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Episode 61: Hildegard College: Restoring Polymathy and Redemptive Entrepreneurship
May 27, 2026
1h 25m 59s
Episode 60: A Living Tradition: Classical Education Without Nostalgia
Apr 22, 2026
1h 30m 38s
Episode 59: American Education: What It Was and Can Be Again
Apr 15, 2026
1h 11m 24s
Episode 58: The Divided Soul and the Prodigal Pattern: Duty, Desire, and the Way Home
Mar 25, 2026
1h 26m 37s
Episode 57: Remembering Well: Restoring History Through Sympathy, Story, and Place
Feb 25, 2026
1h 14m 41s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/27/26 | ![]() Episode 61: Hildegard College: Restoring Polymathy and Redemptive Entrepreneurship✨ | polymathyredemptive entrepreneurship+4 | Dr. Matthew J. Smith | Hildegard CollegeThe Lost Tradition of Beauty | — | Hildegard Collegepolymathy+5 | — | 1h 25m 59s | |
| 4/22/26 | ![]() Episode 60: A Living Tradition: Classical Education Without Nostalgia✨ | classical educationvirtue formation+4 | Dr. John Mark Reynolds | St. Constantine SchoolC. S. Lewis+1 | — | classical educationeducation renewal+7 | — | 1h 30m 38s | |
| 4/15/26 | ![]() Episode 59: American Education: What It Was and Can Be Again✨ | classical educationhistory of education+4 | — | — | — | classical educationliberal arts+6 | — | 1h 11m 24s | |
| 3/25/26 | ![]() Episode 58: The Divided Soul and the Prodigal Pattern: Duty, Desire, and the Way Home✨ | inner conflictduty and desire+4 | Heidi White | The Divided SoulThe Good Teacher+3 | — | inner conflictduty+6 | — | 1h 26m 37s | |
| 2/25/26 | ![]() Episode 57: Remembering Well: Restoring History Through Sympathy, Story, and Place✨ | cultural crisishistory education+4 | Andrew Zwerneman | Cana AcademyHISTORY250® | — | historymemory+5 | — | 1h 14m 41s | |
| 2/11/26 | ![]() Episode 56: A Nice Definition of Classical Education: The Language, Metaphors, and Meaning Behind “Classical”✨ | classical educationlanguage and metaphor+3 | — | Ephesians 6:4Great Books | GreeceRome | classical educationmetaphor+4 | — | 18m 29s | |
| 1/14/26 | ![]() Episode 55: From Fragmentation to Fellowship: The Intellectual Renewal Behind Classical Education✨ | classical educationintellectual community+4 | David Diener | Hillsdale CollegeThe Alcuin Fellowship+4 | — | classical educationDavid Diener+6 | — | 29m 04s | |
| 12/17/25 | ![]() Episode 54: The Festive School: Prayer, Feasts, and the Recovery of Wonder✨ | classical educationschool culture+4 | Father Nathan Carr | ClassicalU.comDesiring the Kingdom+2 | — | classical educationschool culture+7 | — | 45m 08s | |
| 10/8/25 | ![]() Episode 53: Teaching Toward Truth as a Living Reality✨ | philosophy of teachingtruth in education+5 | Andrew Kern | The CiRCE InstituteUnless the Lord Builds the House+1 | — | truthclassical education+8 | — | 1h 05m 54s | |
| 8/27/25 | ![]() Episode 52: Memory and the Music of Language: A Conversation with Grant Horner and Karen Moore✨ | languagememory+4 | Grant HornerKaren Moore | ShakespeareCicero+1 | — | classical educationLatin+5 | — | 1h 03m 52s | |
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| 6/24/25 | ![]() Episode 51: Common Humanity at the Crossroads: A Conversation with Dr. Angel Parham | In this special episode of The Christopher Perrin Show, Christopher welcomes Dr. Angel Parham, professor of sociology at the University of Virginia and co-author of The Black Intellectual Tradition. Together, they explore the often-overlooked legacy of classical learning in the Black intellectual tradition, tracing its vital contributions from figures like Anna Julia Cooper and Frederick Douglass to the modern classroom.Drawing on her own journey through homeschooling, historical sociology, and the founding of the Nyansa Classical Community, Dr. Parham advocates for a deeply integrated approach to classical education—one that honors the Mediterranean and African roots of the tradition while inviting all students, especially the marginalized, into its freeing and formative power. The conversation also touches on themes of cultural polarization, the liberating nature of reading and writing, and how ancient texts can shape a student's soul and imagination—especially when engaged through the timeless practice of keeping a commonplace book.Listeners will come away inspired to recover classical education as a unifying, deeply human tradition—and perhaps even begin a florilegium of their own. | 1h 03m 20s | ||||||
