Atheist-interfaith activism: An interview with Chris Stedman

8 01 2012
Chris Stedman

“Coexistence is merely the first step.  What comes next?”

Snowflake by Simply InnocuousWinterviews continues!  From the Solstice (Dec. 21st) till the next Cross-quarter (Feb. 4th), we’re bringing you non-stop interviews and other goodies from big-name authors.  Mark your calendar!


Click above to listen.

This week we interview Chris D. Stedman, who was recently named among the top ten peacemakers in the science-religion wars.  He’s an atheist-interfaith activist, and takes considerable heat from the atheist community for his work.  While many atheists see little or no need to engage religions in dialogue, Chris reaches out.  And his goal goes beyond tolerance between stances on religion.  He says:

“I don’t want to be tolerated.  I want to be embraced.  I want to be challenged.  I want to be understood, and I want to understand other people.  Coexistence is merely the first step.  Then what’s next?  Are we able to empathize?  Share values?  Work together?”

In this interview, Chris shares stories of his experiences as a person who grew up irreligious, became Born Again, then realized it was not the theology but the ethics and community offered by religion that he was really after.  Ever since, he’s been actively seeking greater understanding and commonality between atheists and the religious.  In particular, he shares a poignant conversation with a Muslim woman in which the two empathize with each other over their shared experiences of fear as minorities in America.

There was an issue with the sound quality – we tried recording in a library space that ended up having a nasty echo.  But our voices come through clear, as does Chris’ affable personality.

Here’s what’s in store:

  1. We tell a little about our paths.
  2. We share stories of what makes interfaith a burning need for us, both in atheist and Pagan contexts.
  3. Chris reveals his upcoming book Faitheist.  Look for it in late 2012!

Faithest, by Chris Stedman

The author

Chris Stedman

Chris Stedman is the Interfaith and Community Service Fellow for the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard University, the Emeritus Managing Director of State of Formation at the Journal of Inter-Religious Dialogue, and the Founder of the first blog dedicated to exploring atheist-interfaith engagement, NonProphet Status. Chris received an MA in Religion from Meadville Lombard Theological School at the University of Chicago, for which he was awarded the Billings Prize for Most Outstanding Scholastic Achievement.

A graduate of Augsburg College with a summa cum laude B.A. in Religion, Chris writes for The Huffington Post Gay Voices and The Huffington Post Religion, where his work is among the most commented upon in the site’s history, and he is the youngest panelist for The Washington Post On Faith. He is at work on a memoir for Beacon Press (2012), and his writing has also appeared in venues such as Religion DispatchesThe Journal of College and CharacterTikkun Daily, AltMuslimah, The New Gay, and The New Humanism.

Previously a Content Developer and Adjunct Trainer for the Interfaith Youth Core, Chris is an atheist and secular humanist working to foster positive and productive dialogue between faith communities and the nonreligious. He has spoken and lead workshops on this topic at college and university campuses all across the United States; in 2011, the University of Oregon Alliance of Happy Atheists recognized Chris’ work with their first annual Happy Heathen! Award, and The Huffington Post named him one of the top interfaith activists on Twitter.

Chris was raised in a secular home but converted to evangelical Christianity after being invited to church by friends at 11 years old. After years of wrestling with theology and his sexual orientation, Chris left the Christian tradition and spent some time exploring. Eventually he recognized that he was an atheist and secular humanist, and today he works to advocate for the mutual respect of religious and non-religious individuals.

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Year One: A Year of Humanistic Paganism – ebook

21 12 2011

Year One: A Year of Humanistic PaganismHere it is! – an anthology of all our published works to date, organized into one coherent presentation.

Yet this is much more than just an anthology.  Exclusive new material lays out HP’s mission and vision, survey data brings the community to life, and multiple tables of contents arrange the articles in fresh and revealing patterns.  Altogether more than 50 articles from over a dozen authors explore life at the intersection of science and myth.

This work includes brand new material:

  • Nine months: The story of HP and its mission
  • Rain dance: A vision for HP

Whether you’re new to HP or an old veteran, you’re going to love Year One.  You can choose from one of four tables of contents that put the articles in a fresh light:

  • Topical Table of Contents – a practical route
  • Critical Questions Table of Contents – responses to critics
  • Fourfold Path Table of Contents – the basic framework of HP’s path
  • Four Elements Table of Contents – a contemplative experience

Wondering what that might look like?  Check out the Topical Table of Contents:

Introduction

Part I: Basics

A. The Fourfold Path

B. Practice

C. A Retreat

Part II: Advanced

A. Psychology

B. Nature

C. Mythology

Part III: Critical Appraisal

Part IV: Dialogues

Part V: Data on the HP Community

Conclusion

Dynamic Tables of Contents

Get your copy of Year One today – available now for your e-reader!

