Change
Happens
Now

With
Host

5/5

LOVE IT! This is the podcast that I always wanted to listen to but didn’t know it existed! A blend of depth, spirituality, and leadership.

-Olivia SFTS

5/5

TIMELY! Love how this podcast empowers voices from the emerging generation of leaders around topics of justice, spirituality, and social change!

- Aizaiah Yong

5/5

The conversations we need! So grateful for these powerful conversations in this moment.

- A Fan From Portland

Meet Mo!

Join Mo King in Season 6 for game changing conversations with the voices of social transformation!

Mo is an education and community advocate, currently in grad school at Pacific School of Religion. Professionally, his career has been in apparel production and commerce working for companies including Gap, Inc., The Limited, The Walt Disney Company, and Nike. Mo’s community and education advocacy has spanned schools, corporations, and nonprofit organizations. We’re thrilled to have Mo hosting this season!

In each episode, guests from our leadership collective share stories, insights, practices, and tools that prepare and empower leaders to enact social change in their personal lives, communities, and the organizations they serve.

This season we talk about the “Change Happening Now,” how people in our community are responding to and leading through it.

Episodes

Dr. Joyce Del Rosario

Episode 6

On this episode, we are joined by the fabulous Dr. Joyce Del Rosario, Assistant Professor, Practice of Ministry and Director of Community Engaged Learning at Pacific School of Religion. She is a second Generation Filipino American whose current research is with an affectionately named group of Filipino American religious scholars called the “Theo Adobo Collective”. She’s run programs in various cultural and economic communities for over 20 years and launched The Wedge, a videocast series for Asian Americans about Asian Americans doing social justice work. Here she shares more about the potluck approach to leadership and why culturally empowered expressions of leadership are critical in this time.

Resources mentioned on this week’s episode:

Inheritance Magazine

Liberated Together by Erna Kim Hackett

Joanne Rodríguez

Episode 7

On this episode, we drop in conversation with Rev. Joanne Rodríguez Executive Director of the Hispanic Theological Initiative (HTI), and phenomenal woman who leads with a passion to amplify and promote the educational and theological formation of Latinx students across the United States. Here she talks with us about “en conjunto” partnerships are why they are so important to do impactful transformational work. She invites those from minoritized experiences to resist the temptation to sacrifice one’s own knowledge, whether it be language or culture, or something else, just to fit in at an organization. She shares more about how a wisdom based leader is one who embraces their cultural leadership style, is rooted in their spirituality, and is committed to leading from their personal authenticity. She also reminds us that this generation is facing so many different challenges, and that instead of trying to give them the answers, we need to listen to them and enjoy them, because they are amazing!

For more information on Joanne’s work with the Hispanic Theological Initiative or to connect, please visit: https://hti.ptsem.edu/

Roger Heuser

Episode 8

On this episode, we sit down with Roger Heuser, an amazing leader, Professor of Leadership Studies at Vanguard University, and cancer survivor. He has a heartfelt conversation with us about gifts that exist, for emerging and established leaders, when they embrace spirituality, and invites us all to see spirituality as a journey inward to reframe the journey outward. He talks about why, in this time of multiple crises, we need leaders who are hospitable, humble, courageous, and who can sacrifice in the service of others. You’ll also hear some practical invitations to begin seeing your work through a spiritual lens.

To get in touch with Roger, email at rheuser@vanguard.edu or LinkedIn

Resources mentioned on the episode:

Inclusify by Stephanie Johnson

Robert Greenleaf – Servant Leadership

A Spiritual Audit of Corporate America by Ian Mitroff

Better World Books

OurSpareChange

Emma Seppala – Author, Speaker & Science Director, Stanford Center For Compassion And Altruism Research And Education

Rev. Dr. David Vásquez-Levy

Episode 9

On this episode we sit down with Rev. Dr. David Vásquez-Levy, a truly inspiring higher education and immigration leader and President of Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley, California, a progressive, multi denominational seminary and center for social justice. He is a committed pastor, a sought after speaker, and leads at the intersection of faith, higher education, and social change. He regularly contributes a faith perspective to the national conversation on immigration and has consulted on a number of documentaries on immigration, labor, and human rights and is the author of various publications that explore migration stories in sacred texts and in people’s lives. He talks with us about how migration is bigger than just people moving from one place to another, and that those immigrating know something about leaving everything behind to venture into a new place, and inspires us to think about how we can translate that into business by being willing to take risks and trying new things!

