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Campaigners

Learning to love yourself: living in a world of self-image – Revd Joanna Jepson

About This Episode

The Revd Joanna Jepson is an Anglican priest, campaigner, first female chaplain of the London College of Fashion and a padre to the British Army. Born with a now corrected congenital jaw deformity, Joanna made headlines in 2001 for her legal challenge to the late abortion of a foetus with a cleft lip and palate – raising questions of morality over how we treat people born with disabilities. Her memoir, A Lot Like Eve: Fashion, Faith & Fig Leaves, draws comparisons between her life and that of the biblical Eve being shut out of the Garden of Eden; offering a contrast of life before and after facial reconstruction and an exploration of the world of self-image.

Revd Joanna Jepson, Anglican Priest, Campaigner & Author

Revd Joanna Jepson is an Anglican priest, author, broadcaster and coach. She trained at Bristol and Cambridge and, following her ordination in 2003, served in parishes in Chester and London. Joanna has since worked speaking, coaching and leading groups across the UK, USA, West Africa & Australia. In 2006 she set up the first chaplaincy in the British Fashion Industry, based at London College of Fashion. In 2015, Joanna’s first book was published by Bloomsbury. A Lot Like Eve; Fashion, Faith & Fig Leaves, charts her journey through faith, deconstruction and reconstruction. Joanna is based in Wells, with her husband and son, and, as a military chaplain, spent the first part of 2021 working with the UN Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus.  She is a regular contributor on BBC Radio 2 and guest on Radio 4, BBC, ITV and Channel4, and has written for the national press including The Independent, The Times and The Sunday Telegraph. She is a patron of Alabaré; a charity that seeks to end homelessness for military veterans, vulnerable adults and people with lifelong disabilities.

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Lockdown List

What is a book that has changed your life?

The Universal Christ by Richard Rohr and Shameless by Nadia Bolz-Weber

What are you watching at the moment?

Unorthodox, for the third time.

Who is your biggest inspiration and why?

Etty Hillesum. She was in her 20s working in a Jewish work camp and wrestled through all the degradation around her to be LOVE to those who were struggling. Her love even enabled her to recognise the humanity of the Nazi soldiers and she wrote about needing to pray for one of them. Such an astonishing woman. She lived with love and joy even to her last place; Auschwitz where she died at the age of 29.

 

In one sentence, describe your ‘new normal’.

Paying attention to the undulations and saying yes to the abundance of it all.

What is your best tip for life?

Lean in, pick it up and wrestle with it, make life out of it, and be grateful.

A quote for life

My Sandhurst Colour Sergeant bellowing: “Do the right thing, not the easy thing”, is one that I’ve found hard to shake off, especially as a parent. But the nuns I lived with used to say: “There are no shoulds and oughts in the Kingdom of God”, and my favourite, “Nothing is wasted in God’s economy.”

What is your lockdown soundtrack?

Who’s Yellen Now by Dessa; Sister by K.Flay;  Over the Hills by the Band and Bugles of The Rifles; Mozart’s House by Clean Bandit and, finally, this: https://open.spotify.com/album/35CNyoexp8Zy2xUchxazlu?highlight=spotify:track:7x1WulsQC3wgxveCaJJH0P 

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