| 4/22/25 | ![]() Episode 50: Sing to Learn: Recovering the Ancient Art of Musical Education | In this episode, Dr. Perrin gives a foretaste from his forthcoming book with Carrie Eben, The Good Teacher, as he advocates for singing as a powerful and now neglected pedagogical tool. Drawing from traditional sources like Plato and Augustine, Scripture, and personal anecdotes, he explores how music—especially in the form of singing and chanting—can shape the soul, foster joy, and make learning permanent. Perrin traces the etymological and cultural significance of music (from the Greek muse and mousikē), noting how integral it once was to early education and soul formation. He challenges modern classical educators to break free from their limited educational upbringing and rediscover this method of teaching, particularly in the lower grades. Through vivid examples—such as his daughter’s ability to recall scripture, history, and Latin years later through song—Perrin demonstrates how singing enables children to internalize and retain knowledge in a joyful and embodied way. He urges educators to sing far more often than feels natural to the adult mind, to make use of existing resources, and to partner with others in creating musical material. The episode concludes with a compelling invitation: to teach in a way that aligns with the nature of children and the harmonious order of the cosmos—by singing what is true, good, and beautiful. | 17m 38s | ||||||
| 4/8/25 | ![]() Episode 49: What Is Virtue? Recovering a Lost Vocabulary of Education | In this episode, Dr. Christopher Perrin draws upon his forthcoming book with Carrie Eben, The Good Teacher and invites listeners to reconsider the meaning of virtue. It once stood at the heart of education but now often eludes clear definitions. Considering personal experience and the broader tradition of liberal education, Perrin explores how the modern educational landscape has drifted from its roots, leaving many unable to articulate what virtue—or even education—truly is. He explains the classical understanding of virtue as human excellence, rooted in the Latin virtus and Greek aretē, and discusses the cardinal virtues of prudence, justice, temperance, and courage.Perrin then turns to the forgotten tradition of the liberal arts, challenging even well-educated listeners to name and understand them. From this foundation, he builds toward a vision of education as the cultivation of virtue—not only moral and civic but also intellectual and even physical and spiritual. He provides a taxonomy of intellectual or academic virtues—including wonder, zeal, humility, attentiveness, courage, and discipline—and discusses how these can and must be cultivated in students and educators alike. Throughout, Perrin emphasizes that true education forms not just the mind, but the whole person, and that the rediscovery of this vision requires a recovery of vocabulary, tradition, and purpose. | 25m 19s | ||||||
| 3/25/25 | ![]() Episode 48: Embodied Learning: Cultivating Beauty in Classical Education | In this episode, Dr. Christopher Perrin explores the often-neglected role of beauty in classical education, emphasizing the importance of engaging all five senses in the learning experience. He challenges the text-centered focus of modern education and invites educators to rethink school environments, advocating for spaces that reflect truth, goodness, and beauty. Through thought experiments and practical suggestions, he encourages schools to move beyond utilitarian aesthetics toward classrooms that feel more like homes, museums, or gardens. He also highlights schools that have successfully integrated beauty into their educational philosophy and provides resources for further exploration. Listeners might also enjoy the book Making School Beautiful by Dr. John Skillen. | 17m 43s | ||||||
| 3/11/25 | ![]() Episode 47: Balancing Rigor and Rest: A Classical Approach to Education | In this episode, Dr. Christopher Perrin explores the tension between rigor and rest in classical education, drawing on Aristotle’s concept of virtue as a balance between extremes. He examines how rigor is often emphasized as a corrective to declining academic standards but warns against its overuse, which can lead to a rigid and joyless educational experience. Discussion includes monastic traditions, the etymology of “school” (scholé), and scriptural examples to illustrate how classical education thrives when both rigor and rest are harmonized. By drawing on historical and philosophical insights, as well as practical examples from classical schools, Dr. Perrin advocates for a blended approach that includes contemplation, wonder, and delight alongside academic challenge. | 19m 36s | ||||||
