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Kohler DunesPhoto courtesy of Matthew John George

Following our show with Esther Sternberg, "The Science of Healing Places," listeners continue to gift us with picturesque images of their physical sanctuaries and healing spaces. This might not be surprising, but the common themes we've noticed: home and nature.

In the photo above, Matthew John George takes us along the shores of Lake Michigan to the Kohler Dunes State Natural Area in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. While, in the photo below, Steve Gentile presents the best of both worlds — Kaaterskill Falls in New York, "which is in reality right in my backyard." He posted this scene on our Facebook page and shared this important parting thought:

"Every sacred place could be embraced as 'right in our backyard' and we should confidently protect them as a part of our soul's wellbeing."

Steve Gentile (from Facebook)Photo courtesy of Steve Gentile

Camden, NJ soup kitchenDinner is served at the Cathedral Kitchen soup kitchen which serves 300 to 600 meals a day, six days a week, to the needy and hungry in Camden, New Jersey. The U.S. Census Bureau cites Camden as the most impoverished city in the United States with a 19 percent unemployment rate. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

In the most recent presidential debates, candidates have addressed issues ranging from foreign policy to domestic spending, with little mention of religion. Are the candidates failing to make room in public discussion for morality and values among weighty political issues?

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Joanna Brooks thinks so. Speaking with her shortly before the Republican National Convention (audio, to the right), Krista cites Ms. Brooks' Religion Dispatches article Romney: “A Life Balanced Between Fear and Greed”?:

"I’m waiting for the story that transcends the flat ethnicity paradigm and gets the deeper and more persistent question of religion and moral bearings:

How does the most religiously devout candidate in recent memory reconcile a life of religious commitment with a values-neutral approach to work, livelihood, and the marketplace?

Why does religion play an outsized role in the politics of gay marriage and contraception but apparently has no say when it comes to big-ticket items like national spending and economic policy?"

Joanna BrooksMs. Brooks responds by expanding her thoughts on faith in public life, how it has been used inappropriately instead of in service to many of our country's most vulnerable:

"In the public sphere religion has been weaponized around a very few political issues. Most of which have to do with very private intense personal choices."

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Papyrus Fragment Purported to be from The Gospel of Jesus' WifeA fragment of papyrus purported to be from The Gospel of Jesus' Wife.

On September 18, 2012, Prof. Karen L. King of Harvard Divinity School made public the so-called “Gospel of Jesus’ Wife” at a conference in Rome. The text, written in Coptic (the form of Egyptian spoken in the early Christian period), is preserved on a codex papyrus fragment (4 x 8 centimeters) with eight visible lines on one side (the other side is heavily faded). The fragment seems to come from the middle of a page, with lost text on either side of what is visible, as well as above and below. Prof. King argues that the fragment is from the fourth century CE and is likely a translation of a second-century CE Greek original.

Most likely, readers will have heard of this papyrus due to the content of the fourth and fifth lines: the fourth line reads, in part,

“Jesus said to them, ‘My wife...’”; the fifth line includes “she will be able to become my disciple....” The texts of the New Testament make no mention of Jesus being married. The canonical Gospels do mention some women as being part of Jesus’ “circle” (cf. Luke 8:1-3). The papyrus raises questions both concerning Jesus’ marital status and about whether women might have been included alongside men in the group called “the disciples.”

As part of her publishing the fragment, Prof. King gave an interview to reporters, provided high-resolution images and a transcription of the Coptic text (with adjoining English translation) on the HDS website, and posted a draft of her article on the papyrus scheduled to be published in Harvard Theological Review in January 2013. Not surprisingly, news of the fragment spread quickly as major news outlets around the globe carried the story. Bloggers both academic and popular debated various issues surrounding the papyrus; scholars posted academic papers directly to the Web; NPR covered the story on “All Things Considered”; and even YouTube videos appeared discussing various aspects of the problem.

