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Buddha at the Gas Pump

748. Robert Ganung - Where the Rivers Meet: A Journey Through World Spirituality

Buddha at the Gas Pump

Rick Archer

Religion & Spirituality, Spirituality, Society & Culture, Philosophy

4.7737 Ratings

🗓️ 11 February 2026

⏱️ 118 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dr. Robert Ganung, chaplain and teacher at Taft School, joins Rick to explore how deep contemplative practice can ground a life of service, justice, and education. Drawing from Celtic Christianity, Buddhism, Vedanta, and the civil rights tradition, Robert shares how daily meditation, interspiritual study, and a sense of the sacred in all beings inform his work with students and his view of a world in crisis yet ripe for awakening. They discuss non-duality and interconnection, inner practice as fuel for action, the impact of mystical experiences, near-death research, and living with love and courage amid social and planetary upheaval. The Rev. Dr. Robert Ganung is an ordained minister, educator, and school chaplain whose life and work have been shaped by a deep engagement with both Eastern and Western spiritual traditions. He holds a doctorate from the Boston University School of Theology, where his dissertation explored how the mindfulness and meditation practices taught by the Vietnamese Zen monk Thich Nhat Hanh can enrich and nourish the spiritual lives of Christians. That work grew out of years of personal practice and study, including retreats with Thich Nhat Hanh in the 1980s and 1990s, as well as a lifelong interest in contemplative spirituality. For more than four decades, Dr. Ganung has served at the intersection of education, ministry, and social justice. He is currently Chaplain at The Taft School in Connecticut, where he also teaches philosophy, ethics, world religions, and global studies, and where he has brought an extraordinary range of voices into the community—among them Cornel West, Bill McKibben, Ibram X. Kendi, Angela Davis, Tibetan monks, and many others addressing spirituality, human rights, environmental justice, and the moral challenges of our time. Earlier in his career, he served as chaplain and teacher at Milton Academy, Punahou School in Hawai‘i, and Cardigan Mountain School. During these years, he also served as a minister in the United Methodist and United Church of Christ congregations in New England and Hawai‘i. Dr. Ganung’s spiritual formation has been deeply influenced by the Christian mystical tradition—figures such as Howard Thurman, Bede Griffiths, Richard Rohr, & John O’Donohue—as well as by Advaita Vedanta, Buddhism, and interfaith dialogue. Introduced to Hindu philosophy and Sufism as an undergraduate philosophy major at Boston University, he later engaged Siddha Yoga and Advaita teachings, while continuing to explore how contemplative practice leads naturally toward nonviolence, compassion, and justice in the world. Discussion of this interview in the BatGap Community Facebook Group, Interview recorded February 7, 2026

Transcript

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0:00.0

If we can come to that realization that the divine is in and through everything, all animals,

0:04.4

all trees, everything is alive, that there's no separation. You talk a lot about non-duality.

0:09.2

There's no separation. We're in the Buddhists talk about interconnection. We're part of one

0:13.2

another. Deeply, not poetically, but fundamentally at the core. If I get that point across

0:18.2

the students, we're fundamentally interconnected. What

0:21.5

happens to the other happens to you. You walk out of this classroom, you have that awareness,

0:26.6

not just intellectually, but you feel it, that it could be a bit of a change. The world can change

0:31.6

around you.

0:41.2

Welcome to Buddha at the gas pump. Welcome to Buddha at the Gas Pump.

0:42.9

My name is Rick Archer.

0:49.2

Buddha at the Gas Pump is an ongoing series of conversations with spiritually awakening people.

0:57.0

We've done 750 of them now, and if you would like to check out previous ones, go to batgap.com,

1:03.4

B-A-T-G-A-P, and look under the past interviews menu, where you'll see them organized in various ways.

1:08.9

This program is made possible through the support of appreciative listeners and viewers, so if you'd like to support it, please go to the website and you'll see the options.

1:13.6

55 years ago, I was teaching Transcendental Meditation in Connecticut,

1:18.5

and I went up to a prep school called Taft in Watertown, Connecticut,

1:23.5

and taught about 80 kids to meditate.

1:26.1

I was 21 at the time.

1:28.4

Today I'm going to be speaking with Dr. Robert Ganung, who is the chaplain at that prep school.

1:34.6

And I thought it was kind of cosmic that out of all the prep schools and schools in the country, this guy should get a touch in me.

1:42.1

You know, because I have a fondness for that school. It was quite

1:45.5

an experience for me going there and teaching all these people. So Robert is my guest, and you're

...

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