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So What? Exploring Big Ideas and Why They Matter

So What? Exploring Big Ideas and Why They Matter

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Welcome to ’So What?” with Michael and Trevor as they invites us on a journey of big ideas. Join them as they talk about their mission to dig into thought-provoking ideas through diverse experiences of wisdom and voices. They bring a spacious perspective, a heap of curiosity, and a deep desires to see big ideas actually ’matter’ and be embodied in real life. Let’s be real - ideas can be fascinating, however if big ideas don’t lead us to more love, more peace, and more beautiful connections in the world - ’so what!’ Thanks to Jim for production and Rebekah for the voice behind the scenes. This podcast is produced by McKillop; Living Sacred Relationships.Copyright 2021 All rights reserved. Christentum Spiritualität Wissenschaft
  • Episode 10 - Featuring John Paul Syndor and The Great Open Dance
    Jan 16 2026

    So What? Exploring Big Ideas and Why They Matter

    Welcome to Episode 10 - The Great Open Dance: A Better Story of God

    What if faith isn’t dying—it’s growing up? Jon Paul Sydnor joins us for a wide-ranging conversation about a spirituality you can actually live in your body and your real life. We talk about love as the thread that ties us together (he calls it “loving inseparability”), why God isn’t a cosmic puppeteer, and why the best kind of church is backstage: honest, safe, unpolished, and full of people learning to carry one another toward healing and flourishing.

    Jon Paul Sydnor is Professor of Theology and Religious Studies at Emmanuel College, theologian-in-residence at Grace Community Boston, and a podcaster at The Progressive Sacred. He studied at the University of Virginia, Princeton Theological Seminary, and Boston College, where he received his PhD. He practices theology in conversation with other religions, especially Hinduism and Buddhism.

    To find out more about Jon Paul, join his substack the Great Open Dance:Progressive Christian Theology (https://jonpaulsydnor.substack.com/) or you can buy his latest book, "The Great Open Dance: Progressive Christian Theology (https://www.amazon.ca/Great-Open-Dance-Progressive-Christian/dp/1666775150) .To explore nondualism, read the book edited by Jon Paul Syndor and Anthony J. Watson entitled: "Nondualism: An Interreligious Exploration" from Lexington Books.

    If you enjoy this episode, please like it, subscribe, consider rating it, and sharing it with family and friends. This podcast can also be found on podbean, Spotify, Apple, and other platforms.

    Thanks to Jim for production and Rebekah for the voice behind the scenes.

    This podcast is produced by McKillop; Living Sacred Relationships.

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    1 Std. und 4 Min.
  • Episode 9 - Featuring Brent Saccucci and Practicing Discomfort
    Dec 5 2025

    So What? Exploring Big Ideas and Why They Matter

    Welcome to Episode 9 of ‘So What’ as Brent Saccucci joins Michael and Trevor as they explore the big ideas of practicing discomforto as to be accomplices with personal and social change to bring liberation and healing and joy to the world. Is it hard or easy? Find out as you listen!

    Brent Saccucci has worked as a K-12 teacher and equity consultant in schools and universities across Canada for over a decade. He is now a faculty member in the Faculty of Education at the University of Lethbridge, where he teaches courses in the social, cultural, and political contexts of education as well as critical media literacy. Before UofL, Brent taught social justice and literacy education at both the University of British Columbia and the University of Alberta. Brent is a Senior Research Fellow at the Canadian Institute for Far-Right Studies and serves as Faculty Advisor of the inaugural Leading Social Change in Schools Cohort for over 60 teachers looking to make change in Southern Alberta schools and communities. He is also a doctoral student at Western University in social justice education, where he studies theocratic government’s curriculum censorship of queer and trans voices. Brent is also writing an open-access, multimodal textbook with queer and trans students as a way to combat misinformation on ‘gender ideology’ in education; and he co-created a new cross-faculty course on “Misinformation” with six other faculty on the UofL campus to help equip undergraduate students with the tools needed for an increasingly polarized information world. Most recently, Brent was recognized as the 2025 Alberta Human Rights Champion by the John Humphrey Centre for Peace & Human Rights.

    You can find more from Brent at https://www.learningwithbrent.com/about-brent

    If you enjoy this episode, please like it, subscribe, consider rating it, and sharing it with family and friends. This podcast can also be found on podbean, Spotify, Apple, and other platforms.

    Thanks to Jim for production and Rebekah for the voice behind the scenes.

    This podcast is produced by McKillop; Living Sacred Relationships.

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    1 Std. und 3 Min.
  • Episode 8 - Featuring Tori Owens and Julian Norwich
    Oct 3 2025

    So What? Exploring Big Ideas and Why They Matter

    Welcome to Episode 8 of ‘So What’ as Tori Owens joins Michael and Trevor as they explore the big ideas of Julian Norwich an English anchoress of the Middle Ages who lived through the Black Death.

    Tori Owens is a full-time therapist and spiritual director, a part-time doctoral student in Open and Relational Theology, most definitely an everyday mystic, just trying to blend it all in such a way that it might be a little healing. You can find her writing at Love, Tori (toriowens.substack.com).

    Tori co-hosts a series of conversations with public theologians, writers, and creatives with Jonathan Foster on Substack (https://fosterj.substack.com/). She is an ordained minister and serves on the board for the Open Table Network (opentable.network). She recently joined the advisory board for SPARKS, a creative initiative of the Center for Process Studies (ctr4process.org), launching this fall.

    If you enjoy this episode, please like it, subscribe, consider rating it, and sharing it with family and friends. This podcast can also be found on podbean, Spotify, Apple, and other platforms.

    Thanks to Jim for production and Rebekah for the voice behind the scenes.

    This podcast is produced by McKillop; Living Sacred Relationships.

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    55 Min.
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