One special difficulty has concerned the papyrus’s provenance; the antiquities market in the Middle East is notoriously complex, and very little is known with certainty about this fragment’s origin. But the doubts about the papyrus extend beyond this matter even to its authenticity as a whole. As part of its standard protocol for vetting potential publications, HTR consulted three anonymous reviewers regarding Prof. King’s essay. As she notes, one reviewer accepted the fragment as genuine, a second raised queries, and a third asked serious questions about the grammar and handwriting. This mixed response has continued: while at least one papyrologist and an expert in Coptic grammar have affirmed aspects of the fragment as genuine, others have not been so sure.

Francis Watson, from the UK’s Durham University, was one of the early detractors of the fragment’s authenticity. He argued that significant material in the text derives from the Gospel of Thomas, and specifically from a modern print edition of that text. Leo Depuydt of Brown University has come to similar conclusions, with his views scheduled to be published in HTR alongside Prof. King’s publication. Finally, Andrew Bernhard, connected with Oxford University, has discovered what seems to be a “typo” in the “Gospel of Jesus’ Wife” that is also present in a widely-distributed electronic interlinear transcription and translation of the Gospel of Thomas. For these reasons, at the time of this writing, the tide of scholarly opinion seems to be turning decidedly against the authenticity of the fragment.

On the chance that the papyrus fragment turns out to be legitimate, we should say that Jesus' reference to “my wife” can be understood in a number of different ways. It is possible that some second- to fourth-century Christian(s) thought that Jesus was married in the way that we understand it today, but we must also remember that Gnostic groups with Christian affiliations used language of marriage and family (including the concept of "spiritual marriage") with great fluidity during those centuries. Regardless, the papyrus and its reception again demonstrate an insatiable appetite in the media for controversial “discoveries” concerning the origins of Christianity; this appetite will surely continue to manifest itself in the future.


Trevor W. Thompson
Trevor W. Thompson is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Chicago in the Department of New Testament and Early Christian Literature.


David C. Kneip
David C. Kneip is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Notre Dame in the Department of Theology.

This essay is reprinted with permission of Sightings from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.


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Synagogue in KabulAn Afghan boy stands inside an old Jewish synagogue undergoing renovation in the old part of Herat city northeast of Kabul. (Photo by Massoud Hossaini/AFP/Getty Images)

The road between the Afghani cities of Ghazni and Bamiyan is fraught with danger. The Kabul-Kandahar highway that makes up most of the journey was improved and reopened in 2003, but in the last several years travelers on this road have been targets for Taliban, insurgents, and bandits of all stripes. A recent article in Afghanistan Today reports that hundreds of people are kidnapped and attacked on this route every year.

The road was also dangerous, so it seems, in the Middle Ages. A cache of Jewish documents was recently discovered in Afghanistan, and among its contents is a trader's letter written in Judeo-Persian; like Yiddish, this Jewish language sounds similar to the standard Persian spoken in Iran and Afghanistan today, but is written in the Hebrew script. In the still-unpublished letter, the author, a trader in Ghazni, complains to his brother that he is far from his wife and family in Bamiyan. Despite the relative closeness of the two cities, for the author a journey was out of the question. "I am not a man of traveling and absence from home," he writes, expressing his grief at the absence of his loved one: "My heart is occupied with her, for I know she is in distress."

This trader's letter is just one of the documents that have the potential to shed new light on the history of medieval Afghanistan and its Jewish community. The documents include not only letters, but contracts, poetry, theology, biblical interpretation, and more. While the vast majority of the documents are as yet unavailable to scholars, experts who have seen the texts, such as Shaul Shaked of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, are certain that the documents can be dated between the ninth and the early thirteenth century, when the Mongol invasion devastated the region's Jewish communities.

Kabul-Kandahar Highway OneAn Afghan man rides his bicycle on the Kabul-Kandahar highway on the outskirts of Kabul (photo by Massoud Hossaini/AFP/Getty Images).

Most scholars agree that the history of the Afghani Jewish community goes back to the seventh or eighth centuries. Beginning as a community of traders, like our letter writer, who traveled as far as China and India along the branches of the Silk Route, with time Jews settled permanently in cities like Kabul, Ghur, and Herat. As indicated by their knowledge of Persian, Afghani Jews seem to have spread east from Iran, where, by the time the new documents were written, Jews had lived for over one thousand years.

