
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The tenderness you may be feeling right now is not accidental — it is a signal of the sacred. As we enter Holy Week, we are being mirrored an ancient truth: that transformation requires a kind of death before new life can emerge. In this episode, we explore resurrection through a lens that reaches far beyond religion, drawing on the timeless parallel stories of Jesus and the ancient Sumerian goddess Inanna — two figures separated by thousands of years, yet walking the same path of vulnerability, surrender, and return.
Key Takeaways:
Whether you are in a season of loss, stagnation, or quietly grieving a dream that hasn't yet arrived — ancient and living wisdom is meeting you here. The images we hold of ourselves and the world are meant to fall away so that we can resurrect as anthropos — fully human, and fully awake to the divine love already alive within us. This episode honors the process of liberation — releasing the false divide between human and divine, and coming home to the truth that one cannot be fully lived without the other.
By Michelle Bersell4.8
1818 ratings
The tenderness you may be feeling right now is not accidental — it is a signal of the sacred. As we enter Holy Week, we are being mirrored an ancient truth: that transformation requires a kind of death before new life can emerge. In this episode, we explore resurrection through a lens that reaches far beyond religion, drawing on the timeless parallel stories of Jesus and the ancient Sumerian goddess Inanna — two figures separated by thousands of years, yet walking the same path of vulnerability, surrender, and return.
Key Takeaways:
Whether you are in a season of loss, stagnation, or quietly grieving a dream that hasn't yet arrived — ancient and living wisdom is meeting you here. The images we hold of ourselves and the world are meant to fall away so that we can resurrect as anthropos — fully human, and fully awake to the divine love already alive within us. This episode honors the process of liberation — releasing the false divide between human and divine, and coming home to the truth that one cannot be fully lived without the other.