December 15, 2022

New Book Sparks Conversations about Racism

A House on Fire includes the contribution of twenty Seventh-day Adventist scholars.

Nathan Brown, for Adventist Record
Maury Jackson (far right) hosted a panel discussion with contributors to the book A House on Fire at La Sierra University Church. [Photo: Adventist Record]

A new book addressing issues of race and racism was launched at the meetings of the Adventist Society for Religious Studies (ASRS) in Denver, Colorado, United States, on November 19, 2022. Published by Signs Publishing, A House on Fire: How Adventist Faith Responds to Race and Racism collects chapters from 20 Adventist scholars, pastors, and writers responding to this issue in the contemporary world. Contributors include Kendra Haloviak Valentine, Kayle de Waal, John Skrzypaszek, Olive Hemmings, and Michael Campbell, with an afterword by John Webster.

Described by ASRS president Sigve Tonstad as a “landmark book,” A House on Fire prompted a Saturday (Sabbath) morning panel discussion hosted by ASRS secretary-treasurer Zack Plantak, professor of religion at Loma Linda University. 

“For me, it was absolutely clear that the racism that we have seen and experienced in recent years has illustrated the brokenness in the world we inhabit,” Plantak said, “so I wanted to have as many of the diverse chapter authors from this book be present and speak at our meetings in Denver.”

The co-editor of A House on Fire is Maury Jackson, associate professor of practical theology at La Sierra University, who also hosted a panel discussion with contributors to the book at the La Sierra University Church. “The idea for this book grew in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd and the antiracism protests that followed, and we saw the need to have a response from our faith community to this large issue of our time,” he explained. “We began sending out invitations to the first contributors in October 2020, and the list grew over the intervening time. We were intentional about inviting contributors from a wide variety of ethnic backgrounds, from a variety of Adventist institutions, and with a good representation of female scholars.”

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A House on Fire panel at the Adventist Society for Religious Studies meetings in Denver included (left to right) Zack Plantak, Maury Jackson, Olive Hemmings, Angela Li, Greg Hoenes, Yi-Shen Ma, and Matthew Burdette. [Photo: Adventist Record]

Jackson said that he learned from reading the various chapters “how complicated the topic of race actually is” but urges that this makes such conversations all the more important. “We could have said more about many aspects of this issue,” he said. “Even if the conversations are sometimes awkward, we get better at it by talking about it.”

And Jackson said that working on this book project has reinforced the valuable contribution that Adventist faith can make. “I didn’t expect so many of our writers to make the connections between colonialism, racism, and Christianity,” he admitted. “But there are more resources in our tradition eschatological readings that can be used in this kind of social critique.”

According to Plantak, the presentation of A House on Fire at the ASRS meetings was well received and sparked vibrant discussion. “There is a huge need to have the book work its way through the Adventist Church,” he reflected. “After all, our church community is part of the society that is grappling with issues of injustice, especially racial injustice, and is too often closer to the conservative and insensitive evangelical community and culture than to the countercultural biblical perspective. I hope that this book will open up the conversation that is too often difficult to have in many of our faith communities.”

A number of Adventist universities in North America are already beginning to use A House on Fire for classes in ministry, mission, and religion. “Many of the religion teachers at the ASRS meetings commented that this book is ground-breaking and provides a missing piece in Adventist thinking,” Jackson said. A House on Fire: How Adventist Faith Responds to Race and Racism is available now from Adventist bookshops in Australia and New Zealand, or online.

The original version of this story was posted on Adventist Record.

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