Given its significance, the find has attracted media attention. A number of reports, including special coverage on Israel's Channel Two, have compared the Afghan discovery to the Cairo Geniza, the giant cache of manuscripts stored for centuries in a synagogue attic in Old Cairo that have helped to rewrite the history of Jews in the Middle East.

However, what most of the media coverage has left unsaid is that the "Afghan Geniza" is not our only record of Jewish life and literature in Persian from this period. Manuscripts and inscriptions discovered in today's Afghanistan, China, India, and Iran already tell the story of a thriving intellectual culture among Persian-speaking Jews. These documents include two Judeo-Persian letters, also between traders, found in the Silk Road oasis of Dandan Uiliq; signatures in Judeo-Persian found on a king's grant to foreign traders in Kerala, South India; and the longest text from this early period, a nearly complete translation and interpretation of the biblical book of Ezekiel.

For scholars of Persian such as myself, the importance of these documents even goes beyond their historical or literary significance. Judeo-Persian texts from before the thirteenth century — including, it is safe to assume, the new finds from Afghanistan — are not written in a single language. Without a court or other central authority to promote one unified standard, as was the case with Muslim Persian from an early period, Jews writing in Persian with the Hebrew script used a number of different regional dialects. In addition to these regional differences, the register of the language varies from document to document. Some writers used local literary languages — micro-standards, one might call them—while others simply wrote as they spoke.

This variety is what makes the documents so important for uncovering the history of the Persian language. These early texts in Judeo-Persian help explain the transition from the ancient Persian used before the seventh-century Muslim conquest of Iran to the full-blown modern literary language that emerges several centuries later, for instance in Ferdowsi's Epic of Kings. While Judeo-Persian is not itself the missing link — Ferdowsi, for instance, was not plagiarizing the Dandan Uiliq letter — these documents do record snapshots of changing grammar, vocabulary, morphology, and even phonology.

In this light, the significance of this new find in Afghanistan is not only historical. For scholars of Persian — Jewish and non-Jewish alike — the documents help fill in the missing links in the development of the language from ancient times to the present.


Samuel ThropeSamuel Thrope is a Lady Davis Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem.

This essay is reprinted with permission of Sightings from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

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How about a national night of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction instead of another debate?

This thought from Krista (@kristatippett) caught the imagination of our followers on @Beingtweets. I think it's no mere coincidence that these words found expression in the City of Brotherly Love:

In Philadelphia at the American Philosophical Society talking science and religion with oils of Ben Franklin and George Washington above.

This week, at the invitation of the Princeton Center for Theological Inquiry and the Templeton Foundation, Krista interviewed novelist Marilynne Robinson "Science and theology speaking together is a feast of exploring how mysterious, strange, dangerous, beautiful, and powerful we are." -Krista Tippett, photo by Chris Ratzlaffand astrophysicist Marcelo Gleiser on "the mystery we are":

Science and theology speaking together is a feast of exploring how mysterious, strange, dangerous, beautiful, and powerful we are.

By all accounts, the conversation was a smashing success. Ms. Robinson offered this useful analogy for religion:

Think of denominations as prisms. None tells the whole truth, but each tells us something about the nature of light.

Thankfully, our production staff was thinking ahead and arranged for a split-track recording of the interview. This means we'll be able to produce for our radio broadcast and podcast. Keep your eye out for this show in the coming weeks. Can't wait!

And, in the following days, Krista attended a symposium with several dozen scientists and theologians, including Robert Bellah, Chief Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks, and the Scottish theologian David Fergusson. Thankfully, Krista shared some memorable gems from the attendees:

Conversation is a kind of prayer. -Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, quoting the Babylonian Talmud. (I love this, obviously.)

There is a dialectic between the holy and the secular. -Rabbi Jonathan Sacks

There are leaps of faith in science; and faith in any life evolves.

Meanwhile, last week's interview with a musical and improvisational maestro was warmly received. Digital and marketing guru Seth Godin gave us a significant bump Bobby McFerrin Speaks with Krista Tippettin traffic when he cited Krista's conversation as an example of how we can redefine productivity in terms of innovation rather than "a race to the bottom":

"Take a listen to Krista Tippett's fabulous interview with Bobby McFerrin: On Being. These conversations go to the heart of the sort of high-productivity work we create today, but would make no sense at all just a generation ago."

