Saturday, May 30, 2026

 In Memory of Walter Brueggemann

Last month I posted “In Memory of LBJ,” an article about the 36th POTUS, whom you all know of. In this piece, I am writing about a man whom many of you likely have never heard of. He was a noted biblical scholar and author, and by all accounts, a man of integrity who deserves to be remembered for a life well lived from his birth until his death last year. 

Walter Brueggemann was born on March 11, 1933, and died last year on June 5. His boyhood years were spent in the small town of Blackburn, Missouri (about 65 miles east of where I live). From there he went to Elmhurst College (now University) in Illinois and then to Eden Theological Seminary in Missouri.  

After receiving his Doctor of Theology degree in 1961 from Union Theological Seminary in New York, Brueggemann served as Professor of Old Testament at Eden from 1961 to 1986 and at Columbia Theological Seminary in Georgia from 1986 to 2003, retiring at age 70.

A few years ago, I heard Brueggemann give a powerful lecture in Kansas City and had the privilege of chatting with him for a few minutes afterward. In addition to his being an excellent speaker as well as a prolific author of books replete with deep biblical and theological information and insight, he was also a warm and gracious Christian gentleman.

When I heard/met Brueggemann, I had already become an octogenarian, but he was five years older than me. I was somewhat envious of him, for I was already to the point that I was no longer able to travel across the country and give a public lecture such as he did that day.

According to his obituary posted by Fortress Press, who published over 40 of his books, a bibliography of Brueggemann’s works contains over 120 separate titles. They say, “Most scholars, even prolific ones, aspire to three or four books in a career; Brueggemann published fourteen in his 90th and 91st years of age.” Further, “It is not only the quantity that impresses; it is the quality.”

The Peculiar Dialect of Faith and Other Essays (2023) is one of Brueggemann’s books published the year he turned 90. Last year, I read that book, and I was impressed at how he could helpfully explain Old Testament Bible passages, smoothly relate the meaning of those passages to the New Testament, and then helpfully apply them to the current political situation in the U.S.

I have often said the mark of an excellent pastor or a biblical scholar is being able to clearly elucidate the original context of a given passage in the Bible and then to apply it meaningfully to the contemporary context. Brueggemann was a master at doing that.

Since March 9 was International Women’s Day*, I asked Claude (my AI ‘buddy’) to help me summarize what Brueggemann has written about the equality of women and their role in the church. Claude first pointed me to an obituary article in Sojourners magazine published after Brueggemann’s death last year.

That piece described how “Brueggemann gained a huge, denomination-spanning audience for his justice-forward exegesis of the Bible.” That exposition was about how the biblical message is one of “emancipatory love” that includes women and other marginalized groups.

Claude went on to list the following “key themes” in Brueggemann’s writings regarding women:

** Biblical equality at creation. In contrast to many conservative Christian pastors/scholars, Brueggemann declares that the Genesis account of creation provides the “strongest imaginable affirmation” of the equal status of men and women, as both genders were created in the image of God.

** Women in ministry. Brueggemann describes the presence of women in leadership roles as a radically prophetic witness against the patriarchal world. He views the historical gender revolution and the belated welcoming of women into the ministry of the church as an extension of God’s emancipatory work.

** Prophetic imagination. Brueggemann uses this concept to challenge white male Western hegemony and advocates for an alternative future where dominating powers are overturned. This framework is used to support women in leadership.