Speaker

Nadia Bolz-Weber

1 podcast 10 moments 2026
1 episodes
1 podcasts
5 quotes
5 snapshots
1 years active

Appearances over time

1 episodes

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Episodes

1

Podcasts

Quotes & moments

Religion & Spirituality
Data point 26

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026

Nadia Bolz-Weber planned a big Rally Day event with food for 80 people, only to find just 26 attendees — a humbling moment that led to her deepest insight about failure and grace.

Religion & Spirituality
Data point 2008

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026

Nadia Bolz-Weber founded House for All Sinners and Saints in 2008, a congregation designed to have very few rules, a lot of fun, and room for everyone to be their whole self.

Religion & Spirituality
Data point 10

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026

After hearing that a young queer congregant was denied communion at her parents' church, 10 members of House for All Sinners and Saints showed up at Denver International Airport with bread and wine and a chauffeur sign.

Society & Culture
Global Solidarity — From Sana'a to London

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026 Society & Culture

After the ride, threats poured in and her parents fled to her sister's house. Then Bushra Al-Fusail opened Facebook and watched solidarity posts roll in from Egypt, Canada, New York, DC, and London. Hundreds of women cycling in support of Yemeni Women Bike. Her mother, quietly trying to balance a bike in the covered backyard, said it all without a word.

Religion & Spirituality
The Rally Day Disaster

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026 Religion & Spirituality

Nadia Bolz-Weber hauled a cotton candy machine, cases of soda, and burgers for 80 people to Rally Day — and 26 people showed up. She snuck downstairs to pray away her fury before the service, confessing she hated the people who didn't come so much she couldn't appreciate the ones who did.

Religion & Spirituality
The Grace She Almost Missed

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026 Religion & Spirituality

While Nadia Bolz-Weber fumed over empty seats, her congregation was feeding hungry strangers at a park and handing cotton candy to every car at the stop sign. A 2 AM wake-up — what she calls a 'bitch slap from the Holy Spirit' — finally made her see all the grace she had been too resentful to notice.

Society & Culture
Jagged Edges: Why Failure Connects Us More Than Success

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026 Society & Culture

At a pastors' conference, Nadia Bolz-Weber confessed her Rally Day breakdown — the bitch slap, the cotton candy, the resentment, all of it. The room stopped seeing her as an expert and started treating her like a colleague. Her conclusion: virtues dazzle, but jagged edges are what people can actually hold on to.

Religion & Spirituality
Airport Communion for a Queer Woman Turned Away

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026 Religion & Spirituality

A young queer woman in Nadia Bolz-Weber's congregation traveled to her parents' church and was barred from communion. Stuart, the church drag queen, didn't skip a beat: 'We'll just have to take her communion to the airport when she gets home.' Ten people showed up at Denver International with bread, wine, and a chauffeur sign reading 'Rachel Pater, Child of God.'

Arts
From 125th Street to the Apollo Stage

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026 Arts

Walking down 125th Street near the Apollo, Audrey Pleasant heard James Brown blast from the Record Shack and couldn't help herself. A crowd gathered. A man stepped forward and handed her a piece of paper with a time and a stage. At 13, she performed with the Coasters — and then James Brown himself walked out and called her 'Lil Mama.'

Religion & Spirituality
Why Nadia Bolz-Weber Started a Church in a Bar Basement

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026 Religion & Spirituality

Nadia Bolz-Weber grew up in a strict conservative church with too many rules and no room to be herself. So she founded House for All Sinners and Saints in 2008, a congregation designed around minimal rules, maximum fun, and radical inclusion — complete with a velvet Elvis at the door and a minister of fabulousness.

Society & Culture
Creating 'Yemeni Women Bike' — A Facebook Page That Sparked a Movement

Cotton Candy and Revolutionary Rides: The Moth Radio Hour · Jun 30, 2026 Society & Culture

Women in Yemen weren't legally banned from biking — society had just decided they couldn't. During a 3-day ceasefire, Bushra Al-Fusail gathered 5 borrowed bikes and 11 women on a bombed-out Sana'a highway. Threats poured in. But photographs of abayas flying behind bicycle wheels spread from Yemen to Canada to London.

Analysis

What they talk about

  • Religion & Spirituality 60%
  • Society & Culture 40%

Connections

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Nadia Bolz-Weber Podcasts Co-speakers