How to Be a Better Human - How to believe in God even when the world sucks (w/ Nadia Bolz-Weber)
Episode Date: January 27, 2025Nadia Bolz-Weber believes the good and bad in all of us is what makes us human. Nadia has built a career talking about personal failings, recovery, grace, faith, and really whatever the hell else she ...wants to. She’s a bestselling author, a former stand-up comic, and now an ordained Lutheran Pastor. Nadia joins Chris to discuss her journey with religion, leadership, and community. They explore questions around the definition of faith, whether spirituality is innate to us, and the beauty of low expectations.For the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscripts Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Thanks for listening to How to Be a Better Human.
Listen on Amazon Music, or just ask Alexa, play How to Be a Better Human on Amazon Music.
You're listening to How to Be a Better Human.
I'm your host, Chris Duffy.
Today on the show, we're talking about faith and religion with Nadia Bolzwepper.
She is a New York Times bestselling author of the books Shameless, Accidental Saints,
and Pastricks.
She's also the host of the Confessional podcast, and the very popular newsletter, The
Corners.
But more than any of the accolades or accomplishments, Nadia is a person who has been remarkably
open and vulnerable about the ways she has struggled and failed and found ways to continue
in her life.
Now, whatever your opinion on religion is, I think that you're going to find that Nadia
has a refreshingly different and much needed perspective on what it means to have faith
in the world today.
And just as an example of how Nadia is really different from what you might expect you'd
be hearing from a pastor, here's a quote that's featured prominently on her website
and which Nadia says is as common a prayer as she has ever prayed in her life.
And that prayer is, God, please help me to not be an asshole. I love that. And here's a
clip of Nadia talking about why that prayer in particular resonates with her.
I guess I think spiritual leaders, a lot of times, even just that term feels weird to apply to myself, but a lot
of times it feels like they're people who have such an abundance of some kind of virtue
that they have extra that they can share with people who don't have that virtue, you know,
whether it's like forgiveness or patience or gratitude, right? And that's never what
I have to offer ever. I think the only thing I have to offer is the fact that I still struggle with hating
most people.
I'm not naturally the most grateful person.
I can hold resentments longer than I should.
All of these things that I would like to be able to somehow work on, even if it's just
in 1% increments, I don't mind admitting that and then
sort of reporting back to people when I have something that worked. Or more often than not,
what will happen is I will think that there's some sort of plan for working on gratitude or
something and then I do that and then something entirely else happens that's entirely unrelated and then suddenly I get it.
You know, a lot of times my insights come
when I'm distracted by thinking I know how
to get the insights.
We are gonna be back with much more from Nadia
after this quick break, so don't go anywhere
and don't get distracted. If you're at a point in life when you're ready to lead with purpose, we can get you there.
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challenges.
From healthcare and the environment to energy, government and technology, it's your path
to meaningful leadership in all sectors.
For details, visit uvic.ca slash future MBA.
That's uvic.ca.futuremba.
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and member of the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization. Today we're talking about religion and faith with Nadia Bolzweber.
Hi, I'm Nadia Bolzweber and strangely enough, I'm a Lutheran pastor.
For people who aren't already super familiar with your work, can you give us just like
a brief history of the House for All Sinners and Saints and of the church that you started and the type of theological work that you believe in and that you do?
Basically, I was raised really like Christian fundamentalist and like women weren't even allowed to pray out loud in front of men. And the people in the Church of Christ were the only real Christians. We were the only people going to heaven. You know, it's very sectarian.
And I left that for reasons of self-preservation
when I was a teenager.
But it's a very recent idea in human history
that you can just choose your symbol system.
The symbol system that you are surrounded by
when your brain is forming will always sort of
Affect the way you see the world that doesn't mean you'll agree with the theological propositions
But it's still in there
And so for me I had to leave the church and I had to leave Christianity for self-preservation
And I did for ten years and and I explored women's spirituality and goddess
stuff, and I'm so glad I did. And it was the healthy, good thing to do for me. But there was
a part of me that I left behind because I was so formed by it. And so, to have only an absolutely
negative view of something that formed me created an alienation inside myself that got
to be resolved when I came back to Christianity, but like on my own terms in a completely different
scene. I kind of discovered Lutheran theology and really loved it because it talks about
paradox and it's the center point of Lutheran theology is grace. It's not being a good person.
