Wild Goose Festival is a transformational annual event grounded in faith-inspired social justice. Over the course of four days, there are hundreds of sessions focused on social justice, spirituality, the arts, and more. This is the Year-Round Wild Goose Festival! Catch some of what you missed and…
Lisa Gungor thought she knew her own story: small-town girl meets boy in college and they blissfully walk down the aisle into happily ever after. Their Christian faith was their lens and foundation for everything—their marriage, their music, their dreams for the future. But as their dreams began to come true, she began to wonder if her religion was really representative of the ‘good news’ she had been taught. She never expected the questions to lead as far as they did when her husband told her he no longer believed in God. The death of a friend, the unraveling of relationships and career, the loss of a worldview, and the birth of a baby girl with two heart defects all led Lisa to a tumultuous place; one of depression and despair. And it was there that her perspective on everything changed. The Most Beautiful Thing I’ve Seen tells the story of what can happen when you dare to let go of what you think to be true; to shift the kaleidoscope and see new colors and dimension by way of broken pieces. Lisa’s eloquent, soul-stirring memoir brings you to a music stage before thousands of fans and a front porch where two people whisper words that scare them to the core. It is the story of how doubt can spark the beginning of deeper faith; how a baby born with a broken heart can bring love and healing to the hearts of many, and ultimately, how the hardest experience in life often ends up saving us. Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/
When counteracting the evils of this world we are subject to burnout, grief, and despair. We can also become dragons while slaying dragons if we succumb to anger and bitterness. When facing the backlash, discouragement, and disillusionment we often experience in the work of social justice, self-esteem is not enough, affirmation is not enough, a strong will is not enough to get us through, to keep us going, to keep us healthy. We must find our identities from higher and a deeper places. The paths of Jesus and King were filled with joy and suffering. The conditions for happiness were often absent. Like them, we must suffer and we must dig deeper for joy. Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/
While this title may sound slightly familiar from religious programming circles, let me assure you that my program is just a LITTLE bit better. Many have asked what to expect from this program. Overall, it will be a ministry of laughter and blessings. I will offer my Christian perspective on current events and the news of the day. You will hear special guests share their testimonies. There will be a time where I get to minister to many of you individually. I will share insight on scripture. And finally, you will have an opportunity to ask me anything on your mind which needs my inspired response. Lives will be changed. People will be touched. Decisions will be made. Hallelujah! Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/
In this episode Alexia Salvatierra shares lessons from Latin America on how to create intentional communities that heal the soul and change the world. Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/
Rob Wilson-Black and Adam Dyer discuss making connections, the right time for energy, and going about connecting resources to people to move agendas forward. Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/
What does an encounter that lasted only a few moments have to say about the deep, invested manner that we engage each other's pain, even when that pain is historically predictable? In the Gospel narrative of Thomas, we find a demand for proof of pain from Christ that informs the same privilege we hold dear--choice, at any cost. But what is the literal human cost of our doubt in the presence of a pain and enduring suffering that has always been there, and who pays it? Xavier Ramey, a community activist, international public speaker, strategist, and poet guides an interactive discussion on the privilege of doubt, a country swirling in a self-obsession with using interrogation as a form of relationship rather than compassion and faith as a guide, and how we continue to use ineffective tools to correct historical wrongs such as racism, sexism, and homophobia. Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/
Carla Ewert and Dr. Tina Schermer Sellers discuss the roots of sexual shame and the tools to dismantle it. Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Jasmin Morrell with Adam Dyer discuss the need for conversation and action regarding accessibility and faith.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Marthame and Helen discuss the weather, liberals, and the crazy duck festival.