On Krista Tippett

(and a brief history and the “why” of On Being)

Krista Tippett is a Peabody Award-winning broadcaster, a National Humanities Medalist, and a New York Times bestselling author. She grew up in a small town in Oklahoma, attended Brown University, and became a journalist and diplomat in Cold War Berlin. (Read Krista’s words on the lessons of this trajectory in the DNA of On Being here.) After studying theology at Yale Divinity School in the early 1990s, she saw a black hole where intelligent public conversation about the religious, spiritual, and moral aspects of human life might be. She pitched and piloted her idea for several years before launching Speaking of Faith — later On Being — as a weekly national public radio show (initially based at Minnesota Public Radio/American Public Media) in 2003. What launched on two radio stations grew to over 400 across the U.S. and has received the highest honors in broadcasting, the Internet, and podcasting.

More important to Krista was the extraordinary depth and impact with which a counter-cultural cross-section of people were taking On Being into their lives and communities – even as lines of division and rancor had begun to calcify in culture at large. In 2011, she created the Civil Conversations Project, now an ever-evolving body of shows and public events at the heart of our work. In 2013, Krista and a team of four producers took On Being and the Civil Conversations Project into independent, non-profit production with a work/studio/event space on Loring Park in Minneapolis — and The On Being Project was born. In 2019, she invited Lucas Johnson — who was introduced to us by the late, brilliant civil rights leader, Vincent Harding — to lead, expand and center the overarching commitment to social healing in everything we do, in an increasingly tender, increasingly tumultuous world.

President Obama awarded Krista the National Humanities Medal at the White House in 2014 for “thoughtfully delving into the mysteries of human existence. On the air and in print, Ms. Tippett avoids easy answers, embracing complexity and inviting people of every background to join her conversation about faith, ethics, and moral wisdom.”

In other honors, she has received a Four Freedoms Medal of the Roosevelt Institute, holds honorary doctorate including Yale University and Middlebury College, and was the Mimi and Peter E. Haas Distinguished Visitor at Stanford University. She has published three books: Becoming Wise: An Inquiry into the Mystery and Art of Living; Einstein’s God, drawn from her interviews at the intersection of science, medicine, and spiritual inquiry; and Speaking of Faith, a memoir of religion in our time.

Krista has two grown children. She is currently at work on a new book about moral imagination and the human challenges and promise of this young century.


Why On Being? A reflection on origins intimate and civilizational
Beginnings: Oklahoma, and Cold War Berlin. And Now.

I think each of us can all trace the roots of the callings we end up following back to our earliest lives, and this is where I start all of my conversations. Sometimes those roots bespeak love and formation that mobilized; sometimes they tell more of disarray and absence that planted longing. My story was the latter. I grew up in a small town in Oklahoma in a family in which real listening was rare, which is to say that curiosity was rare — and this left me curious. I grew up in a faith full of fear, and disinterested in the life of the mind, yet I was intensely powered by the entwined pleasure I found in thinking deeply and in wondering spiritually and philosophically. I grew up in a world where the deepest things shaping us were unspoken, and this galvanized me to seek to muster big enough questions and words for it all.

I traveled far from that place of my birth and upbringing — first (wholly improbably) to Brown and then to East Germany, West Germany, and finally divided Cold War Berlin, where I spent most of my 20s, most of the 80s. I was idealistic and ambitious. A dutiful child of the mid-20th Century, I believed that all of the interesting questions were political and all of the serious solutions, too. I became a reporter, a stringer for The New York Times and Newsweek and others. I knew and loved people on both sides of the Wall that ran through Berlin. It was a fault line of the geopolitical division of the world, and it felt like the shape of forever. After a few years I was invited to work for the chief U.S. diplomat in Berlin and help him make sense of the political and environmental passions that new generations my age were sharing across the “inner-German border.” I was eventually promoted as chief aide in Berlin to the U.S. Ambassador to West Germany. I spent my days sitting around tables with men (yes, mostly men) who were moving nuclear missiles around like chess pieces on maps of Europe.

My time in Berlin left me exhilarated and bewildered. The exhilaration was in exposure to power and to professional skills that have served me ever after. But it was the bewilderment that would direct what came next.

More riveting to me in the end than the politics of Berlin was the vast social experiment its division had become. One people, one language and history and culture, split into two radically opposing worldviews and realities, decades entrenched by the time I arrived. I found myself drawn again and again to the East, where so much more was at stake, and life and mind felt more passionate and vital. This realization began to unsettle my sense of personal progress and education: it was possible to have freedom and plenty in the West and craft an empty life; it was possible to have nothing in the East and create life of intimacy and dignity and beauty.

That reality, and the questions it raised about what matters in a life and where true power is carried, eventually sent me to study theology — the part of the human enterprise that has most persistently carried the questions of what it means to be human and how we want to live and who we will be to each other. These are the questions that our great religious and spiritual traditions arose to address — and they are the universal human questions. They are the root questions that animate On Being now.

So, too, does the capacious sense of time that Berlin began to plant in me, and the history and learning that has followed has only deepened this. As that decade of the 80s drew to a close, even as one immutable given after the other began to unravel, no one could imagine a world in which the Wall did not exist in some form. Much less would we have believed that it would crack open all at once under the weight of the whole city joyfully pressing through it, after a bumbling East Berlin bureaucrat misspoke at a late-night press conference. The chancellor of the country himself was traveling elsewhere that day. It was my 29th birthday and I was visiting Oklahoma, watching in ecstatic disbelief. This turning has infused my sense of history and meaning ever after.

There is always more to reality than we can see, and more change possible than we can begin to imagine.

There are places in human experience that politics cannot analyze or address, and they are among our raw, essential, heart-breaking, and life-giving realities.

With all of this in my formation, the place we are now in as a species, as a wide world, feels galvanizingly familiar to me. The pandemic was a seismic turning, like Berlin’s, but at the level of our species and the whole wide world. All at once, astonishingly, we were reminded — as our great spiritual traditions have always known — that this ground is never as solid as we believe it to be. We were given to re-member that civilization is built on something as tender as bodies breathing in proximity to other bodies. In imagery from the ancient Greeks and theology I love, we inhabit a Kairos time. Unlike the Kronos time of clocks and deadlines and schedules and plans, this is an inbreaking that disrupts everything that came before and calls us to remake the world.

My co-leader Lucas and I went into deep discernment, coming out of the pandemic and lockdown, about how we would need to reorient our work and organization to meet the callings that have been laid before us. The ruptures of our world now are not unprecedented in the long history of humanity. Yet the stakes of the challenges before us — ecological, racial, economic, political — are in a new way existential. The question of what it means to be human has become inextricable from the question of who we will be to each other. How we live into that question, I believe, will spell the difference between whether we merely survive, or whether we hold the possibility of flourishing as whole human beings, with whole institutions, inhabiting whole societies.

My life of conversation has taught me that wisdom and wholeness emerge paradoxically, yet precisely, in moments like ours, when human beings have to hold seemingly opposing realities in a creative tension and interplay: power and frailty, birth and death, pain and hope, beauty and brokenness, mystery and conviction, calm and fierceness, mine and yours.

With love,
Krista

 

 

The New York Times Magazine

Krista Tippett Wants You to See All the Hope That’s Being Hidden
July 2022

The New York Times

Radio Program About Faith Defies the Skeptics
May 2010

Meditative Story

A conversation with Krista Tippett
Dec 2020

The Moth

Gaggy's Blessing: A woman circles back to appreciate her strict minister grandfather.
Nov 2012