Monday, March 25, 2019

Religion in an Increasingly Secular World


What does society lose when religion no longer is a safe topic for discussion in public spaces? How has the role of religion changed in parts of the world that are increasingly secular? What are the unexpected consequences of laws designed to prevent discrimination based on religious preferences?

These questions are explored by Coreene Archer and Mark Argent, two UK-based organizational development consultants with deep roots in faith traditions. Although they both understand why governments feel compelled to pass religious nondiscriminatory laws, they believe such laws have unexpected consequences.

“Faith for me and lots of people is a core value,” says Archer, Principal Leadership Coach and Organisational Development Consultant at the Tavistock Institute for Human Relations. “To have to have a work face and a private face is a bit of a shame. It damages all of us if we’re hidden and can’t speak to who and what we are.”

“Carl Jung came up with the very useful idea that progress in the West has come about at the expense of our ability to feel,” says Argent, a spiritual director, organization development consultant, and Elder in the UK's United Reformed Church. “If you compare the West with bits of the world that are often described as underdeveloped, you see something very rich going on (in these less developed countries) that we’ve sort of lost sight of. There’s a price we’re paying for our technological progress.”

In this podcast, Archer and Argent talk about their faith traditions, challenges of working both in secular and faith organizations, and their sense as how religion plays out in the public sphere.

Links:

  • Mark Argent’s site
  • Coreene Archer at the Tavistock Institute
  • “Religion: Hard to Talk About” event
  • Diversity and Spirituality Network's site
  • Provoked by this episode? Record a response!
  • Like the podcast? Support us on Patreon!

Check out the Diversity and Spirituality’s newest podcast


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Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Improv and Spirituality weekend in Buckinghamshire in Spring!


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New edition includes my Introduction!


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Wednesday, March 06, 2019

Teaching diversity as Miss North Dakota (and beyond)


Rosie Nestingin is an African-American woman who grew up in North Dakota, one of the whitest states in the U.S.  Because she grew up in a multiracial household, and went to daycare with international children, she was shocked to discover that hers was one of the only black faces in her elementary school. As a result of this, she began at an early age to start to observe, respond and dispel false assumptions others made about her based on her appearance. From a very early age, she became, in effect, an exemplar of inclusion,  teaching her classmates and teachers what she had already learned about diversity growing up.

After graduating college, she won the title of Miss North Dakota. Her platform was “Celebrate Diversity: One Nation, All People,” and she she spent a year traveling throughout the state, carrying the message of inclusion. In this podcast, she shares some of the insights she gleaned during this process.

Nestingin credits her deeply religious parents with instilling her with a commitment to welcoming everyone with love.  These days, she  continues to embrace and extend this commitment, while at the same time forging a spiritual path.

Links:

  • Diversity and Spirituality Network's site
  • Provoked by this episode? Record a response!
  • Like the podcast? Support us on Patreon!

Check out the Diversity and Spirituality’s newest podcast


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