Ep 15 – “Reckoning with The New Apostolic Reformation” with Dr. Matthew D. Taylor

Listen / Subscribe

Apple Podcasts

Spotify

YouTube

RSS

Ep 15 – “Reckoning with The New Apostolic Reformation” with Dr. Matthew D. Taylor

Introduction

Guest Dr. Matthew D. Taylor shares his faith journey and we discuss his involvement in religious pluralism and extensive research on the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) movement in America. Dr. Taylor shares insights into his background in and transition from evangelical fundamentalism, his interfaith dialogues, and the threats posed by NAR’s radical Christian nationalism, which advocates for Christian supremacy and has influenced political events like the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. The episode delves into the implications of this movement, the need for intra-Christian dialogue, and the challenge of addressing radicalization within American Christianity.

Guest Bio

Matthew D. Taylor, Ph.D., is a senior scholar at the Institute for Islamic, Christian, and Jewish Studies in Baltimore. He specializes in Muslim-Christian dialogue, Evangelical and Pentecostal movements, religious politics in the U.S., and American Islam. Prior to coming to ICJS, he served on the faculty of Georgetown University and George Washington University. His first book, Scripture People: Salafi Muslims in Evangelical Christians’ America, offers an introduction to the often misunderstood Salafi movement in the U.S. by way of comparison with American Evangelicalism. He is also the creator of the award-winning audio-documentary series “Charismatic Revival Fury: The New Apostolic Reformation,” which details how networks of extremist Christian leaders helped instigate the January 6th Insurrection. His next book, The Violent Take It By Force: The Christian movement that is threatening our democracy, will be published in September 2024.

 

Guest Links

————-

If you enjoy this podcast and would like to find more content like this, please visit my website at www.markbeckwith.net, where you can listen to more episodes (and read episode transcripts), read my blog, and sign up to get weekly reflections in your inbox. I also explore the themes of this podcast further in my book, Seeing the Unseen: Beyond Prejudices, Paradigms, and Party Lines.

This episode of the Reconciliation Roundtable podcast was edited, mixed, and produced by Luke Overstreet.

 

Transcript:

[Coming Soon]

 

Copyright © 2024 Mark Beckwith. All rights reserved. Contact for questions involving permission to use portions of the audio or transcript elsewhere.

 

Transcripts are created with the assistance of automatic tools. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of this podcast is the audio record.

RSS

Masks, Costumes and Uniforms

I had my first uniform when I was a Cub Scout. I was about eight. I remember the pride I felt when I wore it in the local Memorial Day parade. The blue uniform and yellow kerchief gave me an identity as someone connected to both the community of other scouts and the...

Martin Luther King’s Insight on Power and Love

I write this on the fortieth annual observance of Martin Luther King Day, when the country pauses to honor Dr. King’s memory and legacy. For me, the day is yet another opportunity to be fed by his extraordinary spiritual and intellectual genius. There are many...

Danger, Safety, and Hospitality

Jonathan Ross has expressed that he felt his life was in imminent danger when he fired three shots through a windshield that took the life of Renee Nicole Good.  Millions of people, from the President on down, have agreed with Ross’ split-second decision to eliminate...

The Tyranny of Instant Gratification

Instant gratification. It is an impulse that at times can take on an almost religious fervor in the pursuit of fulfilling an immediate desire. Little, if any thought, is given to the implications or consequences of satisfying the desire; and invariably strategy is...

Merry Christmas: A Greeting or a Message?

Merry Christmas. For generations “Merry Christmas” has been a time-honored greeting. In recent years “Merry Christmas” has fallen out of favor in some quarters because it was felt to be less of a greeting and more of a claim of Christian hegemony that disregarded or...

The Birth of Hope and Its Challenge to Evil

“See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil”, is an English translation of an ancient 5h century BCE Confucian proverb. It is visually depicted on a carving above the entrance to the 17th century Tosho-gu shrine in Nikko, Japan, consisting of three monkeys who, in turn,...

A Path Out of Darkness

We are pursued by darkness. Literally. Darkness comes earlier each day in the northern hemisphere, culminating on December 21, the shortest day of the year. The deepening darkness can do a number on our psyches: seasonal affective disorder –also known by the apt...

Myths About Money andFilthy Lucre

It is a memory that keep popping up. After my sophomore year in college in 1971, I signed on to be a door-to-door book salesman with the Southwestern Company based in Nashville Tennessee. Originally a company that sold bibles, it had recently evolved into selling...

Facing Down a Crusade

“…Trumpism is a thoroughly religious movement”, David French wrote in a November 16 op-ed in the New York Times. A self-described evangelical Christian, French went on to say that since Trumpism is a religious phenomenon, it requires a religious answer. I agree. And...

Gratitude: The Foundation of Thanksgiving

A national day of Thanksgiving was first declared by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863, to be observed at the end of the harvest season, in late November. Over the decades the date moved around several times, and in 1942 President Franklin Roosevelt issued a...
Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Join my mailing list to receive the latest blog updates.

You have Successfully Subscribed!