• Kevin Wells: Addiction and the Dark Night of the Soul
    Sep 27 2024

    Author Kevin Wells felt like his marriage—his whole life, even—was falling apart. His wife, Krista, was mired in an addiction to alcohol that cut her off from God, family, and friends, and Kevin felt helpless and alone. When, at last, supported by the grace of the sacraments, Krista started to find her way to healing and sobriety, the Covid-19 pandemic plunged the whole world into confusion and isolation.

    In his new book, “The Hermit,” Kevin tells the story of a remarkable priest, Fr. Martin Flum, who extended a life-line to Krista and to many others during the dark days of 2020.

    In this episode, Kevin speaks with host Andrew Petiprin about the healing he and Krista have found through suffering, about the deep reservoirs of grace to be found in the sacraments, and about the profound witness of Fr. Flum in their family’s dark night of the soul.

    Find “The Hermit: The Priest Who Saved a Soul, a Marriage, and a Family” at Ignatius.com.

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    49 mins
  • Abigail Favale: Entering the Church—and then converting to the Faith
    Sep 13 2024

    There are multiple ways in which Abigail Favale’s conversion to Catholicism may be seen as unlikely. First as an ex-Evangelical, then as a feminist academic, Favale had built a worldview—and career—on the rejection of “patriarchy” and on the promotion of progressive causes. How could she enter a Church known for male-only leadership, and for rigorous opposition to contraception and abortion?

    In this episode, host Andrew Petiprin speaks with Favale about her conversion—which in many ways began after she had entered the Catholic Church and began to explore its rich teachings and traditions in earnest.

    Her conversion memoir, “Into the Deep: An Unlikely Catholic Conversion,” is available now at Ignatius.com, as is her bestselling book “The Genesis of Gender: A Christian Theory.”

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    51 mins
  • Back-to-school special: Learning the Faith and history through stories
    Aug 30 2024

    Pope Francis wrote recently about the importance of literature in moral formation. For millennia, humans have used story-telling to communicate religious beliefs and moral values, and to ensure that history and culture remain alive for future generations.

    As a teacher in Catholic classical schools, Abigail Palmer has a passion for using stories as vehicles for learning history, language, and the Faith. Her new novel for middle-grade readers, "Faelan and the Miracle Machines," grew out of that passion. It tells the story of a young British slave during the days of the Roman Empire, and is full of adventure and mystery as well as history and culture.

    In this episode, host Andrew Petiprin speaks with Palmer about the book, about the fascinating historical period in which it is set, and about why stories are indispensable for teachers and parents wanting to engage their children’s imaginations as they study a wide range of subjects.

    Find "Faelan and the Miracle Machines" at Ignatius.com.

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    53 mins
  • “Evangelization is about showing up”: Steve Dawson on taking the Gospel to the streets
    Aug 9 2024

    There was a time when Steve Dawson found himself in trouble with the law, mired in destructive

    behaviors and relationships. Today he spends his days sharing the Good News with anyone who will

    listen, as founder and president of Saint Paul Street Evangelization (in between these two stages of his

    life, he says, he could be found downing Jack Daniels while watching Mother Angelica).

    Struck by how Jehovah’s Witnesses, Evangelicals, Mormons, and even atheists are comfortable

    preaching about their beliefs in the streets, Dawson has devoted his life to combating the perception

    that street evangelization “isn’t a Catholic thing.” In fact, preaching, teaching, and sharing the Good

    News in public are practices that go all the way back to the Apostles, and many great saints have

    engaged in them.

    During his years as a street evangelist, Dawson and his team have honed skills and developed methods

    of communicating the Faith in simple, accessible, and compelling ways. In this episode, Andrew Petiprin

    speaks with Dawson about his powerful conversion story, some of the amazing things that he’s seen in

    his years of street evangelizing, and why the basics of evangelization are important for every Catholic to

    master—whether they’re sharing the Faith on the street, in the workplace, or in their own families.

    Related reading: “Catholic Evangelization: Stories of Conversion and Witness”, now available at

    Ignatius.com.

