Episode 9: Food Tripping and Vocation

Podcast with Mihee Kim-Kort on This Everyday Holy towards my sermon on Sunday–with the help of some joyful noises

This Everyday Holy

gay-meal-sharing-travel


My guest this week was the Rev. Katy Stenta and we talked about John 6 and a little bit of Ephesians 6. We talked about everything from eating food too loud to understanding the need for fulfillment and satisfaction to Korean culture to vocation. And the kids are really present throughout this episode – mine and the snippets from Katy’s home life. Mine are really obnoxious – sorry – and I think that Anna is drinking her sippy cup insanely loud. It sounds weird.

Links to some of the content on this blog:

Take This Bread: A Radical Conversion

Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation

Katy’s blog: Katy and the Word

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Author: katyandtheword

Pastor Katy has enjoyed ministry at New Covenant since 2010, where the church has solidified its community focus. Prior to that she studied both Theology and Christian Formation at Princeton Theological Seminary. She also served as an Assistant Chaplain at Trenton Psychiatric Hospital and as the Christian Educational Coordinator at Bethany Presbyterian at Bloomfield, NJ. She is an writer and is published in Enfleshed, Sermonsuite, Presbyterian's today and Outlook. She writes prayers, liturgy, poems and public theology and is pursuing her doctorate in ministry in Creative Write and Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. She enjoys working within and connecting to the community, is known to laugh a lot during service, and tells as many stories as possible. Pastor Katy loves reading Science Fiction and Fantasy, theater, arts and crafts, music, playing with children and sunshine, and continues to try to be as (w)holistically Christian as possible. "Publisher after publisher turned down A Wrinkle in Time," L'Engle wrote, "because it deals overtly with the problem of evil, and it was too difficult for children, and was it a children's or an adult's book, anyhow?" The next year it won the prestigious John Newbery Medal. Tolkien states in the foreword to The Lord of the Rings that he disliked allegories and that the story was not one.[66] Instead he preferred what he termed "applicability", the freedom of the reader to interpret the work in the light of his or her own life and times.

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