Tuesdays with Merton Podcast Podcast By International Thomas Merton Society cover art

Tuesdays with Merton Podcast

Tuesdays with Merton Podcast

By: International Thomas Merton Society
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This podcast brings you the audio of the Tuesdays with Merton webinar series presented by the International Thomas Merton Society and the Bernardin Center at Catholic Theological Union. Each episode features noted speakers and scholars on the life, legacy, and writings of the Trappist monk, spiritual writer, and social critic, Thomas Merton. The webinar is live on the second Tuesday of each month: http://merton.org/ITMS/TWM/. The audio of each month's live presentation is posted here shortly afterward.© 2020 All rights reserved. Photo of Thomas Merton by John Lyons used with permission of the Merton Legacy Trust and the Thomas Merton Center at Bellarmine University. Social Sciences Spirituality
Episodes
  • John Dickerson - Finding Thomas Merton on the Campaign Trail
    Mar 19 2026

    John Dickerson is a journalist, author, and longtime interviewer, most recently co-anchor of the CBS Evening News and chief political analyst for CBS News. He spent 16 years at CBS, where he also served as senior national correspondent, contributor to CBS News Sunday Morning, and previously co-host of CBS This Morning. From 2015 to 2018, he moderated Face the Nation and served as the network’s chief Washington correspondent. During the 2016 presidential campaign, he moderated two CBS presidential debates. From 2019 to 2021, he was a correspondent for 60 Minutes, where his story on the death of Elijah McClain was nominated for an Emmy. He resigned from CBS News in December 2025.

    In addition to his political reporting, Dickerson is known for his in-depth interviews with figures ranging from Apple CEO Tim Cook to actors Glenda Jackson and Christian Bale; authors Colson Whitehead, Michael Lewis, and Tara Westover; and musicians John Prine, Jon Batiste, Jason Isbell, and Dave Matthews.

    Dickerson is a contributing writer at The Atlantic and for 20 years has been a co-host of Slate’s Political Gabfest. He also hosts Whistlestop, a podcast on presidential history, and Navel Gazing, drawn from his 35 years of notebooks he carries with him.

    He began his career at Time magazine, covering economics, Congress, and national politics, and spent four years as its White House correspondent. From 2005 to 2015, he was Slate’s chief political correspondent. He has covered nine presidential campaigns.

    Dickerson is the author of On Her Trail (Simon & Schuster); the New York Times bestseller Whistlestop: My Favorite Stories from Presidential Campaign History (Twelve Books); and The Hardest Job in the World: The American Presidency (Random House).

    He has received the Ford Prize for Distinguished Reporting on the Presidency, the David Broder Award for political reporting, and in 2025, the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in TV Political Journalism for his essays.

    A native Washingtonian, Dickerson graduated with distinction from the University of Virginia with a degree in English and American Studies. He lives in New York City where he serves on the board of Covenant House International.

    See future programs and register to join a future discussion live at: https://merton.org/twm/

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    1 hr and 31 mins
  • Megan Way - Economics and Merton, Developing the Negatives
    Feb 11 2026

    What kind of economic system might Thomas Merton advocate? What principles would it be based on and how would it differ from what we see in the United States, or Sweden, or China, or Cuba? Answering these questions requires developing the negatives. Merton's writings are full of critiques of capitalism and its voracious appetites, its obsession with technology, its triviality and tricks, its relationship to the war machine, and its degradation of humans in pursuit of profit. Merton also critiques communism and its materialism, its obsession with technology, its relationship to the war machine, its degradation of humans in pursuit of production, and its repression of individual freedoms. In this talk, Megan Way will attempt to develop Merton's negatives into an imagined picture of a more "Mertonian" type of economic system, and will ask the participants to lend their imaginations and insights from Merton to this process.

    Megan Way, PhD. is an Associate Professor of Economics at Babson College in Wellesley, MA. She teaches both undergraduate and graduate business students, and her research spans several areas, including family economics, ecological economics, socio-ecological systems and most recently, spiritual leaders and economic ideals. Megan completed the Living School at the Center for Action and Contemplation in Albuquerque, NM, in 2021. She and her husband Rob have four grown children, and live on Cape Cod.

    See future programs and register to join a future discussion live at: https://merton.org/twm/

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    1 hr and 12 mins
  • Jordan T. Jones - Thomas Merton meets James Cone: A Conversation That Never Happened
    Jan 14 2026

    One year after Thomas Merton's passing, the Black American liberation theologian James Cone published Black Theology and Black Power, a reflection on the Black Power movement of the 1960s and the central role that liberation plays in the Christian gospel. As we know, Merton dedicated significant effort considering U.S. race relations broadly and the Black Power Movement specifically as evidenced by an entire chapter in his book Faith and Violence, entitled “From Non-violence to Black Power” but what we don't know is if the two ever met in person. Nonetheless, Merton and Cone inhabited proximate theological and physical geography at pivotal moments in their thinking and praxis (Corpus Christi, the church where Merton was baptized, and Union Theological Seminary, where James Cone taught and wrote, share an intersection). By putting Merton and Cone into conversation with each other, we grasp a deeper understanding of how contemplative practice lends itself to liberation on the margins. If God is Black, then silence is God’s first language.

    As a pastor, theologian, and faith-based community organizer, Jordan Jones is interested in exploring what role contemplation has in the Black Radical Tradition by way of building and cultivating Beloved "fugitive" communities. This was his focus as a seminarian at Union Theological Seminary and continues to be as an associate pastor at Metro Hope Church in East Harlem, New York where he lives and also works as a barista.

    Jordan was a recent member of the 205 Sojourners Journalism Cohort and a clergy fellow with FASPE (Fellowships at Auschwitz for the Study of Professional Ethics). Prior to moving to New York City for seminary, Jordan lived in Medellín, Colombia, as a Fulbright scholar and journalist. A native to Atlanta and graduate from Morehouse College, Jordan is an avid jazz listener and amateur salsa dancer. He is currently seeking ordination with the Disciples of Christ and plans to pursue doctoral work in the near future.

    See future programs and register to join a future discussion live at: https://merton.org/twm/

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    1 hr and 12 mins
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Love to see current thoughts on Merton, leader in spirituality, social commentary, and literary commentary. Thanks!

Love to see current thoughts on Merton

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