And, Kerry Parke (@kelissa), a listener living and working in Madrid, Spain, offered this observation:

Bobby McFerrin is proof that the world is filled with lovely people. On Being interview w/ @kristatippett: onbeing.org/program/catchi…

Speaking of beautiful human beings, long-time friend and blog contributor Pádraig Ó Tuama Reads from His Book of PoetryPádraig Ó Tuama (@duanalla) has published a remarkable book of poetry titled Readings from the Book of Exile:

@duanalla I have been traveling with your poetry. Thank you for sending and for your long friendship from afar.

@kristatippett Krista - your work has nurtured the heart, mind & imagination for years. Honoured to have you travel with the book of exile.

"When the imitation of Christ does not mean to live a life like Christ, but to live as authentically as Christ lived, then there are many ways and forms in which a man can be a Christian." -Henri J. M. Nouwen, photo by I, TimmyWhich reminds me of another book of poems Krista has been toting about...

Speaking of good with words, savoring Mary Oliver's gorgeous new collection, A Thousand Mornings.

...and sharing these lines from "I Go Down to the Shore" by Mary Oliver, whom the Irish poet calls "a sacrament in writing":

...I say, oh, I am miserable / ...and the sea says / in its lovely voice: Excuse me, I have work to do.

The Civil WarsI'll end this letter on a musical note. It's been some time since I've posted a Tuesday evening melody to our Tumblr, but this week we broke form and shared this magical song by The Civil Wars: "Barton Hollow," live from the Austin City Limits Music Festival.

Enjoy and have a splendid weekend!

~Trent (@TrentGilliss)

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Photo by Michael Cramer/Flickr, cc by-nc 2.0

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During the first two presidential debates, Mitt Romney's Mormon faith has come up very little. But, as Joanna Brooks told Krista Tippett shortly before the Republican National Convention, many Mormons continue to "white-knuckle" through this campaign season.

Ms. Brooks says that some of the tensest moments happened during the primaries when two prominent Mormons, Jon Huntsman and Mitt Romney, sought the nomination as Republican candidate for president. She says that one white-knuckle moment occurred earlier this year when the comments of theologian and Brigham Young University professor Randy Bott surfaced in The Washington Post:

“ 'What is discrimination?' Bott asks. 'I think that is keeping something from somebody that would be a benefit for them, right? But what if it wouldn’t have been a benefit to them?' Bott says that the denial of the priesthood to blacks on Earth — although not in the afterlife — protected them from the lowest rungs of hell reserved for people who abuse their priesthood powers. 'You couldn’t fall off the top of the ladder, because you weren’t on the top of the ladder. So, in reality the blacks not having the priesthood was the greatest blessing God could give them.' "

Joanna BrooksHis comments, Ms. Brooks says, were lambasted as racist and pushed the LDS Church into making an official statement about past discrimination and racism rooted in church history:

“The Church’s position is clear—we believe all people are God’s children and are equal in His eyes and in the Church. We do not tolerate racism in any form. For a time in the Church there was a restriction on the priesthood for male members of African descent. It is not known precisely why, how, or when this restriction began in the Church but what is clear is that it ended decades ago.”

Ms. Brooks' commented in Religion Dispatches on the persistence of racism among some LDS Church members and how this event forced Mormons and the LDS Church to confront its own difficult history.

Also, Ms. Brooks reminds us that technology is playing a new role in the faith formation of Mormons — and how Mormon leaders and parents tell their stories. She offers a story about her son, who had no idea about polygamy in Mormon history until he learned about it online:

“Google is playing a huge role in faith formation these days. The church had typically managed its own story.”

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Coptic Christian ReadingAn Ethiopian devotee reads the Bible before Mass at the St. Raphael Coptic Orthodox church in Entoto, on the outskirts of Addis Ababa. (Photo by Simon Maina/AFP/Getty Images)

Vying for space and time on the religion-and-media front this week, in competition with presidential campaigns, Muslim extremist riots, and almost numberless other stirs, has been the attention given to a tiny piece of papyrus which includes the teeny words "Jesus" and "wife." This text was pictured as being "hot off the press," with only a four century pre-publication delay after the time of the occurrences to which it presumably referred. Four centuries from the implied wedding of Jesus to this "evidence" is the amount of time from the writing of the Mayflower Compact to our own.There is little need to rehearse the controversy, so familiar has it become.

