Homebrewed Christianity

From Garden to New Jerusalem: Why the Church's Economic Blindness Matters

9 snips
Dec 11, 2025
Brian McLaren, a progressive Christian author, joins economic geographer Guillermo Bervejillo and community organizer Dawson Allen in a thought-provoking discussion. They challenge the church's economic blindness, framing economics as pivotal to understanding theology. Topics include Kojin Karatani's modes of exchange, the interplay of nation, state, and capital, and how these affect social outcomes. They emphasize the biblical narrative as a guide to communal reciprocity, calling for practical steps churches can take to reclaim community autonomy and foster deeper connections.
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INSIGHT

Bible As Economic Framework

  • The Bible frames human life before institutions: no religion, state, nation, or market exist in the garden story.
  • This suggests scripture can teach different modes of human exchange, not just spiritual truths.
ANECDOTE

McLaren's Shift From Theology To Economics

  • Brian McLaren recounts questioning theology's primacy and feeling economics shapes what's theologically possible.
  • He consulted economist David Corten who warned about economic fundamentalism's power.
INSIGHT

Church's Economic Blindness

  • Early Protestant debates about interest show theological concern for economic forms and neighborliness.
  • The church's learned ignorance about economics has ethical and spiritual costs.
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