Year One: A Year of Humanistic Paganism

Editor: B. T. Newberg

Pages: 259

Color photos: 37

Formats: epub, pdf

Price: epub $12, or pdf $0+ (pay what you think it’s worth!)

© 2011

Buy now

Buy epub from GoodReads or pdf from Oronjo.
epub at GoodReads

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PDF at Oronjo

Buy PDF

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Love and the Ghosts of Mount Kinabalu – ebook

18 12 2011
Love and the Ghosts of Mount Kinabalu

Creative nonfiction from the jungles of Malaysia

“eloquent and absolutely unpretentious”

“Newberg’s prose [stories] have a particular beauty all of their own”

“should be required reading for anyone going to Southeast Asia seeking more than a beach vacation or three weeks of drunkenness”

- Southeast Asia Travel Advice

Drawing on personal experiences living abroad, Love and the Ghosts of Mount Kinabalu presents three works of creative nonfiction set in Malaysia:

  • Why Climb a Mountain?, a narrative essay, hunts down the motivations underlying the somewhat absurd idea of climbing a mountain.  The brush is cleared away to reveal the search for a sense of significance in one’s life.
  • Love and the Ghosts of Mount Kinabalu, which gives the book its title, is a six-chapter story of romance and solitude.  A young teacher revisits an ex-lover on the island of Borneo, and finds more than he bargained for.  When hopes for reunion evaporate, he goes on a journey to find himself in the rotting jungles.  Meanwhile, a mountain said to be a place of ancestral spirits beckons from behind a shroud of clouds.
  • Confessions of a Culture-shocked Alien, a story told in letters, reveals the experience of the same young man three years earlier as an exchange student in Penang, where he first meets the ex-lover from the second piece. In a Muslim country as the World Trade Towers fall and his own country retaliates, he confronts a foreign culture as well as an increasingly alien America. The pitfalls and switchbacks of living abroad lead him on a journey of self-discovery.

The three stories range from romance to rumination, but ultimately affirm the significance of life:

Mountains outscale us. They tower, they loom, they put us in our place. In their shadow, we feel insignificant. There is a sense of majesty and awe. When we climb mountains, we participate in that awe. It’s not that we become greater than the mountain, but that its greatness becomes part of us.

- excerpt from Why Climb a Mountain?

Love and the Ghosts has already received a glowing review from Asian studies scholar Jarrod Brown of Southeast Asia Travel Advice.  Here is an excerpt from the review:

“B.T. Newberg’s book… is for those who come to a different place seeking something other than good times and pretty girls. It is the story of a quest for meaning, and one that stretches further than the individual to the edges of culture and beyond into an exploration of the universal human condition. The journey for the reader is not an arduous one, however, as Newberg’s prose have a particular beauty all of their own.”

The perspective of the book is personal and introspective.  Brown comments:
“It is a rare treat to read something so obviously autobiographic yet so frank and open not only about what is happening around him but also what is happening inside of him in his thoughts and imagination. As a reader one feels almost embarrassed at times, as if one had slipped in and secretly began reading a diary one had found left in open [sic].”
Finally, Brown explores the relationship to Humanistic Paganism:
“Perhaps it is a philosophical commitment to naturalism and humanism that motivates him as an author to “lay bare his soul” in a way not often encountered in prose and always obscured by literary pretenses in poetry. I certainly found philosophical parallels with existential humanism….”
Jarrod Brown, a Ph.D. student at the University of Hawaii and co-creator of the Stories Without Borders documentary project, concludes with a note on the final potential of the book:
What we encounter is not the glorification or bastardization of a place, people or experience, but instead what seems to be an authentic retelling, a man’s retrospective look at a slice of his life, defined by where he was, and the lessons and changes that time brought. As such, it has the potential to change the reader or at least to prepare the reader for transformation deeper than a Phuket tan.
Love and the Ghosts of Mount Kinabalu, by B. T. Newberg
Pages: 72
Photos and illustrations: 19
Formats: epub, pdf
$8 epub – works on most e-readers
$0+ pdf – pay what you think it’s worth!

Buy now

Buy epub from GoodReads or pdf from Oronjo.
Buy epub from GoodReads

Buy EPUB

Buy pdf from Oronjo

Buy PDF

 

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Our ebooks