
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
Michael Burke grew up in upstate New York and first moved to Anchorage in the 1980s. He has been the senior pastor of St. Mary's Episcopal Church in midtown for over 20 years. 2009 in Anchorage is colloquially known as “the summer of hate.” That year an equal rights ordinance was proposed by the Anchorage Assembly and conservatives came from near and far to testify against equal rights for the LGBTQ community. The measure passed the assembly, but was vetoed by Mayor Dan Sullivan, and there were not enough votes to override. Michael Burke confronted a hateful angry crowd to speak in support of non-discrimination protections during a series of contentious assembly meetings. We discuss that "summer of hate," today’s divisive political climate, and how he came to be a priest in the first place.
By Andrew Gray4.9
3535 ratings
Send us a text
Michael Burke grew up in upstate New York and first moved to Anchorage in the 1980s. He has been the senior pastor of St. Mary's Episcopal Church in midtown for over 20 years. 2009 in Anchorage is colloquially known as “the summer of hate.” That year an equal rights ordinance was proposed by the Anchorage Assembly and conservatives came from near and far to testify against equal rights for the LGBTQ community. The measure passed the assembly, but was vetoed by Mayor Dan Sullivan, and there were not enough votes to override. Michael Burke confronted a hateful angry crowd to speak in support of non-discrimination protections during a series of contentious assembly meetings. We discuss that "summer of hate," today’s divisive political climate, and how he came to be a priest in the first place.

91,069 Listeners

43,991 Listeners

32,129 Listeners

38,506 Listeners

38,681 Listeners

9,182 Listeners

5,086 Listeners

8,311 Listeners

6,335 Listeners

6,289 Listeners

112,539 Listeners

14,321 Listeners

16,043 Listeners

104 Listeners

10,795 Listeners