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An Audience of One with Dalia Mogahed

QUICK SUMMARY
What does it mean to be fully committed to your faith while building bridges across differences? In this episode of Religion to Reality, Dave Plisky and Fr. John Gribowich sit down with renowned Muslim scholar and author Dalia Mogahed for a thoughtful conversation on faith, identity, prayer, fasting, belonging, and interfaith dialogue. Dalia shares her journey from Egypt to America, how discovering Malcolm X shaped her identity as an American Muslim, and why listening without an agenda may be one of the greatest acts of love.
IN THIS EPISODE, WE EXPLORE
Dalia Mogahed is one of the most respected voices on Islam, identity, and religious understanding in America today. As a researcher, author, public speaker, and former advisor to President Barack Obama, she has dedicated her career to fostering greater understanding between communities and challenging misconceptions about faith.
In this conversation, Dalia reflects on growing up between two cultures, embracing her Muslim identity, and discovering how faith can serve as a source of freedom rather than restriction. She discusses the meaning behind the hijab, the spiritual practices that shape Muslim life, and the transformative power of prayer, fasting, charity, and pilgrimage.
The discussion also explores common misconceptions about Islam, the role of Jesus in Islamic belief, and the importance of approaching others with curiosity rather than judgment. Throughout the episode, Dalia offers profound insights that resonate far beyond religious boundaries, reminding us that authentic listening is essential for human connection.
ABOUT DALIA MOGAHED
Dalia Mogahed is a scholar at the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding (ISPU), CEO of Mogahed Consulting, and former Executive Director of the Gallup Center for Muslim Studies. She co-authored Who Speaks for Islam? What a Billion Muslims Really Think with John L. Esposito, and served on President Barack Obama’s Advisory Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships. Her TED Talk on identity and belonging was named one of the top TED Talks of 2016. Dalia is also co-host of the Quran Conversations podcast.  
MEMORABLE QUOTES
“Listening without an agenda is about the most generous thing that one can do for another person.”
“The only way to truly liberate ourselves is to surrender to God.”
“You are not representing 1.5 billion people. You are representing yourself.”
“The sense of obligation is part of the relief.”
RESOURCES MENTIONED

Who Speaks for Islam? What a Billion Muslims Really Think by Dalia Mogahed and John L. Esposito
Dalia Mogahed’s TED Talk: “What It’s Like to Be Muslim in America”
The Autobiography of Malcolm X
Quran Conversations Podcast
Institute for Social Policy and Understanding (ISPU)

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R2R Season 2 Drop Teaser

BIG NEWS: Season 2 of Religion to Reality drops all at once on 7/13—no more weekly waits. Subscribe now

Join us on Substack (http://religiontoreality.substack.com) for our free interfaith monthly gathering—first Wed of every month, including today!

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The Practice of Repair with Rabbis Danya Ruttenberg and Paul Sidlofsky

QUICK SUMMARY
What if our culture’s obsession with forgiveness is actually getting in the way of healing? In this rich conversation, award-winning author and Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg challenges popular forgiveness culture, arguing that the real obligation falls on the person who caused harm, not the person who survived it. She walks us through the Jewish framework for repentance, repair, and amends (drawing on Maimonides) and unpacks why “cancel culture” and “forgiveness culture” are two sides of the same broken coin. We also hear from Rabbi Paul Sidlofsky of Temple Israel Tallahassee, who brings a deeply thoughtful perspective on disagreement within Judaism, the living nature of Torah interpretation, and how to hold tradition and change in creative tension. If you’ve ever wrestled with whether you have to forgive someone or wondered what accountability actually looks like, this episode is for you.
IN THIS EPISODE, WE EXPLORE
On forgiveness: Forgiveness is not something a harmed person owes; it may be healing, but it is not obligatory, especially when the person who caused harm has not done the work of repair. Forgiveness and reconciliation are also not the same thing.
On repentance (per Maimonides): The person who caused harm must (1) fully own what they did, (2) do deep internal work to become someone who wouldn’t repeat the harm, (3) make meaningful amends, and (4) apologize sincerely, up to three times, with an accountability team, before it can be considered their best effort.
On Torah: Jewish tradition has always been one of living interpretation. As Rabbi Sidlofsky puts it, “Halakha has a vote, but not a veto.” Even Moses, in the famous Talmudic story, sat in Rabbi Akiva’s classroom and couldn’t understand his own books because the tradition had grown so richly beyond the original text.
ABOUT RABBI DANYA RUTTENBERG & RABBI PAUL SIDLOFSKY
Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg is the award-winning author of eight books and writes at lifeisasacredtext.com. Named by Newsweek as a “rabbi to watch” and recognized by the Center for American Progress as a faith leader to watch, she has written for The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Atlantic, TIME, and many other major publications. Her commentary has appeared on NPR, CNN, NBC News, and Good Morning America. She led the Network of Rabbis for Repro during and after the landmark 2022 Supreme Court decision on abortion law and has played an active role in shaping Jewish responses to sexual misconduct and systemic injustice. Her book On Repentance and Repair is a must-read for anyone thinking about accountability culture.
Rabbi Paul Sidlofsky brings 38 years of congregational experience across the United States and Canada. Currently based in Tallahassee, Florida, he serves Temple Israel and is deeply engaged in interfaith work, including co-chairing the Cap Tallahassee Interfaith Clergy Council and participating in the God Squad with the Village Square. He is a warm and thoughtful voice on Torah interpretation, Jewish-Christian dialogue, and what it means to build an inclusive community.
MEMORABLE QUOTE
“If you cause harm, you have an obligation to clean it up — to truly own it fully in all the ways. And if you are harmed and your harm-doer has not done the work of repair and amends, you do not owe this person forgiveness at all.” — Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg
RESOURCES MENTIONED

