I Didn’t Leave Angry. I Left Healed.
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There’s a story many people expect when someone leaves church.
Anger. Bitterness. Scandal. Collapse.
But what happens when someone leaves not because they were rejected… but because they finally healed?
In this deeply personal episode of The Radiant Soul Podcast, Jay Clark shares the story of returning to church after more than twenty years away following rejection from the Baptist church as a young gay man. What began as a simple Lenten commitment on Ash Wednesday of 2025 became a profound year of healing, belonging, service, contemplation, and spiritual restoration within the Episcopal tradition.
Jay opens up about becoming deeply involved in church life, serving Eucharist, teaching, leading groups, and finally living the spiritual life he once believed had been stolen from him forever.
But one year later, another Ash Wednesday brought an unexpected realization:
the wound had healed.
This episode explores religious trauma, embodied healing, burnout, spirituality beyond performance, nature as sanctuary, contemplative practice, and what it means to outgrow survival mode without losing your faith.
This is not a story about abandoning God.
It’s a story about finally no longer needing to prove your belovedness.
Topics include:
• Religious trauma and healing
• LGBTQ+ spirituality and belonging
• The Episcopal Church and contemplative faith
• Burnout and over-functioning in spiritual spaces
• Embodied spirituality and meditation
• Nature mysticism and sacred presence
• Leaving church without anger
• Healing beyond certainty
If you’ve ever wrestled with faith, belonging, identity, burnout, or the ache of spiritual reconstruction, this conversation may feel like sitting beside a fire with someone who finally learned how to breathe again.
Follow The Radiant Soul Podcast for more conversations on embodied spirituality, healing, contemplative living, and the sacred ordinary.