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Confronting Colonial Theologies through Acts of the Apostles: A Conversation with Dr. Jordan J. Cruz Ryan

Jan 28, 2026
Dr. Jordan Ryan, a Filipino-Canadian New Testament scholar and archaeologist, reflects on decolonizing biblical theology. He discusses reading Acts through Filipino and Asian diaspora lenses. He explains socially located hermeneutics, how Western anti‑communist and colonial assumptions shape interpretations, and contrasts missions in Acts with colonial missionary practices.
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INSIGHT

Authentic Subjectivity Produces Objectivity

  • Biblical interpretation always comes from a positionality; Jordan Ryan reads Acts from his Filipino-Canadian horizon.
  • He invokes Lonergan and Ben F. Meyer: true objectivity arises from authentic subjectivity, so acknowledge horizons.
ANECDOTE

Formed By Inner City Ministry In Toronto

  • Jordan Ryan grew up in Toronto with parents working among unhoused youth, shaping his interest in Jesus and the Gospels.
  • His father founded a church for street-involved youth and Ryan did ministry there in high school and university.
INSIGHT

A Filipino North American Hermeneutic Shapes The Commentary

  • Ryan's Acts commentary is written for and to the Filipino North American Christian community and incorporates Canadian content.
  • It intentionally uses Filipino/A sian diaspora history and sociology to recontextualize Acts for that audience.
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