The Golden Thread is a podcast about the moments when something sacred breaks through—woven from real stories of seekers, saints, and everyday people whose courage, faith, or quiet wonder left a mark on the human spirit. Narrated by Harmonia in her gentle, first-person voice, each episode traces the thread of meaning that runs across ages, places, and traditions—never preaching, never dividing, but honoring the lived experience of those who listened for the sacred and tried to follow it. If you’re curious about how faith, conscience, and the yearning for something more have shaped our world, you’re in the right place. Whenever you’re ready, just press play.

Rufus Jones: The Quiet Light That Moved the World

In this episode, Harmonia invites you into the gentle yet world-shaping life of Rufus Jones, the Quaker thinker and activist whose quiet conviction helped make equality, peace, and compassionate service feel like common sense. Through moments of silence, acts of conscience, and the founding of the American Friends Service Committee, Rufus Jones showed what can happen when one person trusts the light within, even before the world is ready to see it.
Season 1
Episode 21
Religion

Roger Williams and the Freedom of Conscience

Harmonia shares the story of Roger Williams, the exiled minister who refused to let faith become a tool for political power and paid the price for his convictions. In the frozen wilderness of colonial New England, Williams planted the radical idea of religious liberty-not as tolerance from the strong, but as a birthright for all. His courage created a haven for dissenters and laid the groundwork for true freedom of conscience.
Season 1
Episode 22
Religion

The Voice That Would Not Vanish

In a ghetto designed to erase dignity, one woman stood and taught. Regina Jonas-the first female rabbi in Jewish history-was nearly lost to time. Silenced by patriarchy, murdered by fascism, her legacy was buried for decades. But memory has a quiet strength. In this episode, Harmonia recalls the fire Regina carried into the darkness, and the truth that still rises from her life: that the sacred belongs to all who serve it.
Season 1
Episode 23
Religion

The Sheikh of Brougham Terrace

In late Victorian Liverpool, a former Methodist solicitor named William Quilliam returned from North Africa with a new name-Abdullah-and an unshakable conviction. From a narrow English row house, he founded Britain's first functioning mosque and invited a different vision of spiritual belonging into public life. Though his work was nearly erased, the truths he lived still ripple through the world today. In this episode, Harmonia remembers the ephemeral faith of a man too early for his time, but never out of place.
Season 1
Episode 24
Religion

The Silence She Chose

In 1920s colonial Korea, surrounded by empire, ideology, and rising modern feminism, Kim Iryp was a voice everyone heard-poet, editor, provocateur. And then, one day, she walked away. Into the mountains. Into silence. In this episode, Harmonia recalls the woman who chose not to escape the world, but to seek something more honest than noise: a faith that could shape her soul without erasing it. What she found wasn't a retreat from life-it was a return to it.
Season 1
Episode 25
Religion

I Was Called: The Voice of Jarena Lee

Jarena Lee was born free in a land built on slavery. Denied a pulpit, denied authority, and denied permission, she preached anyway-because God called her. As the first Black woman officially recognized to preach in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, she traveled alone, broke barriers with fire in her voice, and left behind a legacy not of protest, but of obedience. This episode of The Golden Thread dives into her extraordinary spiritual authority, the radical clarity of her call, and what it means today to say yes when the Spirit speaks-even when the world says no.
Season 1
Episode 26
Religion

The Last Lesson

In a quiet classroom in 19th-century Karbala, Siyyid Kzim Rasht whispered of a sacred change drawing near. He didn't preach certainty. He taught expectancy. This episode explores how his final teachings invited his students-not to preserve the past-but to prepare for what hadn't yet arrived. Set against a backdrop of global spiritual upheaval, his story becomes a lens on the enduring power of faith to point us toward transformation.
Season 1
Episode 27
Religion

The Woman Who Was Heard Across an Ocean

In a cloistered convent in 17th-century Spain, a young nun wrote visions of the Virgin Mary while stories of a mysterious "Lady in Blue" spread among Indigenous communities in New Spain. Though she never left her cell, Mara de Jess de greda became a spiritual presence across cultures, continents, and centuries. In this episode, Harmonia explores how sacred ideas press into the world through ordinary lives-and what it means when institutions must catch up to truths already in motion.
Season 1
Episode 28
Religion

Ruth - The Courage of the Outsider

In a dry field on the margins of ancient Bethlehem, a young Moabite widow bends to gather fallen grain. Her name is Ruth, and her presence is barely tolerated by law-but her loyalty, courage, and quiet resilience will echo through generations. In this episode, Harmonia remembers the sacred power of those who cross borders with nothing but faith and fidelity. Ruth's story isn't just about survival-it's about the spiritual responsibility to see the stranger, protect the vulnerable, and recognize holiness where it isn't expected.
Season 1
Episode 29
Religion

The Interior Reformer: Saint Teresa of Ávila

In the silence of a 16th-century convent, Saint Teresa of vila heard something dangerous: her own soul, fully awake. As empire and inquisition tightened their grip on Spain, this barefoot nun turned inward-and found a kind of freedom no authority could touch. In this episode, Harmonia traces Teresa's quiet rebellion, her visions and reforms, and the enduring gift she left behind: a spiritual architecture built for anyone seeking clarity, courage, and inner truth.
Season 1
Episode 30
Religion