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Enjoy an interview with Daresha Kyi, the award-winning visionary who writes, produces, and directs for film and television. Daresha's next project due for release next year is called Mama Bears. Mama Bears is a feature-length documentary that explores the many ways in which the lives of conservative, Christian mothers are impacted and utterly transformed when they decide to affirm and advocate on behalf of their LGBTQ children. Most recently Daresha co-directed and co-produced her first feature documentary, Chavela, with Emmy nominated filmmaker Catherine Gund. Chavela celebrates the wild, rollercoaster life of badass singer Chavela Vargas, who jumped onstage wearing pants, a poncho, and a pistol, smoked cigars, and drank tequila while she boldly sang love songs to women in the early 1950s in very conservation, macho Mexico. The film was nominated for the Teddy award and won the 2nd place Panorama Audience Award at the 2017 Berlinale, as well as Best Documentary and Audience Awards at Outfest and the San Francisco LGBTQ Film Festival. Chavela is on Netflix.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Minister and Bryan Sirchio discusses progressive, substantive, uplifting AND challenging Christian music. Sirchia discusses the convergence music project with a guitar in hand. Bryan Sirchio is an ordained minister who joined forces with well known author Brian McLaren and Rev. Cameron Trimble of the Center for Progressive Renewal in Atlanta to form a new worship music company called The Convergence Music Project (CMP). In 2012, Bryan published a book called The 6 Marks of Progressive Christian Worship Music ,which articulates the theological parameters for a new genre of worship music with progressive lyrics and theology. As of May, 2016, Bryan has released 14 CDs, 4 study guides, and 4 songbooks in all. Bryan Sirchio has also traveled extensively since 1987 offering concerts, leading worship services and retreats, and offering keynote addresses at various regional and national conferences. Bryan has also worked extensively with grass roots organizations in Haiti since 1991. He’s a founding member and leader of an organization called Haiti Allies www.haitiallies.org, that supports education, meal programs, and job creation in Haiti.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ A powerful story teller, Matt Bays presents an honest, raw, yet hopeful account of how we find God in the ruins of our lives. The magic in this communicator’s voice and way of looking at the world is that he is able to speak honestly about deep and tragic events while simultaneously illuminating beauty and hope. - Be empowered to be honest with a God who has felt far off and hard to understand. -Discover community with fellow broken travelers. - Find the courage to shed the skin of an inauthentic Christianity that has promoted a healing process which is, in actual practice, unredemptive. - Begin to understand how God is reaching out to you in unexpected and unique ways. Matt joins the ranks of narrative spirituality writers/speakers such as Ann Lamott, Donald Miller, Rachel Held Evans, and Ann Voskamp in offering readers an honest, raw, creative, and insightful companion for sorting through the struggles of life with a measure of joy and hope.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Christianity receives a lot of attention in the media, but the most frequently discussed version represents a type of Christianity that sometimes turns people away from the Church.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ In today's political environment, who speaks for whom is not always clear. Over the past couple of decades, evangelical Christians have tended to be associated with the religious right and the most conservative positions of the Republican Party. Rebelling against this designation are those who prefer to be called Red Letter Christians, desiring to live out the red letters of Jesus words in the New Testament. Believing that Jesus is neither a Republican nor a Democrat, Red Letter Christians want to jumpstart a religious movement that will transcend partisan politics and concentrate on issues such as fighting poverty, caring for the environment, advancing peace, promoting strong families, and supporting a consistent ethic of life, all viewed as critical moral and biblical values.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Jill Henning and Sarah Pressly discuss experiencing the transformational spirit during challenging times.
A timely message for the American situation, Rev. William Barber brings his message to the people. This timeless recording from 2019 is inspiration for the work that must be done to confront systemic racism, poverty, the war economy, ecological devastation, and our nations distorted morality. Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ The Rev. Gwen Fry and Sarah Pressly discuss the rejuvenating power of gathering in a place like Wild Goose.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ What do Charles Darwin, Adam Smith, and Karl Marx have in common? What does theology have to do with economics? Why is a radical transformation of our economic system a gospel imperative for our time? Why is the gospel an economic manifesto?
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Phil Fox Rose, Patheos director of content and Goose presenter since 2012, is joined by author, faith community leader and blogger Keith Giles and guests to discuss the state of Progressive Christian blogging. What is it for? Sure we lift each other up, and give some advice. But are we trying to reach people and change their hearts too, or is that pointless? What are the particular challenges and opportunities today? Has podcasting killed blogging, or is it seeing a comeback?