The fact that well-recognized Harvard expert on Coptic Christian texts (and on more than that), Karen King took it seriously prompted other sober scholars to pay attention. We are told that her paper on the subject was one of some sixty delivered at a conference in Rome. The other 59 or so no doubt elicited yawns among many scholars of things Coptic and ancient Christianity in general, and suffered neglect by media. This one was different.

Shadow BrideWhy? Some commentators assumed that publicizing this would shake the faithful for whom the canonical gospels are unique sources. The usual suspects from the "New Atheist" front checked in, picturing that their suggestion that Jesus may have been married would score one against God and all that stuff. As mentioned, alert scholars of Coptic texts had good reason to be more alert than ever, and to be seen as relevant in the 21st century. Most of all, we heard and read that this piece of papyrus would cause defensive Catholics—and there are many--who argue for and insist on celibacy for clergy to find their fortress shattering. They would have to cry "uncle," throw in the towel, and let feminists have their way.

We can put this kind of media event into perspective by noting that each such unearthing of non-canonical ancient Christian texts receives publicity in direct proportion to attention being given to particular controversial issues in the contemporary world. In the long perspective of Christian history of twenty centuries, my generation and I are virtual kids, with only a half-century of observation behind us. But we can see ancient textual interests and contemporary itches matching almost decade by decade.

Thus: when in the 1950s-plus "we" were seeking precedent for social justice on Christian fronts (count me in!), Jesus got pictured as an East Harlem Protestant social worker. Then came a time when best-sellers and their publicists proved that Jesus worked wonders because he and his followers were chewing mushrooms which gave them hallucinatory and thus divine-revelatory visions. Just in time to match the world of hippies and consciousness raisers. They came and went. Remember the Passover Plot? It had its moment in a time when such plotting mattered. Recall the books on "Jesus the Zealot," based on discoveries from times of old to match the most radical Liberation Theology of our time? This dagger-carrying Jesus came and went.

Now the churches and the culture are hung up on sexual issues, and "Jesus-"and- "wife" prompts new obsessions. (Sexual issues won't go away in any hurry, so the various celebrating factions can elaborate at leisure on this papyrus). But if the majority of Christian scholars don't jettison all their other texts to embrace this one, we do not need to wonder. We and they might even yawn.

Photo, bottom, by Stefano Corso/Flickr, cc by-nc-nd 2.0


Martin MartyMartin E. Marty is the Fairfax M. Cone Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at The University of Chicago. He’s authored many books, including Pilgrims in Their Own Land and Modern American Religion.

This essay is reprinted with permission of Sightings from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

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Pussy Riot Guilty of HooliganismMembers of Pussy Riot sit in a glass-walled cage during a court hearing in Moscow on August 17, 2012. Photo by Natalia Kolenikova/AFP/GettyImages.

On February 21, the feminist collective Pussy Riot crossed the restricted threshold of the altar and began dancing and singing in front of the iconostasis of Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Savior. They delivered approximately 30 seconds of the "punk prayer" "Mother of God, Chase Putin Out," before being removed by security guards. The restored Cathedral, destroyed under Stalin and converted into a swimming pool under Khrushchev, stages the complicated relationship between the revival of Orthodox Christianity and the development of Russian nationalism and post-Soviet political sovereignty.

On August 17, three members of Pussy Riot were sentenced to two years in a labor colony for hooliganism grounded in religious hatred. The media had a trial of its own, scrutinizing everything from the group's gender presentation to their musical abilities. But what, exactly, was on trial and what are the stakes? Free Pussy Riot

On the day of the verdict, Eduard Bagirov, a controversial, Putin-friendly media figure, tweeted the following:

"Not a single normal Russian person would ever support the 'actions' of these cunts. Notice that support comes exclusively from immigrants, faggots, and Yids" (trans. mine).

As a diagnostic tool, Bagirov's comment reveals that on trial were the criteria for "normal Russian personhood" — defining who will count as Russian and who will be the constitutive other(s).

