For The Love With Jen Hatmaker Podcast
Society & Culture:Relationships
Language that Transcends Differences–The Poetry of Faith ft. Pádraig Ó Tuama
We’re wrapping up our Faith Shakers series this week, and we hope you’ve found it as eye-opening and enlightening as we have to see what people of faith in non-traditional spaces have been doing to make the world a better, more thoughtful place. This episode takes us to yet another unique space where faith and art are being combined to great effect--and it’s through poetry. In case you’re having flashbacks to Shakespearean sonnets you had to study in high school, fear not. We’re going beyond poetry to recognize the beauty in the lyrics we love from our favorite songs, to the way thoughts are constructed by deep thinkers like modern poet Maya Angelou. Language, words, and poetry have always been a tool deeply embedded inside any sort of faith search. So this week, we welcome a poet who also happens to be a theologian, and he's going to walk us through the powerful ways that poetry can bring healing, hope, and reconciliation, Pádraig Ó Tuama is a poet and theologian whose work centers around language, power, conflict, politics, and religion. For several years, he was the leader of Corrymeela Community—Ireland's oldest organization focused on religious reconciliation. He’s also the in-house theologian for the NPR show On Being, with Krista Tippet. Pádraig focuses on conflict resolution who dedicates his life to creating safe spaces for all people within the religious realm. He shows us all that communication, understanding, and landing in the gray space is the way forward and that we can all find our faith space, no matter who we are or where we come from.
* * *
Thank you to our sponsors!
Betterhelp | Get 10% off your first month at betterhelp.com/forthelove
OSEA | Get 10% off your first order using promo code FORTHELOVE at oseamalibu.com
Thistle Farms | Get 15% off at thistlefarms.org using promo code FORTHELOVE
Thought-Provoking Quotes
"Conflict can be the place for brilliant friendships to thrive, and experience electricity for themselves. So sometimes you want to amplify conflict because it's really fruitful, energetic, and creative. But when it gets violent, or destructive, or fruitless, then it needs to be resolved."
– Padraig O Tuama
“I have no interest in whether somebody does or doesn't believe in God. I have no interest in whether we agree. That doesn't interest me at all. I hope we don't, I don't agree with myself, so I don't really agree with anybody else.”
– Padraig O Tuama
"I have a deep interest in wondering, 'do the words we use help us make some kind of sense of the world?' And when there's no sense to be made, do the words we use help give our grief voice?"
– Padraig O Tuama
“So much of the work of peace can be undone by the peace field being partitioned, and segregated, and fighting amongst itself.”
– Padraig O Tuama
“I'm uninterested in neutrality. I am interested in fairness and trustability.”
– Padraig O Tuama
"If you were to gather all the authors of the bible, and put them in a field, I think they would hate each other at times. They would not agree with each other on this word of God, or the question of God. And as a result, I thought, ‘Oh my God, there's room for me.’"
– Padraig O Tuama
Padraig’s LinksWebsite
Connect with Jen!Jen’s website
Jen’s InstagramJen’s Twitter
Jen’s FacebookJen’s YouTube
To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free