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ In this episode, Barbara and Brian will speak briefly about the writing life, the road to publishing, and the mechanics of marketing before opening the floor for questions and wisdom from participants.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Enjoy an interview with Sara Cunningham, the founder of Free Mom Hugs. Sara calls herself an accidental activist for LGBTQ kids, and their families. Sara admits she struggled with knowing how to respond to her youngest son's coming out since they were in an evangelical church that was not inclusive or affirming. It took her a little while, but Sara finally broke through the fog and fully embraced Palmer's sexual orientation. Since that moment, she has been on the front lines of LGBTQ advocacy. Recently, her story caught the attention of Hollywood legend Jamie Lee Curtis who has bought the rights to do a movie based on Sara's book How We Sleep at Night. Sara is funny, thoughtful, and making a difference through her organization Free Mom Hugs. You will love meeting her.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Darci and Mathame discuss worship landscaping, performative art in church, and why art and church services shouldn't necessarily be separate.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ In this unique workshop episode, you’ll learn how to connect with others as an exploration of God and the divine. Whereas most spiritual practices are a retreat into solitary prayer or meditation, relating has us look for God by putting attention on relationships, with each other and the spaces between us. In addition to deepening our spirituality we also cultivate real world relational skills that help us meet others with greater presence, clarity, compassion and understanding. Rainier Wylde is a wholeness guide, a spiritual teacher and a group facilitator. He holds a Masters in Psychology, and has been extensively trained in Eastern mindfulness, Western contemplative practice, and the art of Socratic questioning.He has spent literally thousands of hours professionally interacting with individuals in all different stages of life—from spiritual seekers wanting training in being present, to men scrambling to get their lives pieced back together; from businessmen craving to have the keys to success to world-weary travelers trying to find healing and hope. His passion for new tribes, strong individuals, and spiritual connection are what drives him.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Best-selling children's book author, Matthew Paul Turner, will read his books and talk about why he started writing books for kids. For kids, families, lovers of children's books, or those interested in learning more about the children's book publishing world - Matthew Paul Turner, author of When God Made You and When I Pray for You, will read his books, his favorite books by other authors, and answer your questions. Whether you're a child or a child at heart, you'll enjoy this session with Turner.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ In this episode, Michael Gungor (of the Liturgists podcast) discusses his faith and career journey over the past 3 years and how he arrived to the present moment.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ What can we learn from the last several years about the state of Christianity and the moral character of the evangelical Right in the United States today? More specifically, what can we learn — and what can we do — about the threat of white Christian nationalism? The facilitators of this session are both leading and emerging voices in the theopolitical resistance movement, emphasizing the importance of activism, understanding, and intersectionality. We recognize how the various forms of oppression interrelate to contribute to a vast, dynamic, and seeming impenetrable network of systemic injustice and marginalization. Politics, even in 2019, need not be played as a zero-sum game with a winner-take-all mentality; a critical theology is as urgently needed and as relevant now as ever. Presenters touch briefly on their own work of dismantling white Christian nationalism in their contexts, and lead listeners through exercises and reflections meant to help them think critically and creatively about their own experiences of intersectionality. We will address how listeners can utilize their experiences toward productive conversation and transformation.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ What is the goal of the Kingdom of God? Looking at the mission of Jesus it seems that the goal is human flourishing, or Jubilee. Thus, all "missional" activity and church planting should be centered around facilitating and empowering flourishing both of the faith community and the surrounding neighborhoods. By providing three key missiological elements, community organizing offers a parable of what the church can be when the church is at its best and offers hope for the church in a post-Christian culture. In this episode, we ask what it means to be "missional," look at the connection between the Kingdom of God and community organizing, and converse around the implementation of these three principles in your context to both plant new churches and rejuvenate existing ones.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ This year has provided me all kinds of weird and unexpected opportunities to be in conversation with people I totally disagree with. From appearing on Buzzfeed with a Baptist to being invited to President Trump's prayer breakfast I have had lots of facetime with people that many would deem "The other side." I am also the only main line and female leader in my towns "lead pastor group." As you can imagine we don't see eye to eye. What I am discovering is that I need these relationships even more than I need the people who agree with me. These are the very people that if I just relied on their online presence I would detest, or even be afraid of. These relationships are helping me be a better person and teaching me about the heart of God. I want to share ways that we can all engage the other and how this is the only way that any change is going to happen in our own lives and in the world. I believe that the only way we are ever going to over come the huge divide in our country and world is if some of us stand in the gap. This episode is a conversation about what it looks like to be in difficult relationships.