Spring 2021
Overlooked and Despised: Lectures on a Humanist Re-Thinking of Biblical Outsiders
Job’s Wife and the Price of Integrity
Dr. Anthony B. Pinn
Date: May 14, 2021
Location: Webinar hosted by First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis
Respondent: Kim Hampton, Earlham School of Religion graduate and researcher on the intersections of race, religion, and popular culture
Job’s wife reveals an unexpected truth, and confronts us with a hard question: What are we willing to live (and die) for?
Dr. Pinn's spring 2021 lectures explore two questions — two related queries motivated in part by the rabid nationalism and marginalization of despised populations marking so much of public life in the United States. He frames them with respect to the way in which religious supporters of nationalism have buttressed their position using theological language and religious principles drawn from their reading of scripture. Mindful of this, is there a way for liberal religionists, and humanists more broadly, to read scripture so as to counter Christian justifications for national disregard and hostility? In other words, are there life lessons within scripture that support a more progressive and justice-minded agenda for personal living in community?
By re-reading three key narratives these lectures aim to help Unitarian Universalists in particular, and a wider liberal-humanist audience in general, rethink the lessons taught by the Bible. The goal in doing so is to offer an alternate religious-theological grammar and network of principles that better position liberal religionists to think and speak a more complex sense of injustice and justice.
Pinn is the Agnes Cullen Arnold Professor of Humanities and Professor of Religious Studies at Rice University. He has published several books advancing scholarship related to religion and culture and has lectured nationally and internationally on topics related to his intellectual interests in black religion, humanism, and religion and popular culture.