Log in

goodpods headphones icon

To access all our features

Open the Goodpods app
Close icon
The Dissident Mama Podcast - Dissident Mama, episode 11 – Nora Kowalchek

Dissident Mama, episode 11 – Nora Kowalchek

07/07/20 • 78 min

The Dissident Mama Podcast

In episode 11, I interview Nora Kowalchek, who is known in online Orthodox circles as “Mother of Five.” She’s just a normal person doing normal things like working, being a wife, owning a home, and raising kids, but she also is ardently committed to rearing her children in the practices and faith of Orthodox Christianity. This is a very abnormal thing to do in our intensely worldly society, where nearly everything is pitted against children to mature into godly men and women. It takes much dedication, time, prayer, and selflessness to remain committed to the raising of the Church’s next generation of laity and leaders, hence, Kowalchek’s motivation to resist the covid rules of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA).

She sees these jurisdiction directives as both detrimental to the salvation of her son and daughters and to the future of the Church as a whole. So Kowalcheck decided to voice her heartfelt opposition to the guidelines implemented by the OCA bishops, not because she wants to be a rebel to authority, but because she knows she must take a stand for what is right - to defend the even higher authority of truth.

If you’re not Orthodox, don’t be scared. Kowalchek and I do a brief “Orthodoxy 101,” which may be of interest to you as far as intellectual inquiry goes. Plus, the greater themes of our discussion speak to the battle that’s happening in American Christianity as a whole and the greater society: faith vs. man, self-determination vs. collectivism, corporate gathering vs. radical individualism, freedom vs. tyranny, the “Great Unreason,” as Jack Kerwick called it, vs. true reason.

Speaking of that, here’s Kowalchek’s popular essay, “The Loss of a Generation,” which struck a chord with many other Orthodox parents who share her concerns about the OCA directives, especially the wording of Archbishop Alexander from his March 10 statement: “This is not a season of trial in which to test one’s piety through unreasonable faith.” Since when was faith in God unreasonable? Interestingly, I cannot find the Archbishop’s original statement on the OCA website or pretty much anywhere on the Internet, other than the full text posted on the St. Athanasius Orthodox Church’s Facebook page.

Also of interest is Father Peter Heers’ interview with Archimandrite Savas Agioreitis. The two discuss “the holiness of the Temple and Holy Things,” and why Christians should stand up for the Holy Canons and what they say about kissing icons, communal worship, and receiving the Eucharist.

Kowalchek mentioned St. Mark of Ephesus as one historic example of a Christian who challenged bishops when they strayed from the faith. Even though he was a devout monk, we lay people can still look to his dogmatic, polemic theology as a guide to how we too can be “the conscience” of the hierarchs.

Of note is Kowalchek’s blog Jacob’s Story, which is about her struggles with having lost a child. She says writing about her son’s death and its ramifications helps her to find her way “through the fog ... in spite of grief.” It’s a beautiful site, filled with trials and triumphs, heartache and happiness, and compassion and kindness. It may speak to you if you have lost a son or daughter, or know someone who has.

plus icon
bookmark

In episode 11, I interview Nora Kowalchek, who is known in online Orthodox circles as “Mother of Five.” She’s just a normal person doing normal things like working, being a wife, owning a home, and raising kids, but she also is ardently committed to rearing her children in the practices and faith of Orthodox Christianity. This is a very abnormal thing to do in our intensely worldly society, where nearly everything is pitted against children to mature into godly men and women. It takes much dedication, time, prayer, and selflessness to remain committed to the raising of the Church’s next generation of laity and leaders, hence, Kowalchek’s motivation to resist the covid rules of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA).

She sees these jurisdiction directives as both detrimental to the salvation of her son and daughters and to the future of the Church as a whole. So Kowalcheck decided to voice her heartfelt opposition to the guidelines implemented by the OCA bishops, not because she wants to be a rebel to authority, but because she knows she must take a stand for what is right - to defend the even higher authority of truth.

If you’re not Orthodox, don’t be scared. Kowalchek and I do a brief “Orthodoxy 101,” which may be of interest to you as far as intellectual inquiry goes. Plus, the greater themes of our discussion speak to the battle that’s happening in American Christianity as a whole and the greater society: faith vs. man, self-determination vs. collectivism, corporate gathering vs. radical individualism, freedom vs. tyranny, the “Great Unreason,” as Jack Kerwick called it, vs. true reason.

