EWP Talks Video Library

EWP Talks are short, accessible, engaging and rich presentations by leading theological educators, suitable for classroom and local church use. These videos help people develop a Christian vision for flourishing communities.

Each EWP Talk is about 15-20 minutes long, so they’re easy to use. But the conversations they’ll catalyze in your classroom, church or group will be much longer!

Note that you can also browse by topic – you may find what you’re looking for more quickly that way!

Check out our video library below, and consider assigning one of these short videos your students, or sharing a video with your group!

Chris Armstrong | “Vocation? Whatever!” From Work/Life Balance to a Seamless Life

Chris Armstrong of Wheaton College evokes key moments from church history, and from his personal history of struggle with attitudes about rest, home and work, to offer a compelling vision for why a theology of vocation must be central to the life of faith.

Consider assigning in: Ethics, Spiritual Formation, History

Chris Armstrong | God’s People, Christ’s Body, Spirit’s Temple: Being a Sacred Church

What if we’re getting the whole sacred/secular problem backward? Chris Armstrong invites us to rethink what the church really is – a visible sign of invisible grace – before we roll up our sleeves to change the world.

Consider assigning in: Pastoral Leadership, Theology, Spiritual Formation, Ethics, History, New Testament

Vincent Bacote | Sending Disciples to a Pluralistic World: Imagination, Hospitality and Hope

Vincent Bacote of Wheaton College invites us into a more full understanding of how worship can form us for a lives of Christian discipleship in a pluralistic world, marked by imagination, hospitality and hope.

Consider assigning in: Culture, Pastoral Leadership, Spiritual Formation, Ethics

Darrell Bock | Luke and Money: Surrendering into Stewardship

Darrell Bock of Dallas Theological Seminary unfolds the ironies and reversals in Luke – from the rich fool and Lazarus’ wealthy neighbor to Zacchaeus and the widow’s mite – that call us to use all our money for good stewardship of God’s world.

Consider assigning in: New Testament, Ethics

Anthony Bradley | Christian Personalism: How to Preach a Public Faith without Making Atheists

Anthony Bradley of The King’s College looks at the fallout of the Religious Right, and how the school of thought known as Christian Personalism can provide an alternative approach to bringing our faith into the public square.

Consider assigning in: Culture, Ethics, Pastoral Leadership, Theology, History

Christopher Brooks | Rethinking Urban Poverty: Context, Data and Collaboration

Christopher Brooks of Moody Theological Seminary, merging theology with his pastoral experience in Detroit, argues that poverty need not be permanent; the truth of the gospel and the imperatives of discipleship demand constructive solutions to poverty.

Consider assigning in: Pastoral Leadership, Ethics, Culture

Constantine Campbell | Chosen Sojourners in 1st Peter: Living between Two Worlds

Constantine Campbell of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School describes how Peter calls us “chosen sojourners” because we can make a bigger difference for Christ in this world when they live more fully for the next world instead of this one.

Consider assigning in: New Testament, Theology

Celeste Cranston | Two Sons: The Gospel and Work

Celeste Cranston of Seattle Pacific University demonstrates how the story of the prodigal son invites us into a life of kingdom work marked by abundance and gratitude, not scarcity and fear.

Consider assigning in: Spiritual Formation, New Testament

Andy Crouch | A Pruned Life: Isaiah’s Posterity Gospel

Drawing on Isaiah 5, Andy Crouch speaks about the challenge of separating real flourishing from mere material prosperity in the midst of economic growth and technological innovation. In a world of instant gratification, what is of lasting importance?

Consider assigning in: Culture, Ethics, Spiritual Formation, Old Testament

Rachael & Jacob Denhollander | Justice and Vocation: A Conversation with Rachael and Jacob Denhollander

Why has the church uncovered more sexual abuse and exploitation in its ranks than almost any other institution in our society? Why is it so difficult for the church – of all institutions! – to respond to abuse with justice and mercy? And what does justice have to do with vocation? In this powerful video, Rachael and Jacob Denhollander speak theologically and practically of the urgent call to the church today to protect the vulnerable. They discuss the atonement, eschatology, vocation and a right understanding of the role of pastoral leadership, showing that justice is woven together with everything the church is and does. Patrick Smith of Duke Divinity School moderates the discussion.

