Steve Norman talks about the importance of a preacher’s formation and the way their life and character can speak more loudly than the sermons they preach.
Steve Norman is a pastor, speaker, and the author of The Preacher as Sermon: How Who You Are Shapes What They Hear.
Kara Powell is executive director of the Fuller Youth Institute, and Brad Griffin is its senior director of content. They are the co-authors of 3 Big Questions That Change Every Teenager: Making the Most of Your Conversations and Connections.
Michaela O’Donnell explores our ideas of calling and vocation in our work and beyond—reflecting on discipleship, community, and the centrality of Christ.
Michaela O’Donnell is executive director of Fuller’s De Pree Center, owner of Long Winter Media, and author of Make Work Matter: Your Guide to Meaningful Work in a Changing World.
Curt Thompson, through lenses of neuroscience and spiritual formation, explores how we engage with our longings, create redemptive beauty, and imagine new futures.
Curt Thompson is a psychiatrist, the founder of The Center for Being Known, and the author of The Soul of Shame and Anatomy of the Soul.
Lorne Buchman discusses how the creative process can become a way of knowing—through improvisation, discovery, and engagement in a space of uncertainty.
Lorne Buchman is the president of ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, California.
Larry Coulter shares about how churches and local organizations can come together to lovingly serve their cities, and how this essential collaborative work can be forged across differences.
Larry Coulter is pastor of Lakeway Church in Lakeway, Texas.
Kat Armas speaks about the profound wisdom and lived theologies of the women who have come before us—in our families, in history, and in the Bible.
Kat Armas is the host of The Protagonistas podcast and is the author of Abuelita Faith.
Janette Ok delves into 1 Peter, reflecting on what it teaches about the formation of Christian identity and its features of belonging, holiness, and unity.
Janette Ok is an ordained minister and is associate professor of New Testament at Fuller.
Shannon Sigler explores the church’s engagement with culture and the integration of worship and the arts, while reflecting on the history and future of Fuller’s Brehm Center.
Shannon Sigler is the executive director of Fuller’s Brehm Center for Worship, Theology, and the Arts.
Justin Giboney speaks about navigating our polarized society not with an either/or mentality but a both/and approach that frames our decisions in the gospel rather than political ideologies.
Justin Giboney is cofounder of the AND Campaign and is an attorney, political strategist, and author.
William Pannell, looking back on his decades of experience, reflects on the American church’s engagement with race, the future of theological education, and the transformative power of the gospel.
He is the author of The Coming Race Wars, among other books, and is professor emeritus of preaching at Fuller Seminary.
Soong-Chan Rah reflects on the warped theologies that have shaped the American church throughout history and hopes for a new, anointed Christian imagination in the 21st century.
He is the Robert Munger Professor of Evangelism at Fuller Seminary.
Willie Jennings hopes for a reframed understanding of education that sheds destructive virtues of achievement and mastery for values of belonging and community.
He is associate professor of systematic theology and Africana studies at Yale Divinity School.
Makoto Fujimura talks about a theology of new creation and reflects on the sanctifying, healing power that comes through the process of making.
He is a leading contemporary artists, as well as an author and speaker.
Jemar Tisby walks through three crucial steps in confronting racial injustice: awareness of one’s racial identity, relationships based on mutuality, and commitment to tangible action.
He is the author of How to Fight Racism and The Color of Compromise.
Jeanelle Austin shares about her experience as lead caretaker at the George Floyd memorial and explains the power of community in the pursuit of liberation and racial justice.
She is the founder and director of the Racial Agency Initiative.
Lynsi Snyder-Ellingson talks about how God offers healing and renewal, sets us free from fear, and calls us to love.
She is the owner and president of In-N-Out Burger—whose foundations include the In-N-Out Burger Foundation and Slave 2 Nothing—and is the co-founder of Army of Love.
Erin Dufault-Hunter discusses the COVID-19 pandemic and vaccine rollouts, considering questions of ethics, broken systems, and neighborly love.
She is associate professor of Christian ethics at Fuller Seminary.
Resources discussed in this episode include the following—which are not necessarily representative of FULLER studio or Fuller Seminary:
“Myths and Facts about COVID-19 Vaccines” according to the CDC.
“Christians and the Vaccine,” a project of Redeeming Babel addressing “common spiritual questions Christians have regarding the vaccine.”
“How mRNA Vaccines Work,” a short video by Harvard University explaining mRNA vaccines.
Matthew Kaemingk talks about cultivating a theology that does not separate worship from work but instead reframes our work in Christian mission and practice.
He is the associate dean for Fuller Texas and assistant professor of Christian ethics.
Rob Bell, author of Everything is Spiritual and other notable bestsellers, shares about his continuous exploration of spirituality and about embracing the ongoing journey of knowing God more deeply.
For more resources for a deeply formed spiritual life, visit Fuller.edu/Studio.
Alexis Abernethy, Fuller’s chief of diversity, equity, and inclusion, discusses the long, multifaceted work of combating racial injustice, the fatigue that comes with it, and the importance of healing along the way.
For more resources for a deeply formed spiritual life, visit Fuller.edu/Studio.
Pete Docter, writer, director, and chief creative officer of Pixar, shares the story behind his latest movie, Soul, and talks about its themes of purpose, beauty, and connection. Mark Labberton served as a faith advisor for the film. (This episode contains spoilers.)
For more resources for a deeply formed spiritual life, visit Fuller.edu/Studio.
Jemar Tisby, author of How to Fight Racism: Courageous Christianity and the Journey Toward Racial Justice, talks about racial justice, the power of the stories we tell, and the dangerous way passivity fuels an oppressive status quo.
For more resources for a deeply formed spiritual life, visit Fuller.edu/Studio.