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Jacqui Lewis and Pete Enns discuss a working definition of Christianity and what it means to allow your life to conform to the model of Jesus.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Doubt isn't sexy, trendy, rebellious or cool. It’s hard, unsettling, and sometimes feels like so much stress and dissonance are hardly worth the effort of keeping up appearances. Sooner or later, and for whatever reason, we all experience constant background noise “Do I really believe any of this?” And yet we’ve been conditioned to ignore our experience, or even shamed into believing that the Creator is disappointed at our performance, and if we just get in line, all will be well. So is that it?! I don't believe so. Not only is doubt a normal experience throughout history, not only is it part of the biblical tradition, but doubt does something FOR us that nothing else can. Doubt is a gift, a means of grace, that helps us get out of our own way.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Are you passionate about spiritual writing? Writing for Your Life is a sessions that will help you gain inspiration and knowledge to empower your writing.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ In this episode, members from Brother's Bear discuss the intersection of music and faith and how that can be expressed at Wild Goose. Joshua Brumley and James McCann had been playing music together, improvising and learning from mutual favorite artists, for years before the death of a dear friend launched the two of them into a deeper and more tethered friendship. Out of that time of deep yet childlike friendship coupled with heavy grief the band’s first album, Say, was written. An honest and holistic look at the lives of the two around that time, Say wasn’t really intended to be the stepping stone it became. In fact, it was recorded long before any Brother’s Bear songs would be performed live. But the process launched James and Joshua into a series of progressively more intentional endeavors, most recently writing a second album, Walking Each Other Home. For this year’s Goose, Joshua will be presenting all new songs written just for the Wild Goose community, supported by the Brother’s Bear string section.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ In this episode John Pavlovitz speaks about your God story, the power of privilege, and believing in a creator that is far greater than your whiteness.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Storytelling is one of the most powerful resources for good and ill in the world. Healing the trauma of violent conflict requires a variety of interventions, but one of the most important is reframing the story we tell, inside and out. In this episode, Gareth discusses storytelling: how to change your story without losing yourself; find fuel for the journey; and make a better world, right here, right now.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Just as hospitals and military have chaplains attending to the spiritual and emotional needs of those under stress, our social justice movements need people who are focused on the care and sustainability of activists, organizers and community leaders on the front lines of fighting for justice. In this episode, Micky ScottBey Jones and the Justice Doula discuss this emerging vocation.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Brad Zable and Sarah Pressly discuss the nourishment and spirit of the Wild Goose.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Experience the artful, playful, outrageously funny, and deeply moving storytelling craft of Peterson Toscano. Drawing on his bizarre personal experiences of conversion therapy along with references to history, literature, science, and the Bible, Peterson takes his audience on an off-beat mental mind trip. A shapeshifter, he transforms right before your eyes into a whole cast of comic characters who explore the serious worlds of gender, sexuality, privilege, religion, and environmental justice. Of Peterson’s work, Chara Armon, Ph.D at Villanova University said, “His mixture of vulnerability and comedy enabled those of us in his audience to access our own authentic feelings about the predicaments of the 21st century. Peterson brings extensive knowledge, extraordinary people skills, dramatic talent, and poignant characters to his presentations” This performance will entertain, enlighten, and enliven you; it may even speak deeply into your life as you consider your role on this rapidly changing planet.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Peterson Toscano discusses the role of humor, how to discuss difficult topics, and strategies to shedding light on difficult issues.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ There’s a lot of conversation around the idea of deconstruction. For many of us, the categories that we inherited for understanding the world and our place in it are no longer convincing. The restlessness created by this destabilization has led to rethinking and reformulating our faith. The basic content of words, like God, Jesus, and Scripture, has been transformed. One key reason for this shift is the loss of fear as a motivator. We’ve discovered that not attending Church or not reading the Bible doesn’t mean we will contract an illness or get a flat tire. So, why would anyone still be Christian? If hell and damnation are no longer the motivation for engaging and participating in this tradition, why would anyone want to do so? In this session, Josh explores these themes and shares his own reasons for (still) being Christian.