Adventist Peace Radio, Episode 77: Moe & Nathan Go To School #14

Moe Stiles and Nathan Brown discuss Sabbath, liberation theology, and advocacy.

In March, 2021, Nathan and Moe commenced graduate studies in a Master of Human Rights program at Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia. This podcast series is their thinking out loud about their educational experiences, their reflections on aspects of the material they are learning and wrestling with, and how this intersects with their Adventist faith and the faithful call to do justice in our world.

Nathan Brown is book editor at Signs Publishing Company, the Adventist publishing house based just out of Melbourne Australia. He is author of 17 books, including Advent, Of Falafels and Following Jesus, For the Least of These, Engage and Do Justice, and continues to write for a variety of publications around the world.

Moe Stiles has recently moved back to Australia, having served in the United States, with her husband Adrian, as the Lead Pastor of Oasis Christian Center, Vancouver, Washington. Moe is now serving as Chaplain for AdventCare Whitehorse, Melbourne, while pursuing postgraduate study. Moe is driven by justice advocacy work, community connectedness, authentic living, building leaders, and passionately yearns to see the person of Jesus truly honored in the way we live and love.

SHOW NOTES

The new book by Nathan, with Karen Collum:

Or check out the original Advent, from last Christmas:

The Sabbath by Abraham Joshua Heschel

The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry by John Mark Comer

Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Contact Moe or Nathan via Facebook:

CONCLUSION

Thank you for joining us for this episode of Adventist Peace Radio. If you appreciated this conversation, we hope you’ll share the episode with others! We invite you to subscribe to the podcast on iTunesApple PodcastsStitcher, or Spotify.

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MUSIC: Our theme music is “Green Fields” by Scott Holmes, and this is available at the Free Music Archive.

DISCLAIMER: The Adventist Peace Fellowship is an independent 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that supports work for peacemaking and social justice building upon the values of the Seventh-day Adventist tradition. We are not part of, affiliated with, or supported by the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists or any affiliates known as the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Any content, opinions, statements, products or services offered by Adventist Peace Fellowship, are solely those of our organization, and not those of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.