
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Peter didn't write this passage to justify slavery, he wrote it to reveal that Jesus identifies most deeply with the most vulnerable among us. Drawing on James Cone's Black Liberation Theology, this sermon explores what it means that liberation isn't an afterthought in God's economy, but the essence of divine activity. If Jesus was willing to suffer for our liberation, the question for us is whether we're willing to spend our privilege for the liberation of others.
By Matt StoutPeter didn't write this passage to justify slavery, he wrote it to reveal that Jesus identifies most deeply with the most vulnerable among us. Drawing on James Cone's Black Liberation Theology, this sermon explores what it means that liberation isn't an afterthought in God's economy, but the essence of divine activity. If Jesus was willing to suffer for our liberation, the question for us is whether we're willing to spend our privilege for the liberation of others.