Speaking of that, here’s Kowalchek’s popular essay, “The Loss of a Generation,” which struck a chord with many other Orthodox parents who share her concerns about the OCA directives, especially the wording of Archbishop Alexander from his March 10 statement: “This is not a season of trial in which to test one’s piety through unreasonable faith.” Since when was faith in God unreasonable? Interestingly, I cannot find the Archbishop’s original statement on the OCA website or pretty much anywhere on the Internet, other than the full text posted on the St. Athanasius Orthodox Church’s Facebook page.

Also of interest is Father Peter Heers’ interview with Archimandrite Savas Agioreitis. The two discuss “the holiness of the Temple and Holy Things,” and why Christians should stand up for the Holy Canons and what they say about kissing icons, communal worship, and receiving the Eucharist.

Kowalchek mentioned St. Mark of Ephesus as one historic example of a Christian who challenged bishops when they strayed from the faith. Even though he was a devout monk, we lay people can still look to his dogmatic, polemic theology as a guide to how we too can be “the conscience” of the hierarchs.

Of note is Kowalchek’s blog Jacob’s Story, which is about her struggles with having lost a child. She says writing about her son’s death and its ramifications helps her to find her way “through the fog ... in spite of grief.” It’s a beautiful site, filled with trials and triumphs, heartache and happiness, and compassion and kindness. It may speak to you if you have lost a son or daughter, or know someone who has.

Previous Episode

undefined - Dissident Mama, episode 10 – Nicole Williams

Dissident Mama, episode 10 – Nicole Williams

In this episode, I interview Georgia native Nicole Elizabeth Williams, who is a public policy professional and former political campaign staffer. She holds two postgraduate degrees from the University of Glasgow in the fields of public policy and political communication and is a 2010 graduate of Tulane University. She previously worked as a staffer for a Member of Parliament in the House of Commons in Great Britain prior to returning to the US. Her primary area of focus is the intersection of Southern colonial history and its effect on contemporary culture with a particular focus on the Scots-Irish.

Williams and I discuss moderns’ disdain for history and heritage, economic progressive nationalism vs traditionalism, the sad state of American conservatism, and the leftist colonization of the South, especially that of Richmond, Virginia - my native home and a place where she once worked for the inept city government.

Mentioned in our conversation are four must-read essays that Williams wrote for the Abbeville Institute: “How to Be a Conservative and the Southern Tradition,” “Rediscovering Heritage,” “What Price Prosperity?” and “The Tragedy of Land Use in the South.”

Next Episode

undefined - Dissident Mama, episode 12 – Paul Gottfried

Dissident Mama, episode 12 – Paul Gottfried

Dr. Paul Gottfried is the editor-in-chief of Chronicles Magazine and president of the H.L. Mencken Club. He is a Raffensperger Professor of Humanities Emeritus at Elizabethtown College, where he taught for 25 years, a Guggenheim recipient, and a Yale Ph.D. He is the author of 15 books, including “Fascism: The Career of a Concept,” “After Liberalism: Mass Democracy in the Managerial State,” “Revisions and Dissents: Essays,” and one of the most influential books on me personally “Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt: Toward a Secular Theocracy.” He’s also editor of the brand-new anthology “The Vanishing Tradition: Perspectives on American Conservatism” featuring chapters by some of today’s boldest and most provocative writers.

Gottfried and I discuss Conservative Inc. and some of his ideas of how to push back against the cultural-Marxist madness. The Gott-father, as a lot of we paleocons call him, has quite the interesting bio, such as the fact that his doctoral advisor was none other than Herbert Marcuse of Frankfurt School infamy. Gottfried has been battling the neocons for decades in what sometimes got a little personal. It’s a “loyal opposition” movement that has left us true conservatives without leaders, without a voice, and without any small-government Republicans, at least at the federal and most state levels.

Episode Comments

Generate a badge

Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode

Select type & size
Open dropdown icon
share badge image

<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/the-dissident-mama-podcast-155410/dissident-mama-episode-11-nora-kowalchek-8383833"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to dissident mama, episode 11 – nora kowalchek on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>

Copy