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We’ve all heard the story of Adam and Eve. The so-called “first sin,” the disobedience, the downfall. But what if we’ve been reading it wrong? What if this ancient story isn’t about the first sinner…but the first failed leader?
In this episode, leadership scholar and host Dr. Kimberly DeSimone challenges centuries of patriarchal interpretation by reframing the Genesis narrative through the lens of modern, evidence-based leadership theory. From blame-shifting to moral cowardice, we explore how Adam’s behavior maps onto core leadership failures across five foundational models: Transformational, Servant, Authentic, Adaptive, and Ethical Leadership.
We also examine the enduring harm caused by reading Eve as the source of sin—a misreading that has fueled generations of bias, blame, and the marginalization of women. With insight from feminist and womanist scholars like Phyllis Trible, Renita Weems, and Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza, this episode is a powerful call to reclaim sacred texts in ways that center accountability, equity, and truth.
Key Topics Covered:
Biblical References:
Genesis 2:16–17, 2:22, 3:6, 3:12
Scholars & Thought Leaders:
Trible, P. (1984). Texts of Terror
Trible, P. (1978). God and the Rhetoric of Sexuality
Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza – In Memory of Her (1983)
Renita J. Weems – Just a Sister Away (1988)
Carol Meyers – Discovering Eve (1988)
Harding, S. (1991). Whose Science? Whose Knowledge?: Thinking from Women's Lives
Code, L. (1991). What Can She Know? Feminist Theory and the Construction of Knowledge
By Dr. Kimberly DeSimone5
127127 ratings
We’ve all heard the story of Adam and Eve. The so-called “first sin,” the disobedience, the downfall. But what if we’ve been reading it wrong? What if this ancient story isn’t about the first sinner…but the first failed leader?
In this episode, leadership scholar and host Dr. Kimberly DeSimone challenges centuries of patriarchal interpretation by reframing the Genesis narrative through the lens of modern, evidence-based leadership theory. From blame-shifting to moral cowardice, we explore how Adam’s behavior maps onto core leadership failures across five foundational models: Transformational, Servant, Authentic, Adaptive, and Ethical Leadership.
We also examine the enduring harm caused by reading Eve as the source of sin—a misreading that has fueled generations of bias, blame, and the marginalization of women. With insight from feminist and womanist scholars like Phyllis Trible, Renita Weems, and Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza, this episode is a powerful call to reclaim sacred texts in ways that center accountability, equity, and truth.
Key Topics Covered:
Biblical References:
Genesis 2:16–17, 2:22, 3:6, 3:12
Scholars & Thought Leaders:
Trible, P. (1984). Texts of Terror
Trible, P. (1978). God and the Rhetoric of Sexuality
Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza – In Memory of Her (1983)
Renita J. Weems – Just a Sister Away (1988)
Carol Meyers – Discovering Eve (1988)
Harding, S. (1991). Whose Science? Whose Knowledge?: Thinking from Women's Lives
Code, L. (1991). What Can She Know? Feminist Theory and the Construction of Knowledge