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Richard Riccardi

Richard Riccardi

Author of The Wandering Worshipper on Belonging, Presence, and Community in Faith

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Richard Riccardi Podcast Episodes

Spiritual Life and Leadership

Spiritual Life and Leadership

310. Why Do Guests Find Church Visits Intimidating? With Richard Riccardi, author of The Wandering Worshipper

May 5, 2026

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About this episode

What happens when you visit 33 different churches in a year? Richard Riccardi, author of The Wandering Worshipper, shares his journey of exploring worship spaces, the surprising power of radical hospitality, and how authentic community can transform even the most unexpected visitor.

THIS EPISODE'S HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDE:

Richard Riccardi describes walking into 33 places of worship and discovering that churches are gardeners of fruitful communities.Churches serve as places where everyone can belong, and everyone needs a place to belong.Richard Riccardi intentionally attended a wide variety of worship services, including Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, and Baha’i gatherings.A welcoming environment across different places of worship made a strong positive impression, regardless of faith tradition.Richard Riccardi recounts a rare instance where a welcome felt too aggressive, serving as a caution about coming on too strong with visitors.Church members often believe their enthusiastic friendliness is always positive, but it can sometimes overwhelm newcomers.Experiences of deep hospitality and acceptance can transcend racial, cultural, and religious boundaries.Richard Riccardi explains that styles of worship that encourage relationship and participation engaged him more than rigid, predictable rituals.A diversity of approaches is needed in church messaging and environment to reach both newcomers and longtime members.Markus Watson and Richard Riccardi discuss the importance of “sacred listening” and tailoring responses to visitors’ backgrounds and spiritual needs.Being sensitive about criticizing other faiths or denominations can foster genuine community and dialogue.Authentic community in churches is demonstrated when people support each other in times of need, as seen in the care Richard Riccardi’s mother received near the end of her life.

RELEVANT RESOURCES AND LINK:

Richard RiccardiWebsite - https://thewanderingworshiper.com/Books mentioned:The Wandering Worshipper, by Richard RiccardiBeyond Thingification, by Markus WatsonRelated episodes:167. Called to Each Other218. Trust, Teams, and Transformational Leadership222. Building a Multi-Inclusive ChurchSend me a text! I’d love to know what you're thinking!

Click HERE to get my FREE online course, BECOMING LEADERS OF SHALOM.

Richard Riccardi Podcast Episodes

The Spiritual Forum

33 Churches: A Spiritual Quest for Belonging with Richard G. Riccardi - EP 359

The Spiritual Forum

May 2026

The Innovative Church Leaders Podcast

Lessons from The Wandering Worshipper with Richard Riccardi

The Innovative Church Leaders Podcast

Apr 2026

Authentic Talks 2.0 with Shanta

Episode 300 | Wandering Worshiper Journey | Guest: Richard Riccardi

Authentic Talks 2.0 with Shanta

Apr 2026

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Latest episodes

The Spiritual Forum

33 Churches: A Spiritual Quest for Belonging with Richard G. Riccardi - EP 359

The Spiritual Forum

The Innovative Church Leaders Podcast

Lessons from The Wandering Worshipper with Richard Riccardi

The Innovative Church Leaders Podcast

Authentic Talks 2.0 with Shanta

Episode 300 | Wandering Worshiper Journey | Guest: Richard Riccardi

Authentic Talks 2.0 with Shanta

View all episodes →

Key topics

What church communities can learn from someone who kept walking in as a stranger

This conversation is for people who already attend or lead churches and care deeply about what community is supposed to feel like. Richard reflects on what he noticed by repeatedly entering congregations as an outsider — how small gestures of recognition, warmth, and presence often mattered more than programs or polish. Rather than critiquing churches, he shares what made certain communities quietly magnetic and others easy to forget. The discussion invites listeners to see their own churches through fresh eyes, and to reconsider how belonging is created long before anyone decides to stay. 

What happens when you walk into a different place of worship almost every week for a year?

This conversation is for listeners who are curious about faith but unsure where they belong, whether belonging even matters anymore, or where to start. Richard describes the experience of visiting a different place of worship almost every week as surprisingly energizing rather than destabilizing — each visit sharpening his appreciation for how people gather, welcome, and care for one another. Instead of feeling scattered, he found patterns emerging: the same human needs, the same moments of grace, expressed in common yet different ways. The conversation becomes an exploration of how repeated exposure didn’t dilute meaning, but deepened it, turning curiosity into genuine affection for communal worship. 

We are not the same, but shared humanity and values create belonging despite difference

This conversation is for listeners who worry that difference automatically leads to division, especially in religious spaces. Richard reflects on visiting communities where beliefs, culture, and practices didn’t match his own, yet the same underlying values kept surfacing—care for one another, reverence, hope, and responsibility to the people beside you. Rather than flattening differences, his experience showed how shared human instincts create a foundation for acceptance without requiring agreement. The discussion explores how churches can hold diversity honestly while still nurturing real unity.

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