It's not striving to make yourself holy. You know, it's none of these things. It's just
this beautiful concept that all of the most beautiful and unearnable things in your life,
like we get to breathe delicious air, we get to be on this planet, and yet we get to be
alive and you can't earn
the right to have it. Like most of the stuff in your life is a gift. So for that to be
the central idea of the theology, I thought was so beautiful. And so I kind of dipped
my toe back into Christianity. But then a friend of mine who was also a stand-up comic and also recovering alcoholic, he ended up losing his battle with mental illness.
He took his own life.
When PJ died,
all my friends looked at me and they're like,
well, you can do the funeral.
I hadn't been to seminary.
I was the only religious person in my whole friend group.
They're like, obviously, you'll do it.
It was at the Comedy Works downtown, it was packed and it was all these comics and alcoholics and academics. And
it was so clear that nobody had a container for this. I was doing this eulogy, and I looked out
at the crowd, and I was like, these people need a priest. Like, they need a pastor that's somebody that's for them, you know? And then I was like, oh wow, okay?
So I really felt this call to be a pastor to my people, you know, because I'd go to
these Lutheran churches, no one looked like me, no one talked like me. They were friendly
enough if I happened to show up, but my people and my friends in my scene, they weren't accessing
this beautiful
theology and these sacraments and the liturgy and the music and all this stuff I thought
was so great. So I basically had to start a church that I'd feel comfortable showing
up to. That's what House for All Sinners and Saints ended up being. And it was like anti-excellence
pro-participation. Nobody cared what you believed. That wasn't the basis of belonging
at all. And it was acapella, and it was like this four-part harmony, and we sat in the
round, and it was very democratized and weird and funny and wild and holy. It was beautiful.
And I miss it. I have not been the pastor there for six and a half years, so I left
quite a long time ago,
but I served it for 11 years and it was a lot of fun.
We do like beer and hymns in the basement of a bar.
We do like blessing of the bicycles
and we bless the bicycles.
Aspersion is like that holy water thing
that you sprinkle holy water,
but we do it with like those little tassel-y things
on the ends of girls' handlebars.
You know, we do asp spursion on the bikes
and we have a thurble,
which is that swingy incense thing you see,
you know, smoking incense,
but it was made out of parts from a vintage Schwinn.
I mean, we just had so much fun with this tradition.
And because we didn't think it was sacrilegious,
we thought it made sense.
This is how it makes sense for us.
It wasn't like you just invented things completely. You were also going back to say, like, well,
what happens if we take the liturgy and rethink how we experience it or how we interpret it,
but we are still working from the same text and from the same week-to-week idea.
Yeah, that was really important to me because I thought you have to be deeply rooted in
tradition in order to innovate with integrity. And so that's what we kept trying to do. And
that was important to me because I don't have enough wisdom just on my own to make shit
up. You know, like I would get it wrong or it would be somehow self-centered or it would be a quarter inch deep.
I really love the humility it takes to say,
oh, actually generations that came before us,
this is a weird thought, have something to teach us.
You know, we're so arrogant to think, you know,
well, that's old fashioned or, you know,
well, they didn't have the same opinion on women as we do now. Therefore, anything they say is not worthwhile. Something that you talk
about in Pastrix and that I've heard you talk about a number of times is that before you started
doing this work, before you were a pastor and were writing about religion, you were a stand-up comedian.
And I think that's really interesting because I also am a stand standup comedian. And I think that's really interesting
because I also am a standup comedian.
So I'm curious to hear the connections that you see
between the work of performing to get people to laugh
and the work of standing in front of people
and trying to get them to feel or to identify
with something bigger than themselves.
Well, first of all, I don't know how anybody manages to ever be a preacher without having
been a stand-up comic first.
Because I know it's not the most common path, but I can't imagine being a preacher if I
hadn't have been a comic first.
But there are reasons for that.
And I think one is economy of language.
That's what you learn when you're writing stand-up. A lot of people don't realize that about stand-up. It's
all about writing, truly. It's about sort of how can you arrange these words in
this really succinct way that has the impact that you want it to have. There'll
be bits, you probably have bits, where if you added one extra word it wouldn't be
as funny, right? So there's an issue of economy of language, which is why it can deliver a sermon that's
1,500 words long, whereas a lot of people who just kind of ramble around points, they'll
do it for 30, 40 minutes.
So I think I learned that.
