
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
How the radical intertwining of critical race theory, biblical economics, and systemic sin challenges modern Christian assumptions around capitalism, race, and justice. Continuing their Exile Series, Mike Erre and Tim Stafford welcome back theologian Timothy Gombis to explore how the teachings of Jesus, Paul, and the Old Testament offer a countercultural vision for economic and social life rooted in repentance, restoration, and community.
From the Lord’s Prayer’s plea to “forgive debts” to Paul’s vision of a just and unified humanity under Christ, this episode uncovers how deeply Christianity has been co-opted by capitalist ideology, individualism, and white supremacy—and what it might look like to reclaim the Jesus way in the public, economic, and racial spheres of our society.
Key Takeaways: • Critical Race Theory and the Gospel – Understanding CRT as a biblical tool to help Christians identify and dismantle racism baked into culture, law, and power—not as a political threat, but as an opportunity for justice and transformation. • Jubilee Economics vs. Capitalism – Exploring how God's economy of debt forgiveness, land redistribution, and care for the poor clashes with modern capitalist assumptions about profit, property, and merit. • Why Individualism Fails – How evangelicalism’s overemphasis on individual sin blinds us to the powers and systemic evil Paul confronts in his letters. • God’s Preferential Focus – Learning to emulate a God who listens to the oppressed and acts for their liberation—and recognizing that justice, not comfort, is the call of Christian discipleship. • What Discipleship Really Costs – Why following Jesus must mean unlearning inherited racial, economic, and theological assumptions, and how it might reshape our church budgets, politics, and personal lives.
Guest Highlights: Timothy Gombis – Bible scholar, professor, and host of the “Faith Improvised” podcast, Gombis offers a prophetic yet humble perspective on race, economics, and Christian complicity in injustice. With his upcoming commentary on the gospel of Mark and a lifelong journey of being “a student in process,” Gombis models how to wrestle faithfully with scripture and the systems we live in.
Resources Mentioned: • Faith Improvised Podcast – Hosted by Timothy Gombis • Book: “Resurrecting Justice” by Douglas Harink • Robert P. Jones – “White Too Long” • Matthew 25:31–46 – The call to justice as criteria for the final judgment • Deuteronomy 15 – Jubilee and debt forgiveness • Kevin Kruse – “One Nation Under God”
Be part of a community that’s asking better questions, embracing costly discipleship, and seeking the justice of God’s kingdom over cultural allegiance. Don’t forget to subscribe, review, and follow Voxology on your favorite platform.
We love hearing your perspectives! Email us your thoughts at [email protected], or engage with us on social media.
Watch on YouTube: VOXOLOGY TV Grab Vox Merch: Etsy Store Learn more about the show: VoxologyPodcast.com Subscribe via Apple Podcasts or Spotify Support us on Patreon Listen to curated music on Voxology Radio – Spotify
Follow us on Instagram: @voxologypodcast Like us on Facebook: Voxology Podcast Follow Mike Erre: twitter.com/mikeerre Music by Timothy John Stafford // @GoneTimothy
As always, we encourage and would love discussion as we pursue. Feel free to email in questions to [email protected], and to engage the conversation on Facebook and Instagram.
We're on YouTube (if you're into that kinda thing): VOXOLOGY TV.
Our Merch Store! ETSY
Learn more about the Voxology Podcast
Subscribe on iTunes or Spotify
Support the Voxology Podcast on Patreon
The Voxology Spotify channel can be found here: Voxology Radio
Follow us on Instagram: @voxologypodcast and "like" us on Facebook
Follow Mike on Twitter: www.twitter.com/mikeerre
Music in this episode by Timothy John Stafford
Instagram & Twitter: @GoneTimothy
4.8
10571,057 ratings
How the radical intertwining of critical race theory, biblical economics, and systemic sin challenges modern Christian assumptions around capitalism, race, and justice. Continuing their Exile Series, Mike Erre and Tim Stafford welcome back theologian Timothy Gombis to explore how the teachings of Jesus, Paul, and the Old Testament offer a countercultural vision for economic and social life rooted in repentance, restoration, and community.
From the Lord’s Prayer’s plea to “forgive debts” to Paul’s vision of a just and unified humanity under Christ, this episode uncovers how deeply Christianity has been co-opted by capitalist ideology, individualism, and white supremacy—and what it might look like to reclaim the Jesus way in the public, economic, and racial spheres of our society.
Key Takeaways: • Critical Race Theory and the Gospel – Understanding CRT as a biblical tool to help Christians identify and dismantle racism baked into culture, law, and power—not as a political threat, but as an opportunity for justice and transformation. • Jubilee Economics vs. Capitalism – Exploring how God's economy of debt forgiveness, land redistribution, and care for the poor clashes with modern capitalist assumptions about profit, property, and merit. • Why Individualism Fails – How evangelicalism’s overemphasis on individual sin blinds us to the powers and systemic evil Paul confronts in his letters. • God’s Preferential Focus – Learning to emulate a God who listens to the oppressed and acts for their liberation—and recognizing that justice, not comfort, is the call of Christian discipleship. • What Discipleship Really Costs – Why following Jesus must mean unlearning inherited racial, economic, and theological assumptions, and how it might reshape our church budgets, politics, and personal lives.
Guest Highlights: Timothy Gombis – Bible scholar, professor, and host of the “Faith Improvised” podcast, Gombis offers a prophetic yet humble perspective on race, economics, and Christian complicity in injustice. With his upcoming commentary on the gospel of Mark and a lifelong journey of being “a student in process,” Gombis models how to wrestle faithfully with scripture and the systems we live in.
Resources Mentioned: • Faith Improvised Podcast – Hosted by Timothy Gombis • Book: “Resurrecting Justice” by Douglas Harink • Robert P. Jones – “White Too Long” • Matthew 25:31–46 – The call to justice as criteria for the final judgment • Deuteronomy 15 – Jubilee and debt forgiveness • Kevin Kruse – “One Nation Under God”
Be part of a community that’s asking better questions, embracing costly discipleship, and seeking the justice of God’s kingdom over cultural allegiance. Don’t forget to subscribe, review, and follow Voxology on your favorite platform.
We love hearing your perspectives! Email us your thoughts at [email protected], or engage with us on social media.
Watch on YouTube: VOXOLOGY TV Grab Vox Merch: Etsy Store Learn more about the show: VoxologyPodcast.com Subscribe via Apple Podcasts or Spotify Support us on Patreon Listen to curated music on Voxology Radio – Spotify
Follow us on Instagram: @voxologypodcast Like us on Facebook: Voxology Podcast Follow Mike Erre: twitter.com/mikeerre Music by Timothy John Stafford // @GoneTimothy
As always, we encourage and would love discussion as we pursue. Feel free to email in questions to [email protected], and to engage the conversation on Facebook and Instagram.
We're on YouTube (if you're into that kinda thing): VOXOLOGY TV.
Our Merch Store! ETSY
Learn more about the Voxology Podcast
Subscribe on iTunes or Spotify
Support the Voxology Podcast on Patreon
The Voxology Spotify channel can be found here: Voxology Radio
Follow us on Instagram: @voxologypodcast and "like" us on Facebook
Follow Mike on Twitter: www.twitter.com/mikeerre
Music in this episode by Timothy John Stafford
Instagram & Twitter: @GoneTimothy
4,297 Listeners
1,412 Listeners
999 Listeners
289 Listeners
1,965 Listeners
488 Listeners
217 Listeners
256 Listeners
869 Listeners
1,887 Listeners
445 Listeners
802 Listeners
115 Listeners
499 Listeners
644 Listeners