    Learn more about Dawson’s work at Saint Paul Street Evangelization: https://streetevangelization.com/

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    55 mins
  • Edward Sri: The Faith is a love story
    Jul 26 2024

    If someone looked at the way you live your life, would they say, “That’s a person who is seeking Christ?” While many Catholics might be able to give personal or intellectual reasons why they practice their Faith, how many really allow the interior conversion necessary for a relationship with Christ to shine through in their daily lives? How many have essentially adopted a secular way of living?

    These challenging questions are at the heart of Edward Sri’s new book, “What Do You Seek?”, out now from Ignatius Press and the Augustine Institute. In this episode, Dr. Sri speaks with your host, Andrew Petiprin, about the necessity of coming to know and love Christ, and not just facts about the Catholic Faith—important as those may be—in order to share the Gospel with others.

    Find “What Do You Seek? Encountering the Heart of the Gospel” at Ignatius.com.

    Learn more about Edward Sri and his work at www.edwardsri.com.

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    49 mins
  • Mike Aquilina: Uncovering the ancient cities that shaped Christianity
    Jun 21 2024

    In its earliest days, Christianity was a faith associated with cities. Cities were the spots chosen by the Apostles to begin spreading the Good News, the earliest Christian communities were found in city centers, and cities quickly became the focal points of persecution of Christians—and the blood of the martyrs was always the seed of the Church.

    Best-selling author Mike Aquilina has written a book about twelve cities in the ancient world where Christianity caught hold and spread despite often brutal persecutions. “Rabbles, Riots, and Ruins” is a lively journey through cities as diverse as Rome, Jerusalem, Milan, and Constantinople.

    In this episode, host Andrew Petiprin speaks with Aquilina about how the unique characteristics of these cities allowed for the development and flourishing of the faith, frequently in hostile environments. They discuss the cities—some still well-known, others lost to history—that defined and shaped the earliest centuries of our Christian faith.

    Find “Rabbles, Riots, and Ruins: Twelve Ancient Cities and How They Were Evangelized” at Ignatius.com: https://ignatius.com/rabbles-riots-and-ruins-rrrp/?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=post&utm_campaign=Rabbles%2C+Riots%2C+and+Ruins&utm_id=Rabbles%2C+Riots%2C+and+Ruins

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    53 mins
  • Fr. Michael Brisson: Finding a Catholic soul in classic film-noir storytelling
    May 31 2024

    The hero of the new novel Death in Black and White is a Catholic priest and classic film buff who finds himself caught in a web of crime, sin, and double-crossings that rivals anything found in his favorite film-noir detective movies. The book’s author, Fr. Michael Brisson—also a Catholic priest and classic film buff—may not have real-life experience of being in the clutches of the Mob, but he does know the unique way a priest is privy to some of life’s hardest and darkest moments.

    In this episode, Andrew Petiprin speaks with Brisson about the graces on offer in the sacraments, the Catholic faith’s unflinching realism about human nature and our sinful proclivities—and how a film-noir tinged crime novel can be the perfect vehicle for exploring these themes and more.

    Find Death in Black and White now at Ignatius.com.

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    51 mins
  • Archbishop Alfred Hughes: What prayer is, and what it isn’t
    May 17 2024

    Most Catholics are aware, even if only in a vague way, of the many holy men and women who have come before us who wrote or preached on the spiritual life. We may have read about their lives; we may find their holiness and closeness to God inspiring. But do many of us look to them for concrete, specific spiritual guidance?

    Archbishop Emeritus Alfred Hughes has written a book that presents the luminaries of the Catholic spiritual tradition not as distant, unapproachable models of spiritual perfection, but as flesh-and-blood mentors in the spiritual life whose wisdom and insight transcends the passage of centuries.

    Archbishop Hughes joins host Andrew Petiprin to discuss that book, “Spiritual Masters: Living and Praying in the Catholic Tradition,” and how he hopes readers will come to a deeper appreciation of the spiritual treasures of the Church, and a fuller understanding of the nature of prayer itself.

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    51 mins