But I think the other thing is the idea of having somebody who's set apart to speak from
their own perspective to a group of people. And that group of people have
allowed them to do it, but also if you're not doing it well or if you've gone off
track or you start being mean or you start being braggy or whatever it is,
people will
draw their laughter, right? They will sort of go, we don't trust you. We aren't allowing
you to have this anymore. And I think the same might be true of preaching too. You have
to, in the act of doing it, you have to maintain the trust of the people that you are doing
it in front of, you know? And so I think I wrote this in
pastricks that comics see the underside of life, you know? That we have this
really slant view and that's why the things we say are funny because other
people know they can recognize the truth in it. They would never articulate it
that way because they're normal, you know, like they have a normal view. But comics have
this, they see everything slant. And so it allows you to see reality in a different way
that's actually very funny or absurd, usually more often than not. And a really good preacher
can do the same where you're taking this text and you're taking the experience that you
have and the experience other human beings have, and you're looking at it slant and in a spiritual way.
And then people are like, oh,
and they have a certain aha moment as well.
So I think they are related.
I just, I don't tell as many dick jokes from the pulpit.
You know?
And yet it's not zero.
Your books definitely have a few.
Yeah.
So there's a piece here that you do
in writing about religion,
which is a lot of non-religious people
associate preachers and pastors with this,
like how I want to be this kind of perfect self.
And you write about it in the way you actually are.
There's nothing sort of aspirational about me.
So a lot of people will give off this thing about themselves.
It's the thing they aspire to be, or like that's how they want to be seen like same with like a yoga teacher, right?
I like cannot I cannot deal with yoga teachers who?
have that unnaturally straight posture all the time and they talk with that like
Passive-aggressive half whisper and it just feels fake as shit, right? I'm like, I don't believe you
I don't believe that's how you really are.
I believe that's what you're pretending to be.
And so what I do is I immediately assume they're a monster.
I'm sorry.
If you're pointing yourself off as this like spiritual giant who's just never struggles
with all the shitty things about your personality that I struggle with on the daily, if you
point yourself off as that, I don't trust you.
And I just assume
there's something really dangerous about you. And so I had a yoga teacher who came in once and he
was a little late, which is unusual. And he was like really apologetic. He goes, but honestly,
I just had a fight with my teenager and I threw my yoga mat across the room on the way out. And
I'm like, oh, great. What do you have to teach us? I'm ready. Let's do it. Right. Immediately trust at him. It's so weird how often people think,
I just want to thank you for being real. I'm like, what? It's so weird that you can be thanked for
not pretending to be someone you're not. Like, what kind of world do we live in? What is up with
spiritual leadership that that is remarkable?
A thing that it makes me think about is when I'm doing great, I'm happy to be around other
people who are doing great, who've got it all figured out.
There's something to learn from those people.
But when I'm struggling, when I am in grief or I am hurting or something is just like
my life is falling apart, I am not interested in figuring things out
from the person who has it all figured out already.
I get that maybe it would be helpful
to learn from the person who's not grieving or in pain,
but what you actually want is to spend time
with someone else who is similarly broken
or at least understands what it means
to be broken in those ways.
Well, this is why Alcoholics Anonymous works,
right? This is why Alcoholics Anonymous isn't, let's get some trained counselors in here to help you
people who are broken. It's like fucked up person to fucked up person. That's how it works, you know?
And so in a way, I think whatever I've been able to do in my life professionally, I think it does just come
down to the fact that I really try to stay in my lane and who I am. I don't, I
try to never pretend to be more than I am or have it together more than I am or
less than I am, you know. I mean, I'm not the same person I was, you know. I am. I'm
in my mid-50s and if I was still saying the things and talking like I was when
I was 40, because that's when my audience started building, you know, and I have to
be true to my brand, still, that wouldn't work either.
I want to talk to you about some of the, like, actual religious parts of your work, you know,
in real faith, because I think that I find it personally to be really hard to talk to other
people who I'm not very, very, very close with and certainly to talk about publicly
about faith, partly because I just don't actually have all that much language for it.
And also partly because I think people often bring a lot of their own totally right and
reasonable baggage and history and ideas about judgment or politics to it.
Something that you wrote about in Pastrax that really resonated with me is this idea
of like, I don't necessarily want this. It would be a lot easier if I didn't believe.
