90: God's Glory or Ours?: Reclaiming the Joy of Performance Part 2 with Melissa V. Cartwright 09.05.25

Melissa V. Cartwright


This is part 2 of our two-part series talking with Singer/Songwriter Melissa V. Cartwright. If you haven’t already, go back and listen to part 1 and then come back here for part 2.

In this follow-up conversation with Melissa V. Cartwright, we continue unpacking the process of spiritual deconstruction—especially how it reshapes the way we create. We talk about what happens when the certainty we once clung to dissolves, and how grief, disorientation, and memory show up in our art.

From “cry nights” and purity culture to unexpected dreams and desert metaphors, we explore the tension between old beliefs and creative freedom.

Ultimately, we ask: what if not knowing is a perfectly good reason to make something?


Melissa’s Bio:
Singer, Songwriter, and Bilingual Voice and Performance Coach Melissa V. Cartwright is the founder of MVC Performance and the host of Passionate Performer PODCAST (in fact, Emily was a guest on her show—and we’ve the episode below). With over 25 years of experience in TV, radio, studio work, and musical theatre, she helps artists step on stage with confidence—whether it’s their very first open mic or a headlining show. 


Where to find Melissa:

Website: www.mvcperformance.com
Instagram: @mvcperformance
TikTok: @mvcperformance
Passionate Performer Podcast: on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube


TIMECODES
0:00 - Intro
1:25 - As evangelicals, how do we enjoy making things now?
3:53 - Allowing ourselves to grieve
10:40 - Uncertainty and the unknown
13:59 - “I don’t know” breeds humility
17:17 - “Compassion led me away from the church.”
19:46 - What made Carrie start questioning - the Teen Mania missions trip story
24:34 - Christians are mean
26:56 - Aquire the Fire
29:49 - “Cry Night”
33:44 - Cry Night - an explanation for those who didn’t grow up weird like we did
37:32 - Expendable bodies in an evangelical war machine
41:11 - Numbness
42:36 - Brain versus body & artists
44:05 - Artists need space and freedom to create