On Repentance and Repair by Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg — her book on the Jewish roadmap for accountability
✍️ Rabbi Danya’s Substack:

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The Jewish Jesus with Amy-Jill Levine

QUICK SUMMARY
What does it mean to take the Incarnation seriously? According to AJ Levine, one of the most respected scholars of New Testament and Jewish Studies in the world, it means taking seriously the time, the place, and the people who first told those stories, and that starts with understanding the Jewish Jesus.
In this episode, hosts Dave Plisky and Fr. John Gribowich sit down with AJ Levine for a conversation that is by turns surprising, funny, and deeply illuminating. Whether you’re a lifelong Christian, a curious skeptic, or someone navigating the space between traditions, this episode will change the way you read the Gospels.
IN THIS EPISODE, WE EXPLORE

How a seven-year-old Jewish girl decided to attend catechism and why it launched a career
Why understanding Jesus’s Jewish identity is actually a matter of Christian doctrine
The woman at the well: why she’s not a sinner, and why that matters
The Parable of the Prodigal Son, and why making Judaism the villain misses the entire point
What “Abba” actually means (and what it doesn’t)
How the same parable reads completely differently in Russia, Australia, Kenya, and the U.S.
Why true interfaith dialogue requires disagreement — not a “kumbaya moment”
What AJ does while listening to podcasts (it involves knitting)

ABOUT AMY JILL LEVINE
AJ Levine is Rabbi Stanley M. Kessler Distinguished Professor of New Testament and Jewish Studies at Hartford International University for Religion and Peace, and University Professor of New Testament and Jewish Studies and Mary Jane Worthen Professor of Jewish Studies Emerita at Vanderbilt University.
She is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, recipient of the Seelisberg Prize for Jewish-Christian Relations and the H. Walter Award for Interfaith Cooperation, and the incoming president of the Catholic Biblical Association for 2026–2027.
Her books include:

The Misunderstood Jew: The Church and the Scandal of the Jewish Jesus
Short Stories by Jesus: The Enigmatic Parables of a Controversial Rabbi
The Jewish Annotated New Testament (co-edited with Marc Brettler)
The Bible With and Without Jesus: How Jews and Christians Read the Same Stories Differently (with Marc Brettler)
Jesus for Everyone: Not Just for Christians
And many more, including the Beginner’s Guide series and six children’s books with Sandy Sasso

AJ describes herself as “an unorthodox member of an Orthodox synagogue”, someone who works to counter biblical interpretations that oppress and exclude.
MEMORABLE QUOTE
“The best outcome of this type of conversation is you become a better you because you’re more aware of the strengths and weaknesses of your own tradition. You can interrogate your own tradition with questions that you might not have posed — because they’re questions that somebody from the outside would see that you would not see.” — AJ Levine
RESOURCES MENTIONED

The Jewish Annotated New Testament — 3rd edition coming August 2025
The Bible With and Without Jesus — AJ Levine & Marc Brettler
Short Stories by Jesus — The Enigmatic Parables of a Controversial Rabbi
Nostra Aetate — The Vatican II…

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Gold in the Desert with Frederica Mathewes-Green