For Pussy Riot, the "punk prayer" aimed to undo the identification between "normal Russian personhood," Putin's regime, and the Orthodox Church. The mutual constitution of a unified "Russian people" and a unified "Orthodox Christianity" reinforce the legitimacy of Putin's sovereignty along with that of his former KGB colleague Patriarch Kirill Gundyayev. On trial, then, was also the possibility of religious contestation — i.e. that one might be critical of a religious tradition and nonetheless speak for it rather than hatefully against it. As one blogger for Women in Theology notes, the language of Judge Marina Syrova's ruling pits Pussy Riot's feminist commitments against the "antifeminism" of Christianity. Judge Syrova explains that "The court does find a religious hatred motive in the actions of the defendants by way of them being feminists who consider men and women to be equal. Now gender equally [sic] is asserted, maintained by the Russian constitution [...] At the same time, Orthodox Christianity, and Catholic Christianity and other denominations do not agree with feminism and their own values are not in line with feminists."

Playing a theologian or a historian, the Judge publicly establishes a uniform "Orthodox Christianity," whose constitutive feature is an opposition to equality between men and women, so much so that any challenge to this inequality constitutes an act of hatred. Since the Judge makes clear that sex-based discrimination is unlawful in Russia, one wonders why sex-based discrimination with religious "credentials" can become legally sanctioned. Is Orthodox Christianity an extra-legal space that represents "the Russian people" but is not subject to its laws?

The ruling's logic forecloses on the possibility of such questions in part because it figures "Orthodox Christianity" as a static object rather than a dynamic tradition, whose various claims to "orthodoxy" are themselves products of historical negotiations that could have turned out differently. Hence, even as the Judge claims divergence between Russian law and "opposition to feminism," she nonetheless discursively reconstitutes a unified "Orthodox Christianity," adding "antifeminism" to the chain of congruencies between Putin, "normal Russian personhood," and "Orthodox Christianity." The intactness of this discursive framework relies on the impossibility of interpreting Pussy Riot's performance as an act of religious devotion that effectuates disidentification between Orthodox Christianity and "the Russian people" on the one hand and Putin, antifeminism, and the Patriarch on the other.

Pussy Riot in ChurchIn her statement to the court, Yekaterina Samutsevich, one of the convicted members, writes,

"In our performance we dared, without the Patriarch's blessing, to unite the visual imagery of Orthodox culture with that of protest culture, thus suggesting that Orthodox culture belongs not only to the Russian Orthodox Church, the Patriarch, and Putin, but that it could also ally itself with civic rebellion and the spirit of protest in Russia."

The "punk prayer" inverts the locale of Christian authority, declaring the Virgin's solidarity with their countercultural project. They prayed, "Virgin Mary, mother of God, become a feminist." They pled that Patriarch Gundyayev renounce his idolatrous worship of Putin and worship God instead. During the performance, the group cloaked their faces with balaclavas to protect their identities but also to de-hierarchize the liturgical space. The "punk prayer" performance troubled the binaries between clergy and laity, men and women, leader and follower, and fame and anonymity. It appealed to the "feminism" of the Virgin Mary against the "antifeminism" of Putin and the Church elite and leveraged an improvisational, communal mode of prayer, without a frontman, against a highly-centralized, hierarchical liturgical modality. In their closing statements, Pussy Riot continued to draw a connection between their own actions and the biblical drama of the New Testament, where those persecuted for blasphemy turned out to be the rightful bearers of divinity.

Christian supporters of Pussy Riot see the "punk prayer" as an important attempt at elaborating a Christian counterculture. In a petition to the World Council of Churches, a group organized under the slogan of "Christians for Pussy Riot" presents the "punk prayer" and its colorful, disruptive accouterments, as continuous with the tradition of being a fool for Christ, a tradition that enjoyed a particular presence in Byzantine and Russian Orthodox Christianity. As Sergey Ivanov argues, holy foolery in Russia emerged simultaneously with the formation of czarism. Holy fools kept the gap between secular authority, however despotic, and divine authority from closing. The genealogy of the figure of the "holy fool" can be traced from the Paul of 1 Cor. 1-4 to Dostoyevsky's "idiot." While the criteria of "holy foolery" vary historically, one constant feature that Ivanov observes is that holy fools functioned as "cultural antennae" and rehearsed the hypocrisies, idolatries, and abuses of a religious community fallen into sin and decline.

