African Americans Understood Paul’s Words While Slave Owners Twisted Them (Lisa Bowens)
- Part of By The Oppressed
Episode Summary
Discussing her book African American Readings of Paul: Reception, Resistance, and Transformation, Dr. Lisa Bowens identifies how people twisted the Scriptures written by the Apostle Paul to promote slavery and justify it as a Christian practice. But at the same time, Dr. Bowens explains, Black Americans were interpreting Paul’s writings for themselves, and throughout history, they still appealed to Pauline texts extensively to protest and resist their oppression, and ultimately to build a strong foundation for the American church.
Chapters
- 0:26 Hidden voices in Black Christian thought
- 4:25 What does sScripture actually say?
- 6:15 Nancy Ambrose and how Paul was preached to the enslaved
- 10:18 1774 Slave Petition
- 16:37 The slavery project and the broadening of the canon
- 19:40 John Jea and the miracle of literacy
- 25:40 Why we need to hear different voices
- 29:50 Salvation is spiritual and physical
- 34:37 For economic gain
Transcripts are AI generated and are not guaranteed to correctly reflect the content of the podcast.
Transcript
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Dr. Lisa Bowens
Dr. Lisa Marie Bowens (PhD, Princeton Theological Seminary) is Associate Professor of New Testament at Princeton Theological Seminary. Her first book, An Apostle in Battle: Paul and Spiritual Warfare in 2 Corinthians 12:1-10, is a revision of her dissertation and examines Paul’s ascent to the third heaven through a cosmic/apocalyptic lens. Her second book, African American Readings of Paul: Reception, Resistance, and Transformation, is the first book to investigate a historical trajectory of how African Americans have understood Paul and utilized his work to resist and protest injustice and racism in their own writings from the 1700s to the mid-twentieth century. Her current projects include working as a contributor and co-editor with Scot McKnight and Joseph Modica on Preaching Romans From Here (forthcoming); as co-writer with Amy Peeler on an article on New Testament, race, and gender for The New Testament in Color (forthcoming); and two commentaries, one on 2 Corinthians and one on 1–2 Thessalonians.Her research interests include Paul and apocalyptic literature, Pauline anthropology, Pauline epistemology, discipleship in the gospels, African American Pauline Hermeneutics, and New Testament exegesis and interpretation. She is a member of the Society of Biblical Literature, the Society of Pentecostal Studies, Society for the Study of Black Religion, American Academy of Religion, and a past Fund for Theological Education fellow.
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