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You might need a snack for today’s episode.
We welcome Kendall Vanderslice, baker, author, and theologian to The Weight for a discussion about the intersection of food--specifically, bread--and worship. Kendall explores the dichotomy of the simplicity and complexity of making bread and how it connects to the simplicity and complexity of a life of faith.
Kendall is the author of By Bread Alone: A Baker’s Reflections on Hunger, Longing, and the Goodness of God. She is also the founder of the Edible Theology Project, a nonprofit that creates resources for churches, families, and individuals to help you connect the meal shared at the Communion table to other meals you share. She is a graduate of Wheaton College with a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology, a graduate of Boston University with a Masters of Liberal Arts in Gastronomy, and a graduate of Duke University with a Masters of Theological Studies. In 2018, Kendall was named the James Beard Foundation National Scholar for her work on food and religion.
Resources:
Find Kendall on Facebook and Instagram
Listen to her podcast, Kitchen Meditations
Learn more about the Edible Theology Project
Follow Edible Theology on Instagram
Purchase By Bread Alone
By Oxford University United Methodist Church4.9
7777 ratings
You might need a snack for today’s episode.
We welcome Kendall Vanderslice, baker, author, and theologian to The Weight for a discussion about the intersection of food--specifically, bread--and worship. Kendall explores the dichotomy of the simplicity and complexity of making bread and how it connects to the simplicity and complexity of a life of faith.
Kendall is the author of By Bread Alone: A Baker’s Reflections on Hunger, Longing, and the Goodness of God. She is also the founder of the Edible Theology Project, a nonprofit that creates resources for churches, families, and individuals to help you connect the meal shared at the Communion table to other meals you share. She is a graduate of Wheaton College with a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology, a graduate of Boston University with a Masters of Liberal Arts in Gastronomy, and a graduate of Duke University with a Masters of Theological Studies. In 2018, Kendall was named the James Beard Foundation National Scholar for her work on food and religion.
Resources:
Find Kendall on Facebook and Instagram
Listen to her podcast, Kitchen Meditations
Learn more about the Edible Theology Project
Follow Edible Theology on Instagram
Purchase By Bread Alone

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