Adventist Peace Radio, Ep. 96: A House on Fire—Adventist Faith & Racism #1

Maury Jackson, DMin, Nathan Brown, and Lisa Clark Diller, PhD, launch a new series about Adventists and racism based on the book, A House on Fire: How Adventist Faith Responds to Race and Racism.

Maury Jackson and Nathan Brown edited the book, which brings together a number of writers to analyze these critical themes.

Adventist Peace Radio is excited to bring you this special series, featuring a number of the authors who contributed to the book. We are also excited to be co-producing and distributing the series with Adventist Voices, the podcast run by Spectrum: The Journal of the Adventist Forum.

Maury Jackson, DMin

Maury D. Jackson is Chair of the Pastoral Studies Department and Associate Professor of Practical Theology for the HMS Richards Divinity School at La Sierra University. He is an ordained Seventh-day Adventist pastor with 15 years of experience in pastoral leadership, serving in congregations in the Southern California area. He holds a DMin degree from Claremont School of Theology in interdisciplinary studies of Theology, Ethics, and Culture. He formerly taught for the philosophy department of Antelope Valley College. He has authored multiple articles and book chapters on a range of topics: racism, ethics, environmental justice, hermeneutics, black church studies, and preaching.

Nathan Brown

Nathan Brown is Book Editor at Signs Publishing Company, the Seventh-day Adventist publishing house for the South Pacific. He is a continuing student in a Master’s program in Human Rights, having previous degrees in law, literature, English, writing, and theology and justice. Nathan is the author/editor of 18 books, including Advent, Of Falafels and Following Jesus, and For the Least of These, and has written for magazines and websites around the world. He is married to Angela, and they live in a small rural community near Melbourne, Australia.

Lisa Clark Diller, PhD

Lisa Diller is a history professor at Southern Adventist University and co-director of the Adventist Peace Fellowship along with Karah Thompson. And if you look through the endorsements in the book, you’ll find a literary thumbs-up from Lisa.

SHOW NOTES

We hope you’ll read the book as you listen to the series. A House on Fire is available at Amazon.com and the Adventist Book Center.

Series landing page – http://adventistpeace.org/house-on-fire

CONCLUSION

Thank you for joining us for this episode of Adventist Peace Radio. If you appreciated this conversation, then I invite you to support the podcast by sharing the episode (and this entire series) with your friends and family members. You can also support the podcast by giving us a shout-out on social media, posting a review wherever you access this podcast, or by donating to help cover the expenses of running a podcast. You can donate online at AdventistPeace.org/donate.

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EMAIL: And as we plan for future episodes, let us know who you think should be on the podcast. You can write to us at podcast@adventistpeace.org.

MUSIC: Our theme music is “Green Fields” by Scott Holmes, who makes his music available via the Free Music Archive.

PRODUCTION TEAM: This episode was recorded by Nathan Brown and edited by Jeff Boyd.

DISCLAIMER: The Adventist Peace Fellowship is an independent 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that supports work for peacemaking and social justice building upon the values of the Seventh-day Adventist tradition. We are not part of, affiliated with, or supported by the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists or any affiliates known as the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Any content, opinions, statements, products or services offered by Adventist Peace Fellowship, are solely those of our organization, and not those of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.