Todd Wynward – 91¶ĚĘÓƵ Podcast /now/podcast Audio programs from 91¶ĚĘÓƵ Thu, 18 Jan 2018 13:30:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 “Repairers of the Breach: Earth Justice, Everyday Heroes, and the Poor People’s Campaign” – Todd Wynward /now/podcast/2018/01/17/repairers-of-the-breach-earth-justice-everyday-heroes-and-the-poor-peoples-campaign-todd-wynward/ Wed, 17 Jan 2018 15:00:05 +0000 /now/podcast/?p=4947 /now/is/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2018/01/01.17.18-ToddWynwardChapel.mp3

 

´ł´Çľ±˛ÔĚý to explore “Repairers of the Breach: Earth Justice, Everyday Heroes, and the Poor People’s Campaign” linking the ancient prophetic words of Isaiah with the Rev. William Barber’s “Poor People’s Campaign: a National Call for Moral Revival,” set to sweep the country in 2018. Fifty years after MLK was assassinated, Barber and countless others across America are carrying on King’s unfinished call for integrated justice, addressing the intersectional evils of racism, poverty, the war economy, and environmental degradation. This is the time to join in the movement!

—–

Todd Wynward is a wilderness educator and author of Rewilding the Way: Break Free to Follow an Untamed God. Todd lives with his family in Taos, NM. When he is not re-imagining Christianity, Wynward is re-imagining public education and the American way of life, starting with his own. Locally he practices homesteading in the high desert, while nationally he works to galvanize movements in watershed discipleship, bioregional food covenants, and more-with-less living. He has been engaged in experiential education and social change movements for twenty years, and has spent more than a thousand nights outdoors. He is the founder of a wilderness-based public middle school, leads backpacking and river trips for adult seekers, and is an animating force behind TiLT, an intentional co-housing community. Patheos.com calls his novel “The Secrets of Leaven“ a delicious mystery… exploring deep questions.” His writings and doings can be found at leavenrising.com.

]]>
“The Anav Shall Inherit The Earth: Humility, Sustainability, Resiliency” – Todd Wynward /now/podcast/2015/10/07/the-anav-shall-inherit-the-earth-humility-sustainability-resiliency-todd-wynward/ Wed, 07 Oct 2015 15:42:16 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/podcast/?p=4281 Your browser does not support the audio element.

When Jesus said the meek shall inherit the earth, he was invoking the ancient character trait of anav, meekness. Anav doesn’t mean wimpy and powerless, but rather a lifeway that delights the Lord, marked by humility, sustainability, non-grasping, and resiliency. Could it be that the meek shall inherit the earth because only they are able to coexist and thrive within the blessings and boundaries of creation on its own terms, while the haughty and hoarding are unable?

—â¶Ä”-

(Herald Press, September 2015)

How did Christianity become so tame?

God’s dream for human society is far wilder than we can imagine. So why are we so tied to the American Way of overconsumption, status-seeking, gadgetry, and fossil fuels, and how might we break free?

In Rewilding the Way, by digging into prophetic Scriptures and the lessons of Christ to find instruction for redemptive rebellion and joyful enoughness. Wynward, who has spent more than one thousand nights outdoors, writes in the wilderness tradition of John the Baptist and Kurt Hahn, founder of Outward Bound, to discover meaning in reasonable self-denial and hope in uncolonized spaces.

Drawing from writers like Bill McKibben and Joanna Macy and communities like New Monastics and the Anabaptists, Wynward offers inspiring ideas such as reskilling, local food covenants, relational tithes, co-housing, transition towns, and watershed discipleship to live faithfully in an era of climate change and cultural captivity. How can we recover from our affluenza? How can we raise families and also be radical disciples? How can we engage in society without being allegiant to it? With Rewilding Faith, gain encouragement to break free from the empire of Christendom and become the wild people God wants us to be.