It would be simpler. And yet, I'm paraphrasing you, but I kind of can't deny the power that
this has had in my own life, that I've seen
how it has helped me and changed me. This is because I think faith and reason are not as related
as people want them to be, you know? I mean, it's very difficult, I think, to be people who,
who live with this elevation of human reason that we've had since the Enlightenment, where we're
like, we have the scientific method, there are things that are provable as fact, you know, this
is kind of superstitious, this faith stuff. But the reality is that humans have always
been religious. Religion has fashioned itself in endless variety. And I don't just mean
like religion as we think of it now. I mean, human beings are symbol making creatures. And we are creatures who mark the year and the seasons
in really particular ways and have language that we pass down generations and practices
around the divine and around, I think even what some people would call worship, you know, this sort of
exultation that we feel in moments of awe. Like, those are all just really deeply human,
and I think really beautiful parts of being human. But what is also true is that humans
aren't just beautiful. I have, in Latin, on my wrist wrist tattooed simul eustis et picator,
which means simultaneously sinner and saint. So I really think we're 100% of both all the
time. And what that means is that, yes, humans are capable of like beauty and art and compassion
and caretaking and love and all of those things. And that's lovely lovely and that's part of us. And we are capable of selfishness
and vengefulness and violence and all of these things as well. And so what would be a really
great way to leverage the worst parts of ourselves, but using the systems we create to express the best part of ourselves, right? So, religion has been
used and manipulated to exert dominance over other people from the get-go. So, just like humans are
not just one thing, we're good and bad, religion also, not just one thing, also good and bad,
right? So, there's that factor that makes it hard to talk about faith. But you know, Charles Taylor wrote a book about this post-enlightenment world that
we live in, and he said the enlightenment gave with one hand and took with the other.
And the thing that it took was enchantment.
You know, human beings lived in a world that felt enchanted to them, and now we think it's
so superstitious.
But maybe there's something really innate within us that really can see enchantment
still, can actually feel it.
It's more than intellectually assenting to theological propositions.
It's also this lived experience.
So it's very tricky and it's woven into the most vulnerable parts of ourselves as well.
And so of course it would be hard to talk about, you know? We're going to take a quick break, and then we will be right back.
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to meaningful leadership in all sectors.
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I'm wondering, for people who are listening,
do you have any advice for people whose families
or friends differ in their religious views and ideology
and who have religion as a real source of tension
in their relationships.
So just to read you something from Morgan,
one of the producers on this show,
has a very good friend who's very close to her parents,
but her mom in particular is really intense
about church guilting both of her children
into coming to church with her,
especially on Easter each year.
And her daughters have told her many times that they just don't align with
the beliefs of the church and religion and they don't want to attend. But that hurts
the mom's feelings tremendously. And it often gets into these like tense and emotional conversations,
especially around the holidays and special occasions. So that's not a isolated experience.
Yeah. Yeah. What would you counsel this person? There's a few ways to see it, maybe a little differently,
because when we start telling the same story over and over
about what's happening with us or our parents or whatever,
we have to at some point investigate, is it still true?
Can I tell the story from another perspective
that's equally true that makes me less miserable?
That's what I try to do sometimes.
It's probably worn smooth, this story about her mom, religion, them, what they believe.
So one might be, if your mom believes like fervently that she is doing something that
is good, right? What is good is to go to church. What is good is to have your children at church.
Then human beings will do a lot of things and sacrifice a lot of things in order to preserve
our self-regard. So the need that we have to see ourselves as good can really go sideways in our
lives. So it might be that what their her mom really is doing is has an uninvestigated drive to see herself as good.
And so you can have compassion for that in a different way than just this,
she wants us to do something we don't believe, right? So that might be one entry point. But
another is, is for them to investigate for themselves, how important is believing it
to participate in it? Is there another good?
Like meaning, you don't intellectually assent to the theological propositions in this church,
but you do probably assent to the idea of our mom's not going to live forever, and this
is maybe three hours out of our entire lives, hour and a half, twice a year, that maybe
it's worth it. And I don't have to believe these things
and it's not even about that.
It's just about the fact that this would be
a pretty easy way to make our mom happy.
And we don't have to believe the things.
There's just different ways of sort of looking
at our unexamined beliefs around stuff
that I feel like can be really helpful
with this sort of thing.
It's also interesting to think about that answer, which I think is a really good answer
in the context of what you said earlier of like at 50, you are not the same person you
were when you were 40 or 30 or 20.
