Assistant Professor of Theology & Huron-Lawson Chair in Contextual Theology
The discipline of theology is, first and foremost, a public-facing and people-centred enterprise. I am passionate about challenging my students to reflect critically and creatively to participate in life-affirming and community building dialogues and justice-oriented social action.
Rev. Dr. Joshua Samuel is the Huron-Lawson Chair in Contextual Theology at Huron University. His teaching experience has been worldwide, including places such as the United Theological College, Bangalore, India, and at Union Theological Seminary, New York, where he served as the Visiting Lecturer for Theology, Global Christianity, and Mission at the Episcopal Divinity School. He received his Ph.D. in Theology and Interreligious Engagement at Union Theological Seminary.
Dr. Samuel is the author of Untouchable Bodies, Resistance, and Liberation: A Comparative Theology of Divine Possessions (Leiden: Brill, 2020), has also co-authored Church and Religious Diversity (London: CWM, 2020), and is currently working on his second monograph, Rage, Resistance, and Reconciliation: A Postcolonial Theology of Prophetic Anger (Palgrave Macmillan) while co-authoring Dalit Theology: A Global Introduction (Fortress Press). His academic research interests are vast but focus in on the intersections of Liberation Theology, Comparative Theology, Interreligious Dialogue, and Postcolonial studies. Convinced that theology is a public-facing and people-centered enterprise, Dr. Samuel is passionate about challenging his students to reflect critically and creatively to envision and participate in life-affirming and community building dialogues and justice oriented social action.
Born and raised in Chennai, South India, Dr. Samuel is an ordained minister of the Church of South India (C.S.I.) and a member Church of the Anglican Communion. He is now canonically a resident in the Episcopal Diocese of Long Island, where he served as a parish priest for nine years. At present, he is the Theologian in Residence at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London, Ontario.