Although Pussy Riot's performance has succeeded in capturing the countercultural religious imagination of some Christians, the "success" of their performance relies on the ability of "normal Russian persons" to read the difference between the critical voice of "holy foolery" and the destructive voice of religious hatred. Ultimately, then, on trial was the critical efficacy of their actions. In other words, what theological and political resources would their audiences need for their performance to generate a spark of countercultural world-building?

The question of efficacy has been at the forefront for those invested in radical politics. For some, Pussy Riot's statements, which portray the masses as conformist automatons, raise the specter of vanguardism. For others, the perception of elitism is problematic not for its antidemocratic implications but for its easy incorporation into Putin's anti-dissent strategies, where "normal Russian persons," whom Putin purportedly represents, are positioned against the intellectual and creative elites. The worry is that far from an instrument of disruption, Pussy Riot's dissent becomes a fine-tuned instrument for consolidating Putin's sovereignty.Riot Wear

The worry about efficacy also echoes in complaints about the ease with which Pussy Riot's highly fashionable cause has been embraced by the West. Exactly how countercultural can you be if "Free Pussy Riot" memorabilia is being sold at a Madonna concert and "support" for the group just means flexing your consumer muscle? Western cooptation testifies to the power of commodification. It also betrays a potent political fantasy about the nature of Pussy Riot's protest. As Vadim Nikitin points out, the West's outdated reflex to venerate any Russian dissenter as a "Cold War trophy" misses the point. Pussy Riot is not fighting for "freedom of expression" understood as libertarian "freedom" of rabid individualism and unfettered capitalism. Theirs is a radical politics targeting the corporatization of public institutions—church and state. In other words, the religious and political counterculture of Pussy Riot activism, which has a history and a future far greater than the "punk prayer," equally indicts American neoliberalism and its destruction of democratic culture by capitalist logics. And the West's support for Pussy Riot may be its own perfectly-calibrated exercise in absorbing radical political dissent.

As the appeals process begins and various international groups strategize about how to support Pussy Riot, the question of what "we" can do to help "them" might be helpfully displaced and politicized by asking a different question: What kinds of radical changes would need to happen in our own religious and political cultures for our own "punk prayers" to be answered?

*Translation from Russian sources are by the author of this Sightings essay.


Larisa ReznikLarisa Reznik is a PhD candidate in Theology at the University of Chicago, focusing on religious thought in the modern West. Her research interrogates the intersection of religion, politics, and gender.

This essay is reprinted with permission of Sightings from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School. Photo to the right by Sean Comiskey/Flickr, cc by-nc-sa 2.0

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Healing Places: Farm Pasture in Upstate New York
Sometimes healing spaces are not only in far-away romantic, picturesque places. As Asha Sanaker from Ithaca, New York points out, these sacred spaces often encompass our back yards and our livelihoods:

"This is our pasture on our small farm in upstate New York. Over the years this land has raised sheep, goats, ducks, chickens, pigs, rabbits, foxes, deer, ground hogs, thousands of birds, innumerable barn cats, two little girls, and two adults. In the summer I sit in this swing and watch billions of fireflies dance in the tall grass. Currently we are fighting against the incursion of hydrofracking in the area, and I fear that this precious bit of earth that I've been entrusted with will be irreparably damaged. It is a tenuous, poignant time full of beauty and doubt.

This land is the most sacred place in the world right now for me and I wish I felt more confident I could protect it."

Ms. Sanaker sent this photo in response to our interview with Esther Sternberg in "The Science of Healing Places." What's your favorite healing place?

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Did you know God is on Twitter? And that he has a wry sense of humor. Well, Krista retweeted Him last week in a moment of levity after flying several thousand miles in a span of a week:

RT @TheTweetofGod: "Arctic Melting Decades Ahead of Schedule". Well done, everybody! Working together, you really can change the world.

