
Politics and Religion. We’re not supposed to talk about that, right? Wrong! We only say that nowadays because the loudest, most extreme voices have taken over the whole conversation. Well, we‘re taking some of that space back! If you’re dying for some dialogue instead of all the yelling; if you know it’s okay to have differences without having to hate each other; if you believe politics and religion are too important to let ”the screamers” drown out the rest of us and would love some engaging, provocative and fun conversations about this stuff, then ”Talkin‘ Politics & Religion Without Killin‘ Each Other” is for you!
Episodes

5 days ago
5 days ago
Bishop Mary Glasspool models what it looks like to live one’s convictions with courage, humility, and grace — this “Best Of” episode reminds us that pluralism is not an abstraction, but a practice.
Best Of TP&R
As we close out the year, we’re resurfacing a small handful of conversations from the Talkin’ Politics & Religion Without Killin’ Each Other archive that best reflect what this show exists to do: create space for thoughtful disagreement, moral seriousness, and the hard work of living together in a pluralistic democracy.
In this Best of 2025 spotlight, we revisit a deeply human and spiritually rich conversation with Bishop Mary D. Glasspool, a pioneering leader in the Episcopal Church whose life and ministry embody the possibility of faith without fear, conviction without coercion, and leadership without domination.
From her early years growing up in the church, to wrestling with vocation, identity, and resistance from within her own denomination, Bishop Glasspool reflects on what it means to remain rooted in one’s faith while staying genuinely open to others — across theology, politics, and lived experience.
This is not a conversation about winning arguments. It’s about becoming the kind of people who can stay in relationship even when the conversations are hard.
Calls to Action:
✅ If this episode resonates, consider sharing it with someone who might need a reminder that disagreement doesn’t have to mean dehumanization.
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✅ Watch the full conversation and subscribe on YouTube: youtube.com/@politicsandreligion
What We Explore
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Growing up in the Episcopal Church and discovering a call to ministry
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Wrestling with faith, sexuality, and belonging during moments of deep personal and institutional resistance
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The historic ordination of women and the legacy of the Philadelphia 11
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Why being deeply rooted in one’s own faith can make genuine interfaith dialogue possible
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Navigating polarization, fear, and exhaustion within religious communities
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The difference between hope and expectation — and why hope must remain central
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How listening, silence, and collaboration can heal what competition and certainty have fractured
Highlights & Timestamps
[00:00:00] Why this conversation still matters — and why we’re resurfacing it now
[00:03:00] Growing up Episcopalian and the formative power of place, family, and church
[00:13:00] Faith as identity vs. faith as choice — and learning to remain rooted without fear
[00:19:00] Women’s ordination, the Philadelphia 11, and a church at a crossroads
[00:31:00] Reconciling vocation, sexuality, and faith when the institution says “no”
[00:40:00] Creating space for people who disagree — without surrendering conviction
[00:48:00] Clergy exhaustion, political division, and the call to preach the basics
[00:53:00] Hope vs. expectation — and why hope leaves the future in God’s hands
[00:59:00] Why diversity is a strength — and what it takes to live that truth
[01:06:00] Three closing reflections: beyond binaries, the discipline of listening, and collaboration over competition
Memorable Quotes
🗣️ “If you are deeply rooted in your own faith, you are not threatened by people of other faiths.” — Bishop Mary Glasspool
🗣️ “Hope is not the same as expectation. Hope leaves the future in God’s hands.” — Bishop Mary Glasspool
🗣️ “Diversity is not a problem to be solved — it’s a strength to be lived into.” — Bishop Mary Glasspool
❤️ “The risk of staying in relationship is real — but it’s where hope lives.” — Corey Nathan
Resources Mentioned:
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The Philadelphia Eleven Documentary: https://www.philadelphiaelevenfilm.com
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The Episcopal Church: https://www.episcopalchurch.org
Connect on Social Media:
Corey is @coreysnathan on all the socials...
Thanks to Our Sponsors:
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Pew Research Center: pewresearch.org
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The Village Square: villagesquare.us
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Meza Wealth Management: mezawealth.com
Proud members of The Democracy Group
It’s not about erasing difference. It’s about making room for one another — with courage, humility, and care.

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