Empower your mind and embrace mental health awareness with Speak Harmony! 💛
Join us for an inspiring episode featuring Dr. Beth Sarah Wright and Dr. Sharon Reed as we dive into real talk on mental health, resilience, and self-care. From breaking stigma to building community, this is a conversation full of heart and healing. 💬✨
Let’s uplift each other, speak harmony, and spread the message—like, share, and subscribe!
Bless your Advent journey with these inspiring daily devotions exploring the Sunday psalms of Advent. Join four women authors offering diverse perspectives on psalms of adoration, lament, repentance, and thanks.
This collection connects us to the eternal truths of the psalter by reflecting on the assigned Sunday psalms for Advent from all three liturgical years. Each daily devotion includes prompts for going deeper with personal reflection or faithful practices.
During a time of chaos and confusion, these daily devotions will help you stay anchored in the knowledge that “The earth is the Lord’s and all that is in it, the world and all who dwell therein” (Psalm 24:1).
Also available as an eBook on Amazon Kindle and Apple Books.
Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright, an Atlanta-based author, dynamic speaker, and strategic thought partner, writes to inspire transformation and change in communities, institutions, and personal lives. Her impactful work tackles deep-rooted challenges that demand identity shifts and enhanced capacities to achieve lasting, meaningful change. Dr. Wright champions authenticity, striving to align our aspirational identities with our lived realities. Dr. Wright is the author of seven influential books, served for 10 years on the senior leadership team as the director of enrollment management at the largest parish Episcopal school in the country, and serves as an Adjunct Assistant Professor in Psychiatry at Emory School of Medicine.
A dictionary definition of authenticity — to be true to one’s own character — applies to individuals, but writer Beth-Sarah Wright ’95 extends it to institutions, including her alma mater.
The Dean’s Forum featuring Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright, from the Episcopal Cathedral of St. Philip, Atlanta
The author and speaker will sign copies of her books and talk about surviving depression from 7 to 9 p.m. Sept. 3 in the bookstore of the Cathedral of St. Philip, 2744 Peachtree Road N.W., Atlanta.
“Most Listened To Episode of 2020!”
In this episode, Dr. Meeks sits down with Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright and has a conversation around respect and dignity based on her new book Dignity. In the Episcopal Church, we often speak of dignity. We especially speak of it when we renew our Baptismal Covenant in that we recommit ourselves to respecting the dignity of every human being. While we strive for this, sometimes we fall short. Listen in for the full conversation on dignity, the stories, and the challenges of living into this call as followers of Jesus.
We Admit! True Stories from Admission & Enrollment Professionals
Every independent school has a mission statement, but how often does our current, lived reality match this ideal vision? Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright is the Director of Enrollment Management at Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School in Atlanta, Georgia, and a passionate advocate for building authentic communities through DIGNITY: Diversity, Identity, Growth, Nurture, Integrity, Transparency, and Yield. Learn more about Beth-Sarah and her newest book Dignity: Seven Strategies for Creating Authentic Community at bethsarahwright.com
Author Beth-Sarah Wright shares insights on her book ‘Dignity: Seven Strategies for Creating Authentic Community’ with CVM At Sunrise.
The Dignity Lens in Education
Navigating Adaptive Challenges: Using the Dignity Lens for Organizational Success, with Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright, Author of Dignity: Seven Strategies for Creating Authentic Community
The Way of Love with Bishop Michael Curry
Beth-Sarah on Day 1 radio program
God knows each of us intimately, Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright tells us—all our blemishes, our joys, our missteps—and yet God chooses to see our dignity. What might happen in our lives, our communities, our world, if we actually did that?