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Diana Butler Bass opens the day speaking about catching large fish in Caesars lake and taking his breakfast. Butler Bass describes our breakfast at the edge of the sea and how we can feast without fear.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Enjoy an interview with Randy Eddy-McCain. Randy serves as founding pastor of Open Door Community Church in Sherwood, Arkansas. He lives with his husband Gary and their son Bobby in North Little Rock, Arkansas. Hear Randy talk about his journey as a gay Pentecostal boy who always loved Jesus as he reconciled his faith with his sexual orientation and became a Pastor in the Bible Belt South. Randy is a true pioneer inspiring people like Tony and Peggy Campolo, Stan Mitchell, Ray Waters, and thousands more. His church affectionately called the 'House of Hugs' is a genuinely transforming community making a difference. Randy has much has to say, and you will fall in love with him.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ When Emily Joy unintentionally launched the #ChurchToo campaign in November of 2017, she had no idea the ripple effect that would follow her sharing her story. Now, a year and a half out, join Emily to discuss what she's learned from advocating for sexual revolution in faith communities and to hear what's next for the movement. Issues of power and purity culture will be explored, and Emily will show how sexually dysfunctional environments form the bedrock of sexual abuse and exploitation. Space for Q&A to follow.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ The decision to live authentically often comes with a hefty price tag. After the loss of a 23-year marriage, Matt Bays came out as a gay man. As a public figure (worship leader of a conservative mega-church of 7,000+ and nationally published author and speaker) the aftermath of this decision threw his life and career into a tailspin. While his book Finding God in the Ruins: How God Redeems Pain, was still lining the bookshelves of local Barnes and Noble booksellers, his publishers put his book out of print. As Laura Parrott Perry, author of She Wrote It Down: How A Secret-Keeper Became a Storyteller, stepped fully into the truths of the demise of her marriage, her childhood sexual abuse, and her struggles with addiction, she found the ground constantly shifting under her feet. Friends fell away and the life she had been living became incompatible with her decision to live out loud. Matt and Laura will discuss how to navigate and survive the grief of massive life change and what it is like to embrace the joy that comes from authentic living.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ In traditional Goose fashion, Micky ScottBey Jones and Marthame Sanders touch on a few elements of Wild Goose that they are thankful for.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Creative Tensions is an interactive dialogue, a physically active, collective conversation where participants indicate where they stand on a question or issue by the place they stand in the room. Instead of the audience watching a speaker or panel discuss a topic, the Creative Tensions format invites the entire audience into the conversation, through movement. An interactive way to approach group conversation, Creative Tensions is a method for inclusive conversation and a way to show both where our differences and similarities lie but with specificity and nuance. Creative Tensions prompts reflection, invites openness, and celebrates the rare moment when someone changes their mind. Most importantly it stokes curiosity, promotes optimism, and inspires real empathy in participants. The way we practice it, we start in large room with a line down the middle, separating it in two parts. Everyone is standing while the moderator offers a prompt or question. The tension is created by two possible answers and the spectrum of answers in between. Participants than choose where to stand based on how they interpret the question, how they interpret the answers and where along the spectrum they believe they lie (or stand). At that point, the fun begins. The moderator gets a volunteer to tell why they are standing where they are standing and invites others to move in response to any shared answers (whether it changes their mind or enriches their position or causes them to understand the question or answer in a different light). From then on the moderator may ask others who move in response, why they moved, while allowing others to respond why they didn't, all while inviting others to continue moving in response to what they are hearing and sparking more and new conversations. All of this is facilitated with microphones so all can hear the openly shared responses. We usually organize the prompts or questions around a theme so that some questions or prompts build on previous ones or provide a twist on a previous one. This allows an even greater depth of conversation than if we had questions and prompts on random topics, starting at the surface level with each one. The physical form activates people viscerally, places them in close proximity to one another, and encourages eye-contact — all of which enhance one's ability to hear and absorb perspectives that may differ from one's own. The volleying nature of the conversation, which evenly engages audience and speakers alike, sparks a desire to hear from as many people as possible. Lastly, the invitation to move if one's perspective shifts during the conversation, opens participants to the possibility of change, a crucial step toward a growth mindset, learning, and adopting an optimistic point of view. Beyond being educational, it's also just fun and focuses and brings the body into connection with the heart and mind while navigating different issues.