Associate Professor of Religious Ethics and Culture
- BRE Tyndale University College
- MTS Tyndale University College / Wycliffe College
- MA St Michael’s College, University of Toronto
- PhD (Interdisciplinary Studies) St Michael’s College, University of Toronto
Contact
- Tel: -416-585-4537
- Email: netto.medina@utoronto.ca
Néstor Medina is a Guatemalan-Canadian Scholar and Associate professor of Religious Ethics and Culture. He engages the field of ethics from contextual, liberationist, intercultural, and Post and Decolonial perspectives. He studies the intersections between people’s cultures, histories, ethnoracial relations, and forms of knowledge in religious and theoethical traditions. He also studies Pentecostalism in the Americas. He was the recipient of a First Book Grant for Minority Scholars (2014) and a Project Grant for Researchers (2018). He is currently working on the ethnoracial relations during colonial Latin America and the influence of religion in those relations.
Néstor has extensive experience teaching in various cultural contexts and settings. He has taught for the Atlantic School of Theology, Brite Divinity School, Regent University and Conrad Grebel University College. For the last 12 years, Néstor has participated with the United Church as a part of the People in Partnership program by going to Cuba and teaching at the Seminario Evangélico de Teología (SET). Néstor is also an ordained minister of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada.
Besides teaching and researching, He enjoys good food from different cultural backgrounds.
Selected Publications
Néstor Is the author of Christianity, Empire and the Spirit (Brill 2018), On the Doctrine of Discovery (CCC, 2017), a booklet, and Mestizaje: (Re)Mapping ‘Race,’ Culture, and Faith in Latina/o Catholicism (Orbis, 2009), which was the winner of the 2012 Hispanic Theological Initiative book award. He is co-editor of Reading in Between (with Alison Hari-Singh and HyeRan Kim-Cragg); Pentecostals and Charismatics in Latin America and Latino Communities (with Sammy Alfaro); and Theology and the Crisis of Engagement (with Jeff Nowers). He is also the Senior Editor of the journal Perspectivas.
Selected Articles and Book Chapters
“Theological Musings Toward a Latina/o Pneumatology.” In Blackwell Companion to Latina/o Theology. Second ed., edited by Orlando Espín, 182–204. New York, NY: Blackwell, 2023.
“Reconsidering Hospitality in Relation to Migration.” (Spanish) Concilium 398, Edited by Stan Chu Ilo, Gustáv Kovács, y Carlos Schickendantz (noviembre 2022): 117-130; German: Concilium 58, Heft 5 (2022): 579-589; Italian: Concilium 58, No. 5 (2022): 130-144
“Latina/o/x & Chicana/o/x Pentecostals: On the Interconnection Between Religious and Ethnocultural Identity.” Aztlán Journal of Chicano Studies 47, no. 1 (Spring 2022): 179–89.
“On Scripturalization: The Cases of Guatemala and Mestizaje” The Abeng 5, no.1 (2022): 52-56.
“De Liberación a Descolonización” Cuadernos Red Ecclesia in América 2, no 6 (2022): 28-34.
“The Christian Left: From the Past toward a Possible Future.” Toronto Journal of Theology 38 no 1, (Spring 2022): 2-16.
“Absent Peoples, Unaccounted Mothers, and Repressed Knowledges.” The Conrad Grebel Review 39, no. 3 (Fall 2021): 214-219.
“Indigenous Acts of Decolonization: Canada and Guatemala’s Truth and Reconciliation Commissions.” In Decolonial Christianities: Latinx and Latin American Perspectives, edited by Raimundo Barreto and Roberto Sirvent. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.
“Abya Yala, Aztlán, la Isla de la Tortuga, o Weesakajack.” In Decoloniality and Justice: Theological Perspectives, edited by Jean-François Roussel, 35–41. São Leopoldo, Brazil: Oikos; World Forum of Theology and Liberation, 2018.
A Decolonial Primer.” Toronto Journal of Theology 33, no.2 (2017): 279-287.
Memberships
- Society of Christian Ethics
- American Academy of Religion
- La Comunidad of Hispanic Scholars of Religion
- Canadian Theological Society
- International Academy of Practical Theology
- Society for Pentecostal Studies
- ACTHUS: Academy of Catholic Hispanic Theologians in the USA