| 2/25/25 | ![]() Episode 46: The Good Teacher: Principles Over Techniques | Great teaching isn’t about mastering techniques—it’s about embodying principles. In this episode, Dr. Christopher Perrin explores how classical education prioritizes the formation of virtue in both teachers and students through time-tested pedagogical wisdom and Christian tradition. Using the analogy of carpentry, he explains how principles provide the foundation for effective teaching, allowing educators to apply techniques with wisdom. He also introduces The Good Teacher, a book co-authored with Dr. Carrie Eben, which outlines 10 key pedagogical principles that transform the classroom. Tune in for an inspiring and practical conversation on the art of teaching. | 47m 26s | ||||||
| 1/28/25 | ![]() Episode 45: Going Home with Odysseus | In this episode, Christopher Perrin explores the profound theme of the hero's arduous journey home—as depicted in Homer's The Odyssey. He discusses how Odysseus's return to Ithaca not only signifies a physical homecoming but also a reclaiming of identity and status. Consider in this epic tale the timeless human longing for home and the trials faced along the way. | 24m 54s | ||||||
| 12/10/24 | ![]() Episode 44: What We Can Learn from Odysseus, the Man of Many Twists and Turns: The Pros and Cons of Being Curious and Clever | In this episode, Dr. Perrin who teaches the Odyssey to a college class every year, traces the life and quest of Odysseus noting the ways in which his life turns and twists much like our own, and the way his yearning and the story itself anticipate a kind of fulfillment in the life and ministry of Jesus Christ. | 42m 10s | ||||||
| 11/12/24 | ![]() Episode 43: 20 Words You Must Know to Understand Education: What Education Really Is | In this episode, Dr. Perrin notes the ways we have forgotten the meaning of words that related to education and revives the meaning of about 20 key words we need to know in order to better understand what education really is. | 44m 31s | ||||||
| 8/27/24 | ![]() Episode 42: Education as Hospitality and Healing | In this episode, Dr. Perrin describes the way that Christian classical education must offer hospitality to students seeking an intellectual home and healing to the sickness of their souls. While this is not the whole of a robust classical education, it is integral and vital part. (Also with connections to Augustine: Rejoicing in the Truth by Jeffrey Lehman.) | 36m 12s | ||||||
| 6/11/24 | ![]() Episode 41: Scholé over Schooling: Learning to be Mary in a Society of Martha | In this episode, Dr. Perrin discusses the difficulty and the importance of keeping with classical learning throughout the entirety of a student's education, and of finding times to be wisdom-seeking Mary in a society that expects everyone to be always-busy Martha. | 43m 50s | ||||||
| 5/28/24 | ![]() Episode 40: The Best Teacher is a Good Book | In this episode Dr. Perrin considers this traditional maxim. Can authors and their books become meaningful teachers and even life-long friends? What is the link between an author and authority? Do we still need living teachers if we have really good books? | 12m 09s | ||||||
| 4/23/24 | ![]() Episode 39: Education for the Next Life | In this episode, Dr. Perrin traces that part of the Christian tradition of education that regarded education as a preparation not only for one's earthly life but ultimately for the next, heavenly life. Can such a heavenly focus be of real, earthly merit? The tradition says yes. | 14m 48s | ||||||
| 4/9/24 | ![]() Episode 38: Repetition Is the Mother of Memory: The Permanent Learning of Petition | In this episode, Dr. Perrin describes the pedagogical maximum of Repetitio Mater Memoriae, noting that repetition can be a delightful activity of seeking and experiencing the same good thing again and again until it is permanently possessed. | 12m 00s | ||||||
| 3/26/24 | ![]() Episode 37: Multum non Multa: The Pedagogical Principle of Going Deep | In this episode, Dr. Perrin describes the ways that teaching a few things deeply and well accelerates learning much better than by superficially covering or skimming over content. | 16m 30s | ||||||
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