QUICK SUMMARY
What does it mean to pray without ceasing? Can ordinary people actually do it? In this episode of Religion to Reality, prolific author and Orthodox Christian writer Frederica Mathewes-Green shares her remarkable spiritual journey: from a devout Catholic childhood to atheistic hippie, to a dramatic conversion in a Dublin church, to 50+ years of daily unceasing prayer. She also opens up about leaving the Episcopal Church, the beauty of Orthodox liturgy, and why she believes spiritual loneliness is one of the great unspoken crises of our time.
IN THIS EPISODE, WE EXPLORE 

How a young Catholic woman lost her faith, explored Eastern religions, and unexpectedly encountered Christ in Dublin.
Federica’s dramatic conversion experience and the voice she believes changed her life.
How Federica and Gregory’s marriage became a path back to faith from atheism to the priesthood.
Why liberal theology accelerated church decline and weakened belief in core Christian teachings.
Gregory’s journey from Episcopal priest to Orthodox priest after leaving an increasingly secular church.
Why they left Catholicism for Orthodoxy and what liturgical worship revealed about humanity’s need for transcendence.
What God’s detailed instructions for worship in Exodus teach us about icons, beauty, and sacred art today.
The difference between liturgy and worship, and why Orthodox worship centers entirely on God.
The Jesus Prayer: its origins, spiritual benefits, and Federica’s practical guide to praying it.
What nearly 50 years of daily 3:00 AM prayer has taught Gregory about discipline and devotion.
Catholic diversity vs. Orthodox unity, and why reunion between the two traditions is more complex than it seems.
Federica’s advice on listening well, asking better questions, and meeting the deep human need to be heard.

ABOUT FEDERICA MATHEWS-GREEN
Frederica Mathewes-Green is one of the most prolific voices in American Christian writing, with over 800 published essays and 11 books to her name. Her work has appeared in The Washington Post, Christianity Today, The Wall Street Journal, First Things, and Smithsonian. She has been a commentator for NPR, a podcaster for Ancient Faith Radio, and a consultant for VeggieTales. A sought-after speaker, she has delivered more than 600 presentations at institutions including Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Cornell, and has been interviewed over 800 times by outlets including NPR, PBS, Time, Newsweek, and The New York Times. She holds an honorary Doctor of Letters from King University and lives in Johnson City, Tennessee with her husband, the Reverend Gregory Mathewes-Green. They have three grown children and 15 grandchildren.
MEMORABLE QUOTE
“Stay alive and keep praying. In time, it becomes second nature, and you realize that He is responding when you invoke His name, and you sense that communion with Him.” — Frederica Mathewes-Green
RESOURCES MENTIONED

The Practice of the Presence of God by Brother Lawrence: The foundational devotional book on unceasing prayer that shaped Frederica’s prayer life. She first read it as a young Christian.
The Jesus Prayer (“Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on me”): Developed by the Desert Fathers from the 2nd century onward; rooted in 1 Thessalonians 5:17 (“Pray without ceasing”).
1 Thessalonians 5:17: The scriptural basis for the practice of unceasing prayer, which Paul also addressed to the Romans, Ephesians, and Colossians.
Exodus 25: God’s detailed instructions to Moses for building the Tabernacle — gold, embroidery, bells, pomegranates, and carved cherubim — Frederica’s go-to passage on the importance of sacred…

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The Practice of Accompaniment with Josh Packard

QUICK SUMMARY What if listening to someone isn’t just a bridge to telling them something, but is itself a formative, sacred act? Sociologist and researcher Josh Packard returns to Religion to Reality to unpack groundbreaking data on the intersection of faith and listening, challenge Catholics to truly live out the concept of accompaniment, and offer…

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A Church That Listens with Sebastian Gomes

QUICK SUMMARY
What does it actually mean for a 2,000-year-old institution to learn how to listen? In this season premiere of Religion to Reality, multimedia journalist and America Magazine podcast director Sebastian Gomes joins hosts Dave Plisky and Fr. John Gribowich to unpack the Synod on Synodality, Pope Francis’s sweeping effort to transform the Catholic Church into a culture of genuine listening. If you’ve ever wondered whether the Church is really changing, or felt frustrated that it isn’t changing fast enough, this conversation will challenge and encourage you.
IN THIS EPISODE, WE EXPLORE

