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    after whiteness

    Explore " after whiteness" with insightful episodes like "Willie Jennings / The Christian Imagination: Theological Complexity, Communication, Cultivation, and Community", "After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging - With Dr. Willie J. Jennings" and "Willie Jennings's After Whiteness: Belonging, Intimacy, and Resisting White Masculinity / Matt Croasmun" from podcasts like ""For the Life of the World / Yale Center for Faith & Culture", "Regent College Podcast" and "For the Life of the World / Yale Center for Faith & Culture"" and more!

    Episodes (3)

    Willie Jennings / The Christian Imagination: Theological Complexity, Communication, Cultivation, and Community

    Willie Jennings / The Christian Imagination: Theological Complexity, Communication, Cultivation, and Community

    Willie James Jennings (Yale Divinity School) joins Matt Croasmun for a conversation about the future of theology, addressing the Christian inability to hold complexity, public communication, and deep formation together in a way that shows how theology is for our very lives.

    Seven years ago the Yale Center for Faith and Culture interviewed a diverse array of theologians about the present woes and future potential of theology. Some five years and a pandemic later, the landscape of theological education seems like it's at a crossroads. The driving purpose of Christian higher education is in question as colleges, universities, and seminaries across denominations and around the world consider how they'll move forward in the wake of stark realities this pandemic laid bare. So it's worth revisiting the conversation to see what has changed, what holds true, and what hopes we're still holding on to. For today’s episode, we're featuring a conversation between Matt Croasmun and Dr. Willie James Jennings, Associate Professor of Systematic Theology and Africana Studies at Yale Divinity School, an ordained Baptist minister, and author of The Christian Imagination: Theology and the Origins of Race, and more recently After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging. Willie reminds us to be looking for the opportunities in the middle of crises of theological education; he worries about the inability to hold complexity, public communication, and deep formation together in a way that shows how theology is for our very lives; he speaks to the recent aversion to pastoral ministry, which is theology for the sake of the people; he touches on the role of Christian theology in a pluralistic world, asking how theologians might learn from comedians; and he encourages all Christians to take up the theological call to courage, the call to see, listen, and and alleviate suffering, and the call to a theology of life.

    Show notes

    • How to make theology attractive 
    • Who do we want to teach? 
    • Secular religious studies versus confessional environments
    • “Never let a good crisis go to waste” 
    • educational ecology: learning environments 
    • Doctoral students, do you want to be a teacher? 
    • The pastor versus the professor: the call to teach 
    • Theology and plurality 
    • Theology and violence: naming the pressure points of suffering 
    • The Christian frame versus the real matter at hand 
    • “We want to be asking human questions, they’re not just Christian questions” 
    • The alleviation of pain and suffering comes before questions of the good life 
    • The real goal is the healthy neighborhood
    • Reverence and theology 

    About Willie Jennings

    Willie Jennings is Associate Professor of Systematic Theology, Africana Studies, and Religious Studies at Yale University; he is an ordained Baptist minister and is author of The Christian Imagination: Theology and the Origins of Race,Acts: A Commentary, The Revolution of the Intimate, and most recently, After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging.

    Other Episodes Featuring Willie Jennings

    Production Notes

    • This podcast featured theologian Willie James Jennings and biblical scholar Matthew Croasmun
    • Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa
    • Hosted by Evan Rosa
    • Production Assistance by Martin Chan
    • A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about
    • Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging - With Dr. Willie J. Jennings

    After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging - With Dr. Willie J. Jennings

    Theological education is about the formation of people, communities, and the world.  However, much of our theological and higher education has been designed and formed by rugged individualism and what is known as whiteness.  Today we had a conversation with Dr. Willie J. Jennings about his new book, After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging.   Listen in on what Dr. Jennings means by whiteness and how it has permeated our theological institutions.  We hope you enjoy this conversation.


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    Willie Jennings's After Whiteness: Belonging, Intimacy, and Resisting White Masculinity / Matt Croasmun

    Willie Jennings's After Whiteness: Belonging, Intimacy, and Resisting White Masculinity / Matt Croasmun

    Matt Croasmun honors theologian Willie Jennings and his work in After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging. Willie Jennings is Associate Professor of Systematic Theology and Africana Studies at Yale Divinity School.

    Show Notes

    • Willie Jennings, After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging
    • Arvo Pärt’s Te Deum
    • “Be ware the hidden curriculum."
    • White, self-sufficient masculinity: "a way of being that conflates knowing with owning, holding up possession, mastery, and control (vices all) as virtues” and “an ideal we cannot achieve"
    • Racial paterfamilias: conflating person and property
    • Beyond education
    • Mutual belonging and deep connection
    • Quote from After Whiteness: The cultivation of belonging should be the goal of all education. Not just any kind of belonging, but a profoundly creaturely belonging that performs the returning of the creature to the creator and a returning to an intimate and erotic energy that drives life together with God. These words, intimacy and eroticism, have been so commodified and sexualized that we, Christians have turned away from them and fear that they irredeemably signify sexual antinomianism, moral chaos, and sin, or at least the need to police, such words and the power of they invoke. But intimacy and eroticism speak of our birthright formed in the body of Jesus and the protocols of braking sharing, touching, tasting, and seeing the goodness of God. There at his body, the spirit joins us in an urgent work, forming a willing spirit in us that is eager to hold and to help, to support and to speak, to touch and to listen, gaining through this work, the deepest truths of creaturely belonging: that we are erotic souls. No body that is not a soul, no soul that is not a body, no being without touching, no touching without being. This is not an exclusive Christian truth, but a truth of the creature that Christian life is intended to witness."

    About Willie Jennings

    Willie Jennings is Associate Professor of Systematic Theology, Africana Studies, and Religious Studies at Yale University; he is an ordained Baptist minister and is author of The Christian Imagination: Theology and the Origins of Race,Acts: A Commentary, The Revolution of the Intimate, and most recently, After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging. You can hear him in podcast episodes 7 and 13 of For the Life of the World.

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