I wonder what would like 30 year old Nadia have said to that person who's like, I don't
want to go to church.
30 year old Nadia would be like, fuck you,
I'm not going to your church.
Yeah. For sure.
No question.
No question.
It's interesting to think like that,
as you get older and you have some,
you change perspective and you have kids of your own,
how that changes the way that you think
about these things too.
That's right.
And just growing in wisdom,
because what I mean by that is the basic building blocks of my personality have not
changed. They're fixed. The only thing that's changed is I've done enough personal work that
they don't kick me in the ass as much as they did 20 years ago. But they're still there. My first
reaction to almost everything is fuck you. I almost never stay there, but I almost always start there. Always. That hasn't changed.
And so I think there was a point in my life where I was like doing therapy and working the steps and doing all the things.
And yet I would still have these very angry, aggressive, sort of innate reactions to things that happened
in my life.
And I really got down on myself.
And I had to realize, like, my daughter had this t-shirt.
It was this kind of cartoony image of a rhinoceros with the horn on a treadmill sweating its
ass off, right?
And looking wistfully over at a poster on its wall of a unicorn, meaning if I spend enough
time on this treadmill, they also have a horn, I can look like that unicorn and I would not be
a rhino anymore. And I'm here to tell you I'm still a rhino. I am still a rhino.
Yeah, I love that.
Yeah. So I think that Americans are so into like, there's my goal. I'm going to make,
I'm going to take steps to beat the goal. And it's like, well, that's great, but there's some
things that aren't going to change about you. And so how do you have compassion for that?
I love that. And you know, the one thing that I think I disagree with in what you just said,
or I was going to disagree with, but then maybe the 1% thing is the same thing,
is this idea that like, you may never be the unicorn, right?
And I think it's silly to run on the treadmill
trying to do it, but I think that there's also,
a lot of people throw their hands up
at problems in the world or themselves
because they're like, I can't get to 100.
And I'm like, fine, just do something, right?
And so to me, the reason I like doing this show
is because I get to talk to really smart,
really passionate people who have these big ideas
and then say like,
okay, but what would a regular person actually do?
And I would say like the guiding philosophy is that like,
we should be able to do something, right?
If not, like, I don't wanna just throw my hands up
and say like, it is the way it is.
And I know you don't either.
Right, well, it's interesting because there's,
I think it's always interesting to investigate
what your basic view of human beings
and what they're capable of, right?
So you can have a very high estimation of that
or a low estimation of that.
And having a low estimation of that
doesn't preclude improvement.
It doesn't preclude the fact that we can grow in,
for instance, in wisdom, right? But what
having a really lofty high estimation of human beings does is it, I think, creates situations
where we're unnecessarily critical and disappointed in ourselves and other people all the time
instead of compassionate about it, right? And, hey, I like low expectations. I find
low expectations really relaxing, right? Because then you get to be surprised, you get to be
sort of thrilled and wowed in a way that really, really high expectations all the time. When
do you get to be wowed and thrilled? Nearly impossible, you know? So with ourselves just going, having low expectations sounds so depressing.
And yet I love the idea of doing what's actually possible and included in doing what's possible
is what you said, which is actually you do have some agency, right? You do have agency.
I think you're right. Some people give up. And so, while like in Christianity, there's a whole
sector of Christians who believe in a thing called progressive sanctification, right? It was, I think,
this Wesleyan idea. So, Methodists believe in progressive Christian perfection. And sometimes,
if I'm talking to a group of Methodists, I'm like, oh yeah, by the way, how's that Christian
perfection thing working out for you guys? Pretty good. You almost there? Because if you find that it's a failed project, there's so much room for you in the Lutheran
church. We would never, never buy into that shit, you know? But what's another way of saying that?
Like achieving enlightenment. Do you know what I mean? I'm like, I just feel so suspicious of it
when people go, oh, not only is this possible, it's our goal.
I'm like, I don't know, like two,
3% less shitty is like so great for me.
So I don't believe in progressive sanctification
or enlightenment.
I do think we grow in wisdom and that's different.
In Accidental Saints, finding God in all the wrong people,
you write about this a lot of like,
that we can learn from people
who we really don't want to learn from.
One of the favorite chapters of this book,
because it was something that I hadn't really heard
someone write about before,
is how you leading a church,
trying to bring people closer to God,
there are also people in the church
who you really just find annoying.
