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.

Episodes ordered by Circa

Episodes in Historical order


O God, Set the Prisoners Free --- Ludwig Haetzer and the Four Layers of Liberation

Ludwig Haetzer was a young Swiss reformer who spent his short life pulling at every container the sacred had been locked inside --- images, sacraments, doctrine, and finally the Trinity itself. Working as a corrector at a printing press in 1520s Germany, he stamped the same motto on every tract and translation he ever published: O God, set the prisoners free. Harmonia walks through the four layers of what that prayer actually meant --- and invites the listener to find where they fit.
Season 1
Episode 221
Faith

The Voice That Would Not Be Silenced: The Martyrs of Karka

In the summer of 447, three men from a small village near the ancient city of Karka in Mesopotamia were killed for refusing to renounce their faith. Their names were Simon, Abraham, and Ma'na. Almost no one remembers them. But the community they died for --- one of the oldest continuously Christian communities in the world --- is still here, still singing its liturgy in Aramaic, the language of ancient Mesopotamia.
Season 1
Episode 222
Faith

The Apostle of Joy: Philip Neri and the Practice of Delight

In the anxious, buttoned-up world of Counter-Reformation Rome, a cheerful priest named Philip Neri walked the streets every day with a book of jokes in his pocket. Not because everything was fine --- he had held enough suffering in his hands to have no illusions --- but because he had understood something the centuries keep forgetting: that joy is not a circumstance, not a temperament, not a reward for sufficient seriousness. It is a practice. Chosen daily, carried deliberately, available to anyone willing to pick it up.
Season 1
Episode 223
Faith

The Apostle of Charity: How Vincent de Paul Organized Love

In the muddy streets of 17th century Paris, a peasant-born priest named Vincent de Paul looked at the suffering around him and decided that goodwill alone was not enough. Captured by pirates, sold into slavery, and broken open by a dying man's confession, Vincent emerged with a radical conviction: that love is a verb, and verbs need structure to sustain them. He built the Congregation of the Mission, co-founded the Daughters of Charity with Louise de Marillac, and created what was effectively the first professional humanitarian organization in European history.
Season 1
Episode 224
Faith

The Monk Who Carved a Thousand Smiles

Harmonia is wandering the Metropolitan Museum of Art when a small, rough-hewn wooden figure stops her cold --- a smiling Fud My carved in 1805 by an eighty-seven year old wandering monk named Mokujiki Shnin. She traces his extraordinary life: a farmer's son who took a lifelong vow to eat only forest food, walked the roads of Japan for decades, and carved more than a thousand Buddhist statues --- leaving each one freely in temples and villages across the country, asking nothing in return.
Season 1
Episode 225
Faith

The Tree She Signed: Hannah Cohoon and the Art of Pure Intention

In January 1997, a small watercolor drawing made by a Shaker woman in rural Massachusetts sold at Sotheby's for nearly $300,000. Hannah Cohoon never left her community at Hancock. She never sought an audience. She simply received a vision of a blazing tree, painted it as honestly as she could, and did something almost no Shaker artist ever did --- she signed her name.
Season 1
Episode 226
Faith

The Gravity of Justice

In the windswept moorlands of northern England, an old priest named Nicholas Postgate spent forty-nine years moving between farmhouses in the dark, celebrating forbidden Mass and carving a small X into doorposts on his way out. A mark for strangers he would never meet. He was eighty-two years old when they finally caught him. His story is the story of eighty-five men --- priests and laypeople --- executed between 1584 and 1679 for the contents of their conscience.
Season 1
Episode 227
Faith

The Living Certificate: Sitt al-Wuzara' and the Question That Holds

In a classroom in Damascus, an old woman is still teaching on the last day of her life. Her name is Sitt al-Wuzara' al-Tanukhiyyah, and she holds something no manuscript can hold --- a living, traceable, human chain of transmission connecting her students to one of the most important books in Islamic civilization. Harmonia explores the rigorous science her world built around a single question: who told you? And asks what it would mean to recover that question in an age drowning in unverified words.
Season 1
Episode 228
Faith

The Frog and the Bishop: Sacred Laughter and the Scrolls of Toba Sōjō

In the galleries of the Tokyo National Museum, Harmonia stands before one of the most subversive drawings ever made --- a frog, seated in the perfect stillness of the Buddha, rendered in a few economical brushstrokes by a twelfth-century Japanese monk-artist known as Toba Sj. What begins as discomfort becomes recognition: this is not mockery of the sacred, but a mirror held up to the institution that claimed to serve it.
Season 1
Episode 229
Faith

The Map Is Not The Territory

In the autumn of 1210, two bored clerks with shovels dug up a dead professor in a Paris churchyard and moved his bones to unconsecrated ground. It was the church's final word on Amalric of Bena and his followers --- a pantheist movement that had dared to suggest the Spirit could not be contained by any institution. Ten of them had already burned. But the question they were asking refused to stay buried.
Season 1
Episode 230
Faith