Mixed Feelings: Poetry and Faith for Our Time / Christian Wiman & Miroslav Volf

Mixed Feelings: Poetry and Faith for Our Time / Christian Wiman & Miroslav Volf

Author: Matthew Croasmun, Ryan McAnnally-Linz, Drew Collins, Miroslav Volf, Evan Rosa, Macie Bridge November 7, 2020 Duration: 42:01

Poet Christian Wiman and theologian Miroslav Volf, both colleagues and friends, discuss poetry's ability to give voice to the mixed feelings of life today, talking about the mash-up of home and exile, joy and sorrow, saint and sinner; and Wiman reads some of his favorite poetry from his upcoming anthology, Home: 100 Poems.

Poet Christian Wiman is Professor of the Practice of Religion and Literature at Yale Divinity School. He’s the author of several books of poetry, including Every Riven Thing, Hammer is the Prayer, and his most recent, Survival Is a Style. His memoirs include the bracing and beautiful My Bright Abyss: Meditation of a Modern Believer, and He Held Radical Light: The Art of Faith, the Faith of Art. He edited an anthology of 100 poems on Joy a few years ago, and is currently putting finishing touches on another 100 poems on Home.

Our guest last week, the novelist Marilynne Robinson, says of Wiman, "His poetry and scholarship have a purifying urgency that is rare in this world.  This puts him at the very source of theology, and enables him to say new things in timeless language, so that the reader’s surprise and assent are one and the same.”

Show Notes

  • On being nowhere, absence, place, and home
  • Simone Weil: “We must take the feeling of being at home into exile, we must be rooted in the absence of a place." 
  • Christian Wiman’s home
  • The resonance of objects and persons
  • Completing a poetry anthology about home during a pandemic
  • The ubiquity of home in poetry
  • "The Niagara River” by Kay Ryan
  • Individual life joining with collective life, the circularity and rhythm of lyric poetry; searching for a remembrance of home
  • William Wordsworth: “Not in entire forgetfulness, And not in utter nakedness, But trailing clouds of glory do we come”
  • “Innocence” by Patrick Kavanagh
  • "To be a poet is to be in exile." What is it to be a believer?
  • "Poets are not poets most of the time, the rest of the time they’re poor slobs like everybody else."
  • Living in and attending to our exile: Abraham “living in tents, awaiting the city, whose architect and builder is God”; Jesus sleeping in the boat in the storm.
  • Gillian Rose, Love’s Work and Nietzsche’s "tragic joy”; writing when she was dying of cancer and viewing faith as unmaking oneself.
  • "The Bennett Springs Road” by Julia Randall: “The bird that sang I am."
  • What is the right relationship of security to precarity?
  • “In a Time of Peace” by Ilya Kaminsky
  • How do we live lives of joy while there’s suffering all around us?
  • “Shema” by Primo Levi
  • Alexander Schmemann’s “bright sorrow"
  • Marilynne Robinson’s model of creating characters with credible lives of faith‚ credible for the very fact that they are attentive to the suffering around them.
  • W.H. Auden: “A good poem is the clear expression of mixed feelings."
  • "Taking life by the throat"
  • Both/And Life
  • “Filling Station” by Elizabeth Bishop—“Somebody loves us all."

What does it mean to live well, not just for ourselves but for the world around us? For the Life of the World / Yale Center for Faith & Culture explores this profound question through conversations that blend deep theological insight with sharp cultural analysis. Hosted by scholars and thinkers like Matthew Croasmun, Ryan McAnnally-Linz, Drew Collins, Miroslav Volf, Evan Rosa, and Macie Bridge, each episode delves into the complexities of faith, philosophy, and everyday practice. You’ll hear discussions that move from abstract ideas to tangible guidance, examining how ancient wisdom intersects with modern challenges in society, education, and personal spirituality. This isn’t about easy answers, but about the harder, more rewarding work of discerning what constitutes a flourishing life-for individuals and communities alike. The podcast serves as an audio extension of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture’s mission, offering thoughtful content for anyone curious about how belief shapes and is shaped by culture. Tune in for a consistently engaging exploration of what it means to seek a life truly worthy of our shared humanity.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 247

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