Episode 81

Living an Authentic Life with Ann Voskamp

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She has a huge platform: Hundreds of thousands of followers, millions of books sold, and many Christians are at least familiar with the name “Ann Voskamp.” And yet when Ann writes, speaks, and engages social media, she does not hide behind the numbers. She writes grittily, authentically, and with boldness.

How is this possible? How can someone with such a great impact on the world maintain such a humble, vulnerable, and others-focused life?

We explore these questions as we engage Ann on living an authentic life. We talk the cost, the gifts, and the practical how-tos.  (And of course, because we are the HIMH Podcast, we make time to take a trip to Goofball Island where we finally learn her real Enneagram number.)

You’re welcome to join us.

Highlights: 
​”I honestly don’t think there should be platforms for writers. Jesus didn’t have a platform. He had an altar where he came, he laid down his life, and he died for his friends. Writing is about a place to be brutally honest, have no reputation, and to pray that out of your death there can be people’s resurrections.” –Ann Voskamp

“We either have the mentality of [God as], ‘Oh dear, I’ve messed up, Dad is going to kill me,’ or ‘Oh, dear, I’ve messed up, I need to call Dad.’ … David doesn’t run from God, he runs to God, and he trusts that when we want a do-over Jesus covers us with un-erasable grace.” –Ann Voskamp

​”We are called to a table-like theology where we not only break bread around the table, but we break open our hearts around the table.” –Ann Voskamp


Do the Next Thing:
That book Laurie read in two days? This one–it’s one of Laurie’s all-time favorites
Follow Ann on 
Instagram and Facebook
Find out more about Ann Voskamp, her blog, and her writings here

Question of the Week for Next Week:
What is a funny-ridiculous tradition your culture has? (Perhaps like how Laurie’s Dutch family celebrates Tulip Time this time of year in Holland, MI. They dress up in old-timey Dutch clothes and painful wooden shoes and klompen dance.) What does your culture do that is silly like this?

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