Monthly Archives: Apr 2018

Easter reflection

itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/nomad-podcast/id301419170

Malcolm Guite leads us through the Passion through his Sonnets on Nomad Podcast.

Poet and priest Malcolm Guite helps us mark the death and resurrection of Jesus with poems from his series on the stations of the cross, and with his reflections on the Messianic Event. Nomad’s David Blower responds to Malcolm’s poetry and thought in sound and song, and Kate Blower brings the Easter readings.

Certainty and doubt

www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09xcs9h

what a delight to listen to these genuine people discussing culture worth discussing.

Amol Rajan discusses faith and doubt. Religion is a recurrent theme in Naomi Alderman’s novels. Her first book, Disobedience, explored a Jewish girl’s split with orthodox religion, while in Liar’s Gospel she told multiple stories of Jesus through the eyes of those around him.

Obedience was a virtue for the nuns of sixteenth-century Italy, but the music they wrote and sang was far less virtuous. Music professor and performer Laurie Stras has unearthed sensual and experimental works by nuns including the daughter of Lucrezia Borgia. And while many flocked to the nunneries to hear these women perform, others accused them of irreligious vanity.

Historian and Anglican priest Malcolm Guite tells the life of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and finds religious imagery permeating Coleridge’s most famous work, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.

And the writer and former Bishop of Edinburgh, Richard Holloway, asks how spiritual belief can help us face our mortality, in his new book Waiting for the Last Bus.