Like not cause they're bad,
but just cause you're like,
you're an annoying person and I don't want to spend my time with you. And yet that can
bring you closer to some idea of what you should be without guilting yourself, right?
Like what can you learn from a person who is annoying to you?
Basically, as soon as I start disliking someone or being really annoyed by them, it feels as if God then goes, okay,
now we know who's going to be the naughtiest teacher, right?
It's like, it's constant, or they'll do something incredibly gracious towards me or towards
someone else.
I'll watch them be this extraordinarily kind person that I could never pull off and I'll
watch them do it.
And I'm like, who's the asshole?
So my teachers, it's often been like that. A few years ago, I walked the Camino de Santiago, which is this thousand-year-old pilgrimage across Spain. You walk 500 miles across Spain.
And I'd read stuff online where people are like, you get this Camino family, where you're with
people from all over the world and you end up kind of each town wanting to stay in the same places and you eat dinner
together and you stay in touch afterwards and it's like this beautiful thing. And I thought,
oh, that looks so amazing. And I went and the funny, like very hilarious thing is,
I thought I'll be a different person on the Camino. I won't be like me. I won't
find people annoying on the Camino. And the very first person I met on the train, I quickly
dubbed the Canadian mansplainer. He was an expert in everything, including the thing
I have two degrees in. It was maybe a 40 minute train ride.
And by the end I had put my earbuds back in, right?
And it didn't get better.
And there was this point where
even the people I really liked on the Camino
who I buddied around with,
I wanted to get away from a couple of weeks in.
And so I took a cab and I skipped an entire stage
of the Camino to get away from my Camino.
Then the next day I started in this little village
and started walking and I laughed out loud.
Like I was totally alone.
I laughed so hard, I grabbed my knees.
If somebody had seen me, they'd be like,
this woman has lost her mind.
But what I was laughing at was how I fell for it again, this thing that I'm going to be a
different person, you know, I'm going to, and it's never worked. And then I had this beautiful
moment of compassion for myself. I did, I had this moment of incredible appreciation for myself.
And I said, Nadia, you are a very astute observer of human beings, including yourself.
And it's kind of the thing that allows you to be the writer you are and to be the preacher
you are, but it also might preclude you from ever happily being part of a group of people.
And would you trade it? And I'm like, I wouldn't trade it. So having
compassion for yourself can be, it's not a fluffy idea to me. I just came home from this
two week long training in Victoria, BC. I took, it was an intensive, so many hours a
day for two weeks and it was on song leading, like how to teach
an audience a song and have them sing it or a group of people, because I want to use it in the
women's prison and I want to use it with my audiences when I'm doing a lecture. It's a very
particular skill and I was really committed to learning it, but I had to be with the same,
But I had to be with the same like 10, 12 people for two weeks. And I prayed for weeks that I be given an open heart and an open mind because I know
how I am.
It could be all over day one when I see somebody's being ridiculous, right?
It worked like 80% worked because I really, I wanted something more than I wanted to just be
living in my personality in an unrepentant way.
And so knowing myself, I did,
I really prayed that I could have an open heart and open mind,
and I reminded myself of that the whole time.
And it got bad.
There were a couple of days where I was like,
I can't stand these people and here are
all the things that are wrong with them.
And then we sang together and there's this beautiful oxytocin that you get from singing
with people that creates this bond between you and the sense of wellbeing and connection.
And even my personality couldn't tear that thing down that our brains were doing when
we're singing together.
My personal experience with religion started with,
my parents are an interfaith couple.
So my dad is Christian, he's United Methodist,
and my mom is Jewish.
And I've since learned that this is maybe not the most common
where they both still believe
and go to their own spiritual practice.
And so I kind of grew up thinking like,
it's natural to think that there are different ways
of finding God and that one isn't necessarily wrong.
It's just, there's different ways
of getting to a similar place.
And you wrote about that in, in Pastrix as well,
that that's something that you believe in,
even as you have your own strongly held
foundational beliefs about your own faith.
I'm curious because I think that's not represented very well in
popular culture as an idea, that you can believe something really, really deeply and allow for
other people to possibly be right or at least have their own way too. How do you talk about that or
how do you think about that when people struggle with it? Yeah, I mean, my husband is not Christian.
He's a heathen. He has his own spiritual community
that he's practiced with for 30 years. And so, we live that out all the time. So, I guess
it's like, what's the difference between somebody's beliefs and their values? And I think if your
values are aligned, you can believe other things and celebrate that in each other. And
it's not threatening. It's not a deal breaker at all. We're both in recovery, right? We both have been sober over 30 years.
