Episode 54: Erin Hicks Moon - Disentangling Faith

In this episode of Faith for Normal People, Pete and Jared talk with Erin Hicks Moon about growing up Southern Baptist and how she started rethinking parts of her faith, moving away from certainty and learning to embrace mystery. She shares her experience with deconstruction, the Bible, and how faith can still be meaningful even without having everything figured out. Join them as they explore the following questions:

  • Who is Erin Moon, and what is her background?

  • How did growing up Southern Baptist shape Erin’s faith and beliefs?

  • Where did Erin’s deconstruction journey begin?

  • Why do some people go through faith deconstruction while others stay content with their beliefs?

  • How can we navigate faith without certainty?

  • How can we rethink the role of prayer in the life of faith?

  • What does it mean to embrace mystery instead of seeking rigid theological answers?

  • Does Erin still consider herself a Christian?

  • How can we handle the tension between faith and the highly polarized cultural landscape?

  • What might be helpful for people struggling with doubt and uncertainty in their spiritual journey?

Quotables

Pithy, shareable, sometimes-less-than-280-character statements from the episode you can share.

  • “In almost every faith tradition, there are things that are good that can get weaponized. The community aspect was weaponized [in my tradition] in that you need to conform, you need to not ask questions, you need to just have faith. But we're really going to take care of you when your grandmother passes away. So it's both things. It's not all bad. It's not all good.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “We don't know what faith is. We don't understand what faith is. We want it to offer conclusiveness and authority to what we believe, where everything is just airtight.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “‘For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son that whosoever has perfect and correct theology will have eternal life.’ That's what we want it to be. There is a fear there of stepping out into something that is not solid, that there's mystery involved. Safety is so seductive almost to the point of you don't even know that you are being seduced by it.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “If you start asking questions and you are not in a community that honors that type of spirituality, you are immediately on the outside. And there are different degrees to which you can lose that community, but sometimes it is a devastation and you are completely alone. I get not wanting to give that up, but you have to reckon with the idea that these are people who don't love you at your fullest. They don't see you at your fullest. They don't allow you to be who you are. And so is that really community?” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “The first time I ever really started to go, wait, hold on just a second, was in college. I was on the university leadership team at my church, and I found out that there was a secret guys-only Bible study. And so I went to our university minister and I [asked], can we get in? And he was like, ‘No, this is for the guys. If you want a woman to go through it with you, you can do that.’...Once I started pulling on that thread of—Wait, you don't like women, you see women as second class citizens—then [I thought] there's a lot more here that we need to uncover.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “I think I'm not the same kind of Christian that I thought you had to be.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “I do think that when Christianity is appropriately applied to society, it is a blessing to humanity. But so often we trip up. We all are trying to consolidate power and we're trying to get our team, whatever that looks like, in first place.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “I would still call myself a Christian. Because I would really love to retake that. Where it's not like this weird MAGA, “we're trying to consolidate political power” as it has turned into in the American version of Christianity. But I would really like us to go back to the simplicity of: yoke is easy, burden is light.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “I don't think God is surprised by the fact that we're humans. I just, something tells me that God is not surprised by that.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “The gifts of God, the way that God interacts with us, Jesus’s words, life, wisdom, all of it—is so much more radical and all encompassing than I could have ever imagined. I still don't have a handle on that.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “What I'm trying to do, and I definitely never do this perfectly or well at all, is to really follow the fruit. What is coming out of me? What kind of posture do I have that is good for the rest of humanity?” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “What is my love for Christ doing in my life, in the life of the people that I'm around in the greater world? Does that make a difference? Does that speak to my salvation and the mercy that I experienced with God and the love that I experienced with God?” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “If someone has certainty about their faith? Congratulations. That's a mirage. The thing that you have certainty in does not exist.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “What I want more than anything is not to be certain anymore. I did. I wanted to be correct. I wanted to be right. I wanted to have perfect lined-up theology. But it's more of a relationship between you and God in the world.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “Certainty is not available in any real way. What I can go on is the experiences that I've had, the Holy Spirit in me, my life, the people that I listen to, the people that I'm around, my friends, my family, my church. Certainty is fake and a lie. And when we can move past that desire to have everything set in stone…beyond that is something much richer that does not lay in a certainty of facts or ideas or anything like that. There's a mysticism in there. This is not something that can be contained. This is not something that can be boxed in.” — Erin Hicks Moon

  • “I'm frequently so surprised by Holy Spirit. I'm frequently so shocked by what I see of God in this world. But I had to put away the idea of certainty. I do know that beyond that desire to have that certainty, God wants to meet you in that.” — Erin Hicks Moon

Mentioned in This Episode


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