He also shares reflections on how leaders need to able to foresee alternative solutions and also be willing to “widen the table” to allow more people to be present and fed. It takes courage to be able to step out and be confident in one’s abilities to lead others and tackle difficult issues. That includes resisting fear, so that we are able to serve and empower our communities.

 If you’d like to get in touch with Rev. Dr. David Vásquez-Levy, email: president@psr.edu

Debbie Alvarez Rodrigue

Episode 10

On this episode, we have an enlightening conversation with Debbie Alvarez Rodriguez, a phenomenal leader, public speaker, champion for social impact, philanthropic innovator, and former Goodwill Industries CEO, who is deeply committed to advancing racial and economic equity and inclusion. She talks with us about the fundamentals of doing anti racism work, and more about what she calls racial equity innovation. She shares stories of her own journey and being courageous in inviting others to consider how we can both tell the truth about injustices that are taking place in our organizations in our communities, and being willing to have the honest and difficult conversations with others that point toward a different way ahead. We are encouraged to listen more, look inside ourselves, and be bold and courageous enough to not just envision a better future, but to make it actually happen! We have the power to change the status quo, as Debbie did during her time at Goodwill. She went from a predominantly white board of trustees to a board filled with people of color, from the local community. She was so committed to finding solutions to poverty, she began hiring diverse voices of color, those from low-income households, and those formerly incarcerated, to help lead the way. While serving as the CEO, she even asked a manager, who was formerly incarcerated, to mentor her.
2 pieces of practical advice for social transformation:

1. Become part of a team, whether a team from work, fellow leaders in your field, or friends.

2. Be willing to listen to diverse voices and those you don’t agree with.

“Examine your own power. That is something only you can do and no one else.”

Jeremiah Chan

Episode 11

On this episode, we sit down with Jeremiah Chan, an accomplished leader in the tech, government, and social justice spaces. Head of Patents at Facebook, he sits on the US Patent and Trademark Office Advisory Committee and is Chairman of the Board for the Bay Area Anti-Trafficking Coalition (https://baatc.org/), a nonprofit organization that combats human trafficking in the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond. He talks with us about a Virtual Reality for Inclusion training that deepened his understanding, and about recognizing our own positions of power in the spheres that we are in, to reach out to people who are left out of these spaces, to begin to see the systems of oppression and to do something about it. We also hear why it’s so important to have a form of measurement to be able to assess progress in a company’s efforts and programming to increase diversity, inclusion, and equity across industries.

Resource mentioned in this episode:

Robin DiAngelo, White Fragility

Aizaiah Yong, PhD + Jonathon Murillo, MDiv

Episode 12

Join our very own, Aizaiah Yong and Jonathon Murillo, in a Season One recap of key insights gleaned from the business, nonprofit, education and tech space leaders we’ve featured, to talk about issues of social transformation. You’ll hear highlights and practices from those, outside of explicitly religious or spiritual spaces, doing very spiritual work. We hope you’ve been inspired by this work, happening in the trenches on so many different levels outside protests, that opens us up to what we might imagine and do together across industries.

When you purchase the 5 course bundle, you get access to:

The Debrief

When you purchase our bundle of 5 on-demand leadership courses, you get access to exclusive content, like the “The Debrief,” an interactive Live podcast event, with our host, Mo King, and friends.

The Debrief is all about real, casual conversations about our episodes, reflecting on what we’ve been sitting with, fielding questions in the chat, and making connections with our community!

Interactive Live podcast event, THE DEBRIEF w/ host & friends

Early access to all new episodes before the public

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