Consider assigning in: Ethics, Pastoral Leadership, Theology, Culture, Spiritual Formation

Bruce Fields | A Humble Dignity: Striving in His Image Is Flourishing

In this very personal talk with a surprise twist at the end, Bruce Fields of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School reflects on a childhood model who helped him learn that striving to bear the image of God more fully is what it means to flourish as a human being.

Consider assigning in: Theology, Ethics

Greg Forster | Fruitful Paradoxes: Bringing Life to the World in the Modern Economy

Being the church means bringing life to the world, but how do we help our students lead churches that do that? In this stimulating talk, Oikonomia Network Director Greg Forster argues that “economic life is the most powerful way to bring life to the world,” because “the economy is where people mostly live.” Drawing on the ancient Letter to Diognetus, Forster unpacks fruitful paradoxes to help Christians think about how to bring life to the world in the modern economy.

Consider assigning in: Ethics, Pastoral Leadership, Culture, History

Deborah Gill | Discipleize! The Great Commission in All of Life

Deborah Gill of Assemblies of God Theological Seminary carefully unpacks the Greek text and biblical/cultural context of the church’s original mission statement, the Great Commission, to show how the church’s task is to “discipleize” in every area of life.

Consider assigning in: New Testament, Spiritual Formation, Theology, Culture

Nathan Hitchcock | A Plan for All Things: The Economy of God in Ephesians

Nathan Hitchcock of Sioux Falls Seminary unpacks the meaning of the biblical term oikonomia. He points out that Paul uses this term frequently; reviewing Paul’s use of the phrase oikonomia theou in Ephesians, Hitchcock argues that God’s creation plan – the economy of God – is an audacious enterprise.

Consider assigning in: Theology, New Testament

Joshua Jipp | Jesus the Economic Teacher

In this highly personal talk, Joshua Jipp of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School shares stories of his grandfather on the Iowa farm where he grew up. Grandpa Wayne had absorbed key economic teachings from Jesus, prioritizing contentment, productivity and community.

Consider assigning in: New Testament, Ethics

Jules Martinez | Reconciled to Reconcile: Making the Kingdom Visible in a Divided World

When the church is divided by ethnic separation and political polarization, the kingdom of God is revealed less fully to our neighbors, and has a gravely diminished impact on communities. In this powerful and personal talk, Jules Martinez of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School points us toward essential kingdom virtues and practices that help local churches grow together and make the kingdom visible and effective.

Consider assigning in: Ethics, Pastoral Leadership, Culture, Spiritual Formation

Jennifer Powell McNutt | A God Who Crosses the Tracks: Social Action in Reformation Theology

Luther and Calvin said justification by faith alone sets us free to love and serve others, working to bring life to the world, with special care for those most in need – and in their churches and communities, they practiced what they preached. In this stirring talk, Jennifer Powell McNutt traces the connection between justification and social action in Reformation theology.

Consider assigning in: History, Ethics, Theology, Pastoral Leadership

W. Jay Moon | Economics and Mission: The Connected Complexity of Cultures

Drawing examples ranging from the book of Acts to modern Africa, W. Jay Moon of Asbury Theological Seminary unpacks how Chrsitian involvement in the economy is vitally interdependent with Christian witness to the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Consider assigning in: Culture, Pastoral Leadership, New Testament

Tom Nelson | If We Would Be Faithful: Fruitfulness Matters

Made to Flourish President Tom Nelson speaks on the integral relationship between faithfulness and fruitfulness, reviewing passages including the Genesis creation account, Proverbs 31 and the teachings of Jesus.

Consider assigning in: Spiritual Formation, Pastoral leadership, Theology, Old Testament, New Testament, Ethics

Gavin Ortlund | Worth Standing Up For: Hearing a 4th-Century Witness for Justice and the Gospel

Christians have always recognized that the gospel calls us to stand up for justice – as difficult and complicated as that can be. Gavin Ortlund of First Baptist Church of Ojai draws on Gregory of Nyssa’s prophetic stand against slavery to help us see how we can stand up for justice in our own time.

