Joel McDurmon

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Joel McDurmon


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Joel McDurmon, Ph.D. in Theology from Pretoria University, is the Director of Research for American Vision. He has authored seven books and also serves as a lecturer and regular contributor to the American Vision website. He joined American Vision's staff in the June of 2008. Joel and his wife and four sons live in Dallas, Georgia. ...more

Average rating: 4.23 · 706 ratings · 207 reviews · 41 distinct worksSimilar authors
What Would Jesus Drink? A S...

4.38 avg rating — 93 ratings — published 2011 — 5 editions
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The Bounds of Love

4.05 avg rating — 80 ratings2 editions
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Restoring America One Count...

4.24 avg rating — 55 ratings — published 2012 — 5 editions
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The Problem of Slavery in C...

4.50 avg rating — 40 ratings
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Jesus v. Jerusalem

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4.14 avg rating — 35 ratings — published 2011 — 4 editions
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The Problem of Slavery in C...

4.69 avg rating — 29 ratings
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God Versus Socialism

3.90 avg rating — 31 ratings — published 2009 — 2 editions
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Biblical Logic: In Theory &...

4.43 avg rating — 23 ratings — published 2008 — 3 editions
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The Return of the Village A...

3.70 avg rating — 27 ratings — published 2009 — 2 editions
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Understanding the Bible in ...

4.65 avg rating — 17 ratings2 editions
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More books by Joel McDurmon…
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“While slaveowners worked vigorously to allow slaves only so much biblical teaching as to make them good, docile, submissive slaves, even the most basic moral elements of Christian truth proved revolutionary. This phenomenon arises clearly with the commandment against theft. Reading the proslavery defenses from the antebellum era, one encounters consistent references to slaves stealing and "pilfering" from their masters' stores and livestock, etc. This is always held up as evidence of their incapacity for civilization. Yet it was hardly any lack of capacity; it was resistance and restitution in their keen understanding of their masters' hypocrisy. "While white preachers repeatedly urged 'Don't steal,' slaves just as persistently denied that this commandment applied to them, since they themselves were stolen property." Former slave Josephine Howard retorted to those slaveholders who preached against theft: "[T]hen why did de white folks steal my mammy and her mammy? . . . Dat de sinfulles' stealin' dey is." A Virginian slave preached back at his master, "You white folks set the bad example of stealing—you stole us from Africa, and not content with that, if any got free here, you stole them afterward, and so we are made slaves." Former Georgian slave George Womble agreed: "Slaves were taught to steal by their masters." [...] It is no wonder that whole audiences full of slaves were known to get up and leave the preaching services of missionaries when they began to preach on stealing. They simply could not stomach the hypocrisy.”
Joel McDurmon, The Problem of Slavery in Christian America

“Love is not coercion, and the state is only an agent of coercion. It has no other function and can work no other way. Its job is to be the last resort in society: the coercion of criminals through punishment. Its nature and its funding are coercion. Any solution it offers will inescapably be coercive. When we make it the primary agent of healing, we fundamentally alter the nature of society. We ought to have a society in which the power of love drives us to break down all social, class, and political barriers, and to effect healing through private means, private associations, private institutions, counselors, networks, schools, hospitals, charities, businesses, etc. It ought to be driven by giving. Love is giving; selfishness is taking. When we make the state the mover, we make the primary solution one of taking rather than giving. This inverts God's designed order for all human relations, including race relations and racial healing.”
Joel McDurmon, The Problem of Slavery in Christian America

“[T]he suppression of injustice with greater injustice only fuels righteous indignation, which will spread even if only maintained by a righteous few.”
Joel McDurmon, The Problem of Slavery in Christian America



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