RT @TheTweetofGod: Steve Jobs died a year ago today. Now he's in heaven. It's a good thing he didn't live to see Apple Maps or he'd never have found it here.

On a more serious note, Krista and the On Being production team pulled together the final two public events for our Civil Conversations Project this Tuesday and Wednesday — in Washington DC and Minneapolis, respectively. The crowds that came out for these discussions were overwhelming. We couldn't have been more pleased and heartened.

Krista Tippett with Alice Rivlin and Sen. Pete Domenici at The Brookings InstitutionIn preparing for her interview with Sen. Pete Domenici and Alice Rivlin at The Brookings Institution, Krista (@KristaTippett) wondered:

How to step outside the competing numbers that frame our economic debates, and consider together the human and moral realities behind them?

Most of us arguably possess far more information about the economy than we did four years, ago, and far less understanding.

It was a riveting conversation (yes, we were talking fiscal policy!) in which Democrat and Republican showed a deep fondness for one another. As The Wall Street Journal's MarketWatch described it:

"The duo also appeared to genuinely enjoy each other's company, regaling the nearly-packed auditorium with stories about working together, a path they clearly believe more politicians should follow."

Or, as Krista describes it:

With Alice Rivlin at 81 and Pete Domenici at 80 at Brookings this week — a merger of power and softness I've seen in the wisest people.

We're producing this conversation for October 25th. But, right now, we're putting the finishing touches on "The Future of Marriage" for next week's show. Kate Cimino (@kcimino), assistant director at the Center for the Study of Politics and Governance at University of Minnesota, said of Krista's conversation with Jonathan Rauch and David Blankenhorn:

Few things are more critical right now in MN than a civil, respectful conversation about gay marriage. http://bit.ly/OTNKPi

The Future of Gay MarriageThe dialogue between the two men — who come to the debate from two very different directions — didn't travel predictable paths or arrive at predictable places. It's a sincere exchange between two men who have developed a friendship as they are navigating the meaning of marriage. It's a dialogue that has some rough edges infused with a bounty of tender moments. Mr. Rauch and Mr. Blankenhorn offer a great deal of insight into what it takes to engage the other side in the definition of marriage — let alone the gay marriage debate.

I'll share with you some of these precious nuggets of learned wisdom we (@Beingtweets) live-tweeted that night:

"David and I had this cobra mongoose relationship, mainly because we were coming from the same space." ~Jonathan Rauch

"There is the intellectual, trying to think about the correct view. I probably wouldn't have changed my mind if not for Jonathan." ~David Blankenhorn

"David showed me that it is really possible to be against gay marriage but not against gay people." ~Jonathan Rauch

"It was a meaningful thing that Jonathan responded with kindness." ~David Blankenhorn

"I saw in you someone who understood that you are a multi-valued person. I equate that as a form of patriotism." ~Jonathan Rauch to David Blankenhorn

"We need to put a good word out there for 'doubt.' You don't always need to be certain that you are right." ~David Blankenhorn

"I think there are higher things than being right." ~Jonathan Rauch

"It was much more the positive relationships rather than the bullying that caused me to change my mind about this." ~David Blankenhorn

"Religion is an important insight to morality and it should inform the debate." ~Jonathan Rauch #CCP2012

Lest you think Krista's finished traveling. She'll be in Philadelphia next week...

Monday I interview novelist Marilynne Robinson and astrophysicist Marcelo Gleiser on "The Mystery of Us." There's a phrase to ponder.

"I define connection as the energy that exists between people when they feel seen, heard, and valued; when they can give and receive without judgement; and when they derive sustenance and strength from the relationship." -Brene' Brown, photo by Willem J.I'll also leave you with this pairing — our Instagram of Willem J. Poolen's photo paired with words of upcoming guest Brené Brown from her book, The Gifts of Imperfection:

"I define connection as the energy that exists between people when they feel seen, heard, and valued; when they can give and receive without judgement; and when they derive sustenance and strength from the relationship."

Please keep on sharing your thoughts and ideas about our shows and this email format. Contact us any way you like: reply to this email, contact us on our website, share your suggestions and critiques on Facebook or Twitter (@beingtweets, @KristaTippett, @TrentGilliss).

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Recent Programs

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