
4 | Learning the Rhythms of the Land and Growing Food to Give It Away, with Edgar Hayes and Ann Rader
What happens when growing food becomes a spiritual practice, and generosity is the harvest? Edgar and Ann reflect on a life of rooted justice.
Liam Myers is a freelance writer, an adjunct professor of religious studies at Iona University, and member of the Catholic Worker Maryhouse in NYC.
What happens when growing food becomes a spiritual practice, and generosity is the harvest? Edgar and Ann reflect on a life of rooted justice.
Martha Hennessy and Dr. Cornel West reflect on the legacy of the Catholic Worker movement and the ongoing call to comfort the afflicted, afflict the comfortable, and disarm the world with love.
Jordan Jones reflects on how Harriet Tubman and Howard Thurman illuminate Black mysticism as a radical practice of inner freedom, ancestral memory, and ecological reverence.
In our first Under the Ginkgo Tree episode, Sam King shares his alarm at the eco-crisis and his commitment to justice. He explores the wisdom of the universe’s vast story while staying deeply attuned to the local and immediate, weaving cosmic perspective with grounded action.