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Composed: Timeless Ways of Living

Composed: Timeless Ways of Living

By: Humanitas Institute
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Composed: A timeless way of living. A podcast for women exploring living patterns of virtue, craft, community, and delight, that carry enduring wisdom into modern life.© 2026 Humanitas Institute Art Literary History & Criticism
Episodes
  • Theology of the Body and the Shape of a Life with Alicia Coyle
    Jun 22 2026

    What does the body reveal about vocation and our search for communion? In this episode of Composed, Christine Perrin speaks with Alicia Coyle about Theology of the Body, motherhood, feminine formation, chastity, education, and the slow work of composing a life around gift rather than competition. Their conversation moves from John Paul II and Edith Stein to Little Women, Aristotle, Mary at Cana, and the daily patterns of homeschooling, prayer, reading, and family life. For parents seeking a wiser way through cultural confusion, Alicia offers a thoughtful vision of embodiment as something neither limiting nor abstract, but deeply human, practical, and full of invitation.

    Together, Christine and Alicia consider how ideas become incarnate through teachers, friendships, families, and habits. They ask what it means to see the body as meaningful, how women and men can offer distinct gifts without rivalry, and why formation begins not with rules alone, but with anthropology, wonder, and the truth of the person made in the image of God.

    About the Guest
    Alicia Coyle is a wife and a mother of four young girls. She currently homeschools. She did her undergraduate in philosophy and theology at the Templeton Honors College, and especially enjoyed thinking about Theology of the Body and the many related topics. She has taught in the classical education world and received her Masters in Theology from the Augustine Institute.

    Connect with the Humanitas Institute
    Humanitas Institute | https://humanitasinstitute.org
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    1 hr and 12 mins
  • Growing Up Classical: Literature, Wisdom, and the Questions We Carry
    Jun 8 2026

    What does it mean to grow up classical, and how can the great books help form a young person’s moral imagination? In this episode of Composed, Christine Perrin speaks with Olivia Reardon, a graduating senior at Messiah University, about literature, ethical formation, and the classical Christian classroom. Drawing from Olivia’s senior honors thesis and her upcoming ClassicalU course, Journeying with the Great Books: Ethical Formation in the Classical Christian Classroom, the conversation explores how stories give students language for their deepest questions, offer “handholds” for living in a broken world, and invite readers to return again and again as they grow in wisdom.

    Together, Christine and Olivia reflect on reading as a relational and formative act, one that happens best in a community of trust, conversation, and shared attention. Olivia offers the images of mirrors, windows, and doors as a way of understanding how books help students see themselves, encounter others, and enter experiences beyond their own. The conversation also considers the breadth of the Great Conversation, not as a narrow inheritance for a few, but as a living tradition shaped by many voices and offered for the formation of all.

    About the Guest
    Olivia Reardon earned her B.A. in English with a concentration in literature and minors in Education and Dance from Messiah University in 2026. Olivia grew up in Maryland with her parents and four siblings where she received a Classical, Christian education first through a homeschool co-op and then at a full-time private school. Olivia now teaches Upper School Rhetoric and Literature at Rockbridge Academy, a Classical, Christian School in Crownsville, Maryland. When Olivia is not teaching, she reads abundantly (some of her favorite authors are Fyodor Dostoyevsky, C. S. Lewis, Jane Austen, Toni Morrison, and Kazuo Ishiguro), teaches dance at a local studio, and enjoys the beach, trying new ice cream flavors, and competition with friends and family.

    Guest Links
    Messiah University Honors Program | https://www.messiah.edu/honors-program/
    Reardon’s ClassicalU Course releases Jun 9, 2026 | https://classicalu.com/course-finder

    Connect with the Humanitas Institute
    Humanitas Institute | https://humanitasinstitute.org
    X | https://x.com/HIClassicalEd
    Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/humanitas_institute/
    TikTok | https://www.tiktok.com/@humanitas_institute
    Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61588606585070
    YouTube | https://www.youtube.com/@TheHumanitasInstitute

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    1 hr and 13 mins
  • The Harmony of the Parts: on Beauty, Place, and Belonging
    May 29 2026

    What does beauty have to do with the spaces where we learn, teach, worship, and gather? In this shared bonus episode of Composed and Forged, Christine Perrin speaks with Brian Williams about Templeton Hall, the home of the Templeton Honors College, and the deep work of making a place that feels whole, hospitable, and human. Their conversation moves from architecture and furniture to poetry, asking how beauty forms us before we can fully explain what it has done. This is an episode about attention, creation, community, and the grace of places that help us breathe more deeply and live more faithfully.


    Brian reflects on the making of Templeton Hall at Eastern University as an act of stewardship, one that honors the old while creating room for students and faculty to dwell together in the pursuit of the true, the good, the beautiful. Christine and Brian consider why beauty is not a luxury, why material places matter to Christian formation, and how the experience of a beautiful space can awaken desire for God. The episode closes fittingly with Hopkins’s “Pied Beauty,” a poem of praise for the dappled, particular, and creaturely world.

    References and Links
    Templeton Honors College | https://templeton.eastern.edu/
    Templeton Hall | https://templeton.eastern.edu/life-community/templeton-hall
    Christopher Alexander, The Timeless Way of Building | https://www.amazon.com/Timeless-Way-Building-Christopher-Alexander/dp/0195024028
    Gregory Wolfe, Beauty Will Save the World | https://www.amazon.com/Beauty-Will-Save-World-Ideological/dp/1610171004
    Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Idiot | https://www.amazon.com/Idiot-Penguin-Classics-Fyodor-Dostoyevsky/dp/014044792X
    C. S. Lewis, Surprised by Joy | https://www.amazon.com/Surprised-Joy-Shape-Early-Life/dp/0062565435
    Charles Williams, The Descent of the Dove | https://angelicopress.com/products/the-descent-of-the-dove?srsltid=AfmBOop0_4ZZscz8U6o_ldEPhSYpkPOBsrJotPNumtbWjmzkJWtypzrJ
    Gerard Manley Hopkins, “God’s Grandeur” | https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44395/gods-grandeur
    Gerard Manley Hopkins, “Pied Beauty” | https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44399/pied-beauty


    Connect with the Humanitas Institute

    Humanitas Institute | https://humanitasinstitute.org
    X | https://x.com/HIClassicalEd
    Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/humanitas_institute/
    TikTok | https://www.tiktok.com/@humanitas_institute
    Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61588606585070
    YouTube | https://www.youtube.com/@TheHumanitasInstitute

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    1 hr and 5 mins
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