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ This session is a conversation with one of the well known “Nuns on the Bus,” a politically active group of religious Sisters who lobby at a federal level and speak truth to power as they traverse the country on a bus. Derived from encounters along the bus trips, the goal of the session is to explore how you can capture your unique power to influence policies impacting those who have repeatedly been left at the margins. We will discuss unexpected political success that can be realized when unique faith voices boldly speak the truth that we ARE our brothers’ and sisters’ keepers. In today’s political climate, it is people of faith who must hold our nation to its moral commitment to the common good, enshrined in the Constitution.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ People have questions they aren’t comfortable asking in their faith communities. They can be absurd curiosities or the deeply personal points of pain. What happens when a car turns on it’s headlights while traveling at light speed? Could God make a rock so heavy that God couldn’t lift it? How does cancer happen? What does science tell us about monogamy? How do I tell my family I don’t believe in God anymore? Ask Science Mike is a weekly podcast hosting an open, honest, and safe discussion about science, faith, and life. A global audience of hundreds of thousands show up every week to talk about the strange, confusing, and often taboo topics that show up at the intersection of ancient faith and modern science. This week, we’re doing it live at Wild Goose. What will we talk about? Whatever you ask. Ask Science Mike is a weekly podcast where no question or topic is off limits, where the genuinely curious find a safe space to voice what they’ve been afraid to say aloud. It’s a program run by its listeners–they choose the topics and focus of every episode. This Wild Goose episode is a rebroadcast of a LIVE 'Ask Science Mike' recording from the 2019 Wild Goose festival.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ We're pretty solid on Christ's divinity in the church- we've spent a lot of airtime on that. But what about his humanity? If we talk about Jesus' humanity at all it's often apologetically. Based on my work in The Irrational Jesus I make a fully throated pitch for using what we know about cognitive bias, what Dan Ariely calls our "predictable irrationality" to highlight areas of Jesus' full humanity. In this episode, we learn about common cognitive biases, including implicit racial, gender, and sexual identity bias, and learn how understanding more about our bias makes us better able to work well and play with others.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ In this episode, musician Emily Musolino discusses music as a spiritual practice and sexism in the music industry. Emily Musolino is a Durham, NC native who mixes soulful vocals with shredding blues rock guitar riffs. The depth of emotion in her voice is stunning and her songs have a classic sound and lyrics that tell compelling stories. A Berklee College of Music graduate, Emily has opened for and collaborated with artists like Ani Difranco, Nikki Hill, Vinx, Shana Tucker, Anna Wise (SonnyMoon, Kendrick Lamar) and Eric Hirsh (The Beast, Orquesta GarDel). She is also owner and head engineer at Blue Moose Recording Studio in Durham and Co-founder of the women's music and arts collective Mama May I. Emily released her newest album "The Vault" in April 2018. Emily has been featured several times on NPR’s the State of Things with Frank Stasio and written up in the News and Observer. She currently fronts the Emily Musolino Band and plays 200+ shows a year, both bandleader and soloist around the world.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ "Christ on the Psych Ward" is a story-sharing based on my experiences of mental illness, recovery, and faith. In telling my story, I weave together threads of personal experience, spiritual reflection, and ministry praxis. By ”going first” with my own story of mental illness and mental health, I open up the opportunity for other participants to share their own stories of mental health struggles in their personal lives, family lives, and/or communities of faith. In this episode, we work together to create a shared storytelling space of courage, lament, vulnerability, and hope. David Finnegan-Hosey currently serves as the College Chaplain and Director of Campus Ministries at Barton College in Wilson, NC, having previously worked with campus ministries at Georgetown University, American University and the University of Hawaii. He holds an M.Div from Wesley Theological Seminary and a unit of Clinical Pastoral Education from the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center. He is certified by Mental Health First Aid USA to provide initial help to people experiencing depression, anxiety, psychosis, and substance use disorders. In 2011, David was diagnosed with bipolar disorder after a series of psychiatric hospitalizations. He now speaks and writes about the intersections among mental illness, mental health, and faith. You can read more of his writing on his blog, Foolish Hosey. David lives in Wilson, NC with his wife Leigh and their dog Penny Lane.
Click here to keep up with the latest Goose News: http://wildgoosefestival.org/signup/ Storytelling is one way to chart our histories, and it can sometimes feel disconnected when we privilege our thinking over our body, which is historically the manner in which all life is lived. In this session, we learn how to re-story ourselves through somatic practice. Featuring Dr. Robyn Henderson-Espinoza and Erin C. Law