“The message is not getting through, so maybe we should listen instead.” Sebastian traces Pope Francis’s pivotal shift from speaking to listening, and why it took 12 years of declining church membership to get there. (16:00)
Synodality is not a program, it’s a culture. Sebastian explains why treating the synodal process like a church initiative is the most common misunderstanding people have, and what it actually means to change how an institution listens. (22:45)
What people finally said when they felt safe. From women’s voices to LGBT experiences to stories of poverty and marginalization, Sebastian describes the dramatic moments inside the synod hall when people said what they’d never felt free to say before. (30:30)
The clergy problem. The most common frustration Sebastian hears from parishioners isn’t about Rome, it’s about their own pastor. He reflects honestly on why priests and bishops are often the biggest obstacle, and what to do about it. (25:00)
Synodality is coming whether you like it or not. Using the analogy of the early internet, Sebastian makes the case that synodal culture will eventually shape every debate in the Church, from liturgy to parish closings to outreach to young people. (38:30)
The Gen Z Catholic revival and why it’s complicated. Hundreds of new converts entered the Church this Easter, making national news. Sebastian offers a nuanced take: it’s real, it’s notable, and it doesn’t mean what you might think it means. (51:45)
You can’t become synodal by just reading about it. Sebastian reflects on the personal and spiritual dimensions of synodality, and why you actually have to do it in community before it can transform your prayer life. (46:30)

ABOUT SEBASTIAN GOMES
Sebastian Gomes is a multimedia journalist and the director of podcast and video production at America Magazine, the Jesuit Review. He holds a BA and MA in theology and history from St. John’s University in Minnesota.
His media career began in 2012 at Salt + Light Catholic Media in Toronto, where he produced award-winning documentaries, including The Francis Effect and The Francis Impact. In 2022, he wrote and directed People of God, America’s first feature documentary on the state of parish life across the United States.
Sebastian led America’s coverage of the 2023–24 Rome gatherings of the Synod on Synodality and the 2025 papal election of Pope Leo XIV. He oversees America’s weekly podcast portfolio, including Jesuitical, Inside the Vatican, and The Spiritual Life with Father James Martin.
He is based in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, and contributes regularly to americamagazine.org.
MEMORABLE QUOTE
“Synodality is not a program. It’s a culture. And resistance to synodality is also, in some ways, a resistance to the Holy Spirit — a lack of faith that God is actually present in our midst when we’re together as a community.” — Sebastian G…

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Bonus: CARA Research with Fr. Tom Gaunt, SJ

QUICK SUMMARY
What does the data actually say about how Catholics live their faith today, and who counts as “active”? In this episode, Dave Plisky and Fr. John Gribowich sit down with Fr. Thomas Gaunt, SJ, Executive Director of CARA (the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate) at Georgetown University, to dig into 60 years of Catholic research. They explore why inactive Catholics still fiercely identify as Catholic, what a year of volunteer service does to marriage stability and vocations, and why radical listening—not big campaigns—may be the most powerful tool the Church has. If you work in parish ministry, Catholic education, or simply want to understand the real state of the faith in America, this conversation will challenge and inspire you. 
IN THIS BONUS EPISODE, WE EXPLORE

Why 30% of self-identified Catholics never attend Mass, yet refuse to stop calling themselves Catholic
CARA’s consistent finding that “care for the poor” ranks #2 in what Catholics say defines their faith
The surprising discovery that 60% of young adult Catholics (18–35) are involved in faith-based activities outside Mass
Why the divorce rate among Jesuit Volunteer Corps alumni was 2% vs. ~12% for comparable peers
How 10–11% of male Catholic volunteers later entered seminary or religious life
The massive demographic churn in the Catholic population, including that 1 in 4 U.S. Catholics is a foreign-born immigrant
Why parish revitalization campaigns need to first ask the parish itself to change
How radical welcome (e.g., parking lot ministers, easy websites, a real person answering the phone) does more than any grand strategy
What Pope Francis’s “arm around the shoulder” posture means for pastoral leadership
Why listening without an agenda may be the most prophetic Christian witness in an age of polarization

ABOUT FR. THOMAS GAUNT, SJ
Fr. Thomas Gaunt is a Jesuit priest with 53 years in the Society of Jesus and 43 years of ordained ministry. He holds a doctoral degree in city planning from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill — making him a proud Tar Heel. He spent his early priesthood as a pastor and Director of Planning for the Diocese of Charlotte, NC, before serving as Formation Director for the Jesuits of the East and Executive Secretary of the Jesuit national office. For the past 14 years, he has served as Executive Director of CARA — the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate — located at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. His research specialties include priesthood and religious life, the impact of volunteer service on young adults, and international Catholic research.
RESOURCES MENTIONED