—â¶Ä”-

Todd Wynward, author, activist, educator, lives with his family in Taos, NM. When he is not re-imagining Christianity, Wynward is re-imagining public education and the American way of life, starting with his own. Locally he practices homesteading in the high desert, while nationally he works to galvanize movements in watershed discipleship, bioregional food covenants, and more-with-less living. He has been engaged in experiential education and social change movements for twenty years, and has spent more than a thousand nights outdoors. He is the founder of a wilderness-based public middle school, leads backpacking and river trips for adult seekers, and is an animating force behind TiLT, an intentional co-housing community. Patheos.com calls his novel The Secrets of Leaven a delicious mystery exploring deep questions. His writings and doings can be found at leavenrising.com.

]]>
“Embodying Enoughness: The Practice of Paul’s Autarkeia” – Todd Wynward /now/podcast/2015/10/06/embodying-enoughness-the-practice-of-pauls-autarkeia-todd-wynward/ Tue, 06 Oct 2015 16:32:53 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/podcast/?p=4279 Your browser does not support the audio element.

, author, educator, small-scale farmer, wilderness trip leader and Mennonite minister for watershed discipleship affiliated with Albuquerque Mennonite Church..

Embodying Enoughness: The Practice of Paul’s “Autarkeia” ;

How did the Apostle Paul learn the secret of being content in any situation, whether surrounded by scarcity or abundance? Todd invites us to discover more about the ancient Christian discipline of autarkeia—adaptive self-sufficiency in God.

]]>
“Rewilding the Way: Break Free to Follow an Untamed God” – Todd Wynward /now/podcast/2015/10/02/rewilding-the-way-break-free-to-follow-an-untamed-god-todd-wynward/ Fri, 02 Oct 2015 15:03:07 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/podcast/?p=4275 Your browser does not support the audio element.

Ancient desert prophets. Modern archaelogical discoveries. Age-old Christian schools of creative cultural defiance crafted in the wilderness. Could it be today’s tame Christianity is missing something vital? Could it be that spending time in wild places, unshackled from the comforts and constraints of dominant culture, is a necessary prerequisite to become the people God yearns for us to be? Is it time for us to become a new kind of human?
—â¶Ä”-

, author, activist, educator, lives with his family in Taos, NM. When he is not re-imagining Christianity, Wynward is re-imagining public education and the American way of life, starting with his own. Locally he practices homesteading in the high desert, while nationally he works to galvanize movements in watershed discipleship, bioregional food covenants, and more-with-less living. He has been engaged in experiential education and social change movements for twenty years, and has spent more than a thousand nights outdoors. He is the founder of a wilderness-based public middle school, leads backpacking and river trips for adult seekers, and is an animating force behind TiLT, an intentional co-housing community. Patheos.com calls his novel The Secrets of Leaven a delicious mystery exploring deep questions. His writings and doings can be found at leavenrising.com.

—â¶Ä”-

How did Christianity become so tame?

God’s dream for human society is far wilder than we can imagine. So why are we so tied to the American Way of overconsumption, status-seeking, gadgetry, and fossil fuels, and how might we break free?

In , Todd Wynward rewilds Christianity by digging into prophetic Scriptures and the lessons of Christ to find instruction for redemptive rebellion and joyful enoughness. Wynward, who has spent more than one thousand nights outdoors, writes in the wilderness tradition of John the Baptist and Kurt Hahn, founder of Outward Bound, to discover meaning in reasonable self-denial and hope in uncolonized spaces.

Drawing from writers like Bill McKibben and Joanna Macy and communities like New Monastics and the Anabaptists, Wynward offers inspiring ideas such as reskilling, local food covenants, relational tithes, co-housing, transition towns, and watershed discipleship to live faithfully in an era of climate change and cultural captivity. How can we recover from our affluenza? How can we raise families and also be radical disciples? How can we engage in society without being allegiant to it? With Rewilding Faith, gain encouragement to break free from the empire of Christendom and become the wild people God wants us to be.

]]>