And so, we both believe in relying on God and praying for help and asking for aid
from people and God, not being totally self-sufficient. We believe in being of
service, that anything, any good we have is meant to be shared. There are things that like, our values are so similar, that the
fact that they're lived out in two different symbol systems matters not at all. Not at
all. Having humility and curiosity goes a long way spiritually to me. I can hold this story of Jesus very close and say,
this is the most true thing I've ever heard in my life.
I can't escape it.
I think it's so beautiful.
It has continued to offer gifts to me
throughout my whole life.
And it doesn't mean that it's the only truth
or the only way to understand God. You know, I think people think,
well, because Christianity has been pawned off as this is the only one true thing, and if you don't
believe this, you're going to hell and all of that kind of thinking, then they're like, then I don't
believe in Christianity. It's like, I consider myself a Christocentric Universalist. So this is my thing, and like, it's all about
Jesus for me. And I believe that God is, of course, too powerful, too mysterious,
for any one symbol system to contain the totality of who God is. God will reveal God's self through
every symbol system, every effort that humans make to reach
for it.
There will be something that they will grab that might be different than other people.
And yet, it feels like hubris to think that human beings can understand God through their
particular thing and it's exclusive to them.
I just have never heard anything more arrogant.
But that doesn't mean that your symbol system and your text and your practices and your prayers are the same as
a Muslim's or a Jew's or whatever. It's not the same, but that it can be yours and you can go,
this is my thing and I have to allow for the possibility that God reveals who God is elsewhere
as well. Have that humility, you know?
The two prayers that I find the most powerful
and the ones that I come back to all the time
in my own life, maybe not every single day,
but close to daily are the line from the Lord's Prayer,
like, forgive me my trespasses
as I forgive those who trespass against me.
And a Jewish prayer, a Hebrew prayer of healing,
El-Nar-Refan-Allah, the way that I've been taught to say it
is heal her, heal him, heal them, heal me.
And then heal me in body and heal me in spirit.
Chris, I think that's so beautiful
that those are the two prayers
and that they kind of came out of this lineage
of both your parents, both these traditions,
and they've embedded in you in a way, to me,
that's having faith. A lot of people think they don't have faith because they don't think,
oh, I don't think Jesus was really alive after he was dead, right? Therefore, I don't have
faith. And I'm like, oh my God, you definitely have faith in a million ways, and it doesn't
have to do with, do you think that this story is medically
true, medically factual? Is there resurrection in your life? Do you have stories of feeling
like something was dead and now it's alive? That's a form of faith. And we have this huge
symbol for that, that we go, this is the thing we believe in the most, that the divine still
is sort of seeps in
when we think there's no hope for something, that divine has this energy that it infuses
into us and we breathe the next breath when we think we can't.
We have this symbol that we constantly are saying, this is what we believe in.
And so to say to people, well, the only way to have
faith is to say that medically, you know, Jesus was dead and then three days later he
was alive. You know, it's like way to drain all of the meaning and mystery and power out
of what faith really is, is to say that's what it is.
Nadia, it's been such a pleasure talking to you. Thank you so much for making the time to be here and for being on the show.
That was super fun. Thanks, Chris.
That is it for this episode of How to Be a Better Human.
Thank you so much to today's guest, Nadia Bolzweber.
Her podcast is called The Confessional.
She's got a sub-stack called The Corners, and her books are Shameless, Accidental Saints, and Pastricks.
You can find more info about all of her work
on her website, nadiaboltsweber.com.
And if you don't know how to spell that,
just look at the title of this episode.
I am your host, Chris Duffy, and you can find more from me,
including my weekly newsletter and all of my projects,
at chrisduffycomedy.com.
How to Be a Better Human is put together by a team of angels.
On the Ted side, we've got the celestial coworkers, Daniela Ballarezzo, Ben Ben Cheng, Chloe
Shasha Brooks, Lainey Lott, Antonia Lay, and Joseph De Bruyne.
This episode was Talmudically fact-checked by Julia Dickerson and Mateus Salas.
On the PRX side, we've got the gospel of Pro Tools and the liturgy of audio plugins
being practiced by Morgan Flannery, Norgil, Patrick Grant, and Jocelyn Gonzalez.
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