through the psychology of hope, offering us tools to help us cope with the times in which we live.
Leisa also covers the limits of mindfulness, the correlation between hope and feeling connected to something bigger than the self, and what is within our power to do â right now â to be people of hope.
âItâs easy to spend our lives just in distraction. But we can surround ourselves with people who are going to help us bring about our hopes and we can have eyes to see the glimpses of what we hope for â and to be those glimpses,â Leisa said.
âThe beauty of glimpses is we donât have to change everything in the world to bring hope about. We need just a taste. Just a glimpse.â
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Explore
Leisaâs website
The âsunny nihilismâ article
Fancy some marriage advice from Leisa?
More on mindfulness from Leisa
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Why have conspiracy theories gained so much traction? And are Christians more prone to believe them?
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âIâd like to say that itâs all intellectual, but I donât think it is.â
The belief that behind the visible mechanisms of society, powerful forces are up to no good is hardly a new idea (or reality). But geopolitics and culture wars in recent years have thrown up plenty of material for conspiracy theorists to work with.
Whatâs so appealing about these theories? When do they become a problem? And how can we have constructive conversations about them, without one side just infuriating or dismissing the other?
Nigel Chapman is the lead author of the ISCAST paper âWho to Trust? Christian Belief in Conspiracy Theoriesâ, which digs into the phenomenon of conspiracism, including how Christian faith and community can either feed into or mitigate against such beliefs.
And Michel GagnĂ© is someone whoâs been down the rabbit hole himself, and returned â starting with the myths and theories surrounding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy 60 years ago. He explains how he got in â and out! â and offers advice for families and friends who find themselves divided and exhausted by conspiracy theories.
âIf we dehumanise others, we are on the slippery slope of creating a false reality, a simplistic myth that does not reflect our world.â
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EXPLORE:
ISCAST discussion paper, Who to Trust? Christian Belief in Conspiracy Theories
Michel GagnĂ©âs book, Thinking Critically about the Kennedy Assassination: Debunking the Myths and Conspiracy Theories
Michel GagnĂ©âs podcast Paranoid Planet
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Why might someone whoâs not religious want to send their kids to a faith-based school?
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âTeachers are one of the few groups of people in society who can tell other people what to do in their discretionary time and â by and large â they obey.â
Education is among our core activities as a society â so itâs unsurprising that it can be a battleground for all sorts of ideas.
David I. Smith is Professor of Education at Calvin University, and he has spent decades thinking about how education really forms people. He says that thereâs no such thing as a âvanillaâ or âneutralâ education â and that even a maths or a French textbook will imply a whole way of seeing the world and other people.
âWe spent a lot of time learning how to say in French and German, âThis is my name. This is my favourite food. I like this music. I donât like biology. This is what I did last weekend. I would like two train tickets to Hamburg. I would like the steak and fries. I would like a hotel room for two nights.â
So the implicit message of the textbooks was that the reason why we learn other peopleâs languages is so that we can obtain the goods and services that we deserve and so that we can tell people about ourselves ⊠Itâs not really imagining us as people who listen to other peopleâs stories or as people who care about the members of the culture weâre visiting who donât work in hotels, or as people who might want to talk about the meaning of life and not just the price of a hamburger.â
Given that about a third of Australian schools are religious, and that faith-based education is the subject of nervousness on both the left and right of politics these days, itâs worth asking: why do parents who arenât religious want to send their kids to Christian schools? Whatâs the content of a âChristianâ education? And what happens when religious schools get it wrong?
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