CARA — Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate
The CARA Report (Substack)
CARA Book: Faith and Spiritual Life of Young Adult Catholics
Catholic Volunteer Network
Jesuit Volunteer Corps
Nativity Parish / Rebuilt (Timonium, MD)
Vinea Research (Hans Plate)
Religion to Reality — DeSales Media Discipleship Study 

MEMORABLE QUOTE
“The most radical way to live the Christian life right now is to become a listener without an agenda.”
— Fr. John Gribowich
EPISODE TIMESTAMPS
Use these timestamps to jump to the moments that matter most to you:

[00:00:00] Introducti…

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Bonus: The Catholic Project with Stephen White

QUICK SUMMARY
What does hard data reveal about the state of Catholic life in America—and what does it mean for the future of the Church? In this bonus episode, Dave Plisky and Fr. John Gribowich sit down with Stephen White, Executive Director of The Catholic Project at The Catholic University of America, for a candid and wide-ranging conversation. Stephen draws on the landmark 2022 National Study of Catholic Priests—the largest priest survey in half a century—to explore trust, identity, community, and what it really takes to renew the Church from within.
From the tension between clericalism and lay vocation, to the striking generational shifts among young priests, to the question of how genuine renewal actually happens in Church history, this episode offers both serious analysis and hopeful insight. Whether you’re a priest, a committed lay Catholic, or simply trying to understand where the Church is headed, this conversation will challenge and encourage you. 
ABOUT STEPHEN WHITE
Stephen White is the Executive Director of The Catholic Project at The Catholic University of America in Washington, DC. Founded in 2019 in response to the clerical abuse crisis, The Catholic Project works to foster collaboration and co-responsibility between clergy and laity. Stephen led the production of the acclaimed documentary podcast Crisis: Clergy Abuse in the Catholic Church and oversaw the 2022 National Study of Catholic Priests. His background is in Catholic social teaching and philosophy, and he writes frequently on matters of faith, culture, and Church life.
IN THIS EPISODE, WE EXPLORE
1. The Catholic Project and the Crisis Podcast

Founded in 2019 at Catholic University of America in response to the McCarrick revelations and Pennsylvania Grand Jury Report
The Crisis podcast was produced during COVID, featuring deeply reported audio documentary-style episodes
Goal: face the Church’s failures honestly while remaining constructive and rooted in love for the Church
Fr. John shares that the podcast was part of his own healing journey as a survivor of clerical sexual abuse

2. The 2022 National Study of Catholic Priests

The largest survey of priests in the United States in over 50 years
Key findings include:

Younger priests (ordained post-2000) describe themselves as significantly more theologically orthodox than older cohorts
Younger priests are more likely to identify as politically moderate — cutting against simple “conservative priest” narratives
The youngest cohort is the most racially and ethnically diverse
There has been a dramatic collapse in priests identifying as liberal or progressive
Younger priests experience more isolation: many are sole pastor of a parish from day one of ordination

A follow-up longitudinal study is currently in development for spring 2025

3. Clericalism, Authority, and Church Renewal

Clericalism is not only a top-down problem — bottom-up clericalism (laity expecting clergy to do everything) is widespread in the US
Pope Francis has simultaneously called out clericalism and warned against “clericalizing the laity”
All authority carries the potential for abuse; the response is vigilance, formation, and accountability — not the elimination of hierarchy
The Church’s vertical (hierarchical) and horizontal (communal) dimensions must work together

4. How Genuine Church Renewal Happens

Historically, renewal almost never comes from the top down institutionally
It begins with one person or small group responding radically to the Gospel (e.g….

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Season 2 Teaser: Sacred Listening Across Faith Traditions

Season 2 of Religion to Reality is on the horizon—and it begins with a simple but urgent question: what does it mean to truly listen?
In a world marked by noise, division, and constant distraction, Dave Plisky and Fr. John Gribowich return to the heart of the podcast’s mission: living an integrated life where faith isn’t separated from the rest of who we are. Reflecting on Season 1, they explore how one theme kept surfacing again and again—listening as a sacred act.
This upcoming season builds on that foundation, asking:
How do we become bridge builders with no agenda? How do we recognize God already at work in the person in front of us?
Inspired by the spirit of Vatican II and the Church’s call to encounter and dialogue, Season 2 features conversations with voices across Christian communities and other faith traditions—not to debate or convert, but to listen.
New episodes begin June 1, with weekly releases every Monday.

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