Consider assigning in: History, Ethics, Culture, Pastoral Leadership, Theology

Keith Reeves | Family and Opportunity in the Law and the Prophets

Keith Reeves of Azusa-Pacific University describes the connection between the household, family structure, land ownership and economic opportunity in the Old Testament law and prophets, and how these connections apply today.

Consider assigning in: Old Testament, Ethics, History

Mark Roberts | All Good Work: Creation and Parenthood

Mark Roberts of Fuller Theological Seminary draws on the Genesis creation account to invite us to resist the cultural narrative that “work” only happens in a job, contending that all good work is God-valued work – including the critical task of raising children.

Consider assigning in: Ethics, Old Testament

Fred Sanders | The Portable Trinity: Working within God’s Work

The Trinity isn’t about counting to three, Fred Sanders tells us, it’s about the God who sends his Son and his Spirit, and then sends his people. Far from a dry abstraction, the doctrine of the Trinity shows us that we do our daily work within the work of God himself.

Consider assigning in: Theology, New Testament

Charlie Self | Faithful Churches Create Flourishing Communities: Righteousness, Peace and Joy

Charlie Self of Assemblies of God Theological Seminary draws together God’s communicable attributes with church experiences from Dallas and Oregon all the way to Sri Lanka and Cambodia, presenting the church’s mission embodying righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit within all the world’s communities.

Consider assigning in: Pastoral Leadership, Theology, Culture, New Testament

Lisa Slayton, Terry Timm & Deborah Gill | Staying Rooted: Discipling People in the New Economy

In a rapidly changing, globalized economy, how can we help people keep their daily lives rooted in the stability of God’s reality? In this insightful discussion, Deborah Gill of Assemblies of God Theological Seminary interviews two leaders who are on the forefront of developing responses to that question: Lisa Slayton of Tamim Partners and Terry Timm of Christ Community Church of the South Hills. Together they explore how discipleship in the church can effectively cultivate the capacities necessary for faithful work in today’s economy that is volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous.

Consider assigning in: Spiritual Formation, Pastoral Leadership, Ethics, Culture

Jennifer Woodruff Tait, Charlie Self & Jay Moon | Dislocation and Discovery: The Industrial Revolution and the Wesleyan Movement

The Industrial Revolution was one of the most massive cultural and economic changes in global history, and we have inherited both positive and negative narratives about its impact. Historians Jennifer Woodruff Tait and Charlie Self look at the Wesleyan movement’s response to these changes to consider how the modern economy has shaped our world in both good and bad ways. Jay Moon moderates the discussion.

Consider assigning in: History, Ethics, Culture

J. Michael Thigpen | The Work of Our Hands: Creation and Economics

Evangelical Theological Society Executive Director J. Michael Thigpen describes how the image of God in the Genesis creation account structures every area of human life, including our work and economic activity.

Consider assigning in: Theology, Old Testament

Eric Tully | Proverbs and Money: You’re Not Playing Monopoly

Why isn’t Monopoly as fun as it should be – grabbing everything for ourselves should be fun, shouldn’t it? Eric Tully of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School brings wisdom from Proverbs to help us rethink the role of money in our lives and in our economies.

Consider assigning in: Old Testament, Ethics

W. Bradford Wilcox | The Ball and Chain Myth: Marriage and Sacrifice

W. Bradford Wilcox of the University of Virginia evaluates popular attitudes about sacrifice, pleasure and responsibility that are challenging marriage in our culture, with economic implications; and how religious institutions can play a key role in strengthening marriage.

Consider assigning in: Ethics, Culture

Michael Wittmer | The Same Call: Vocation Is Integral to the Gospel

Michael Wittmer of Grand Rapids Theological Seminary shows us how to leave behind tired debates (evangelism v. justice) and false dualisms (“I left my job to go into full-time ministry”) by seeing that the call to receive forgiveness through faith in Christ and the call to serve Christ with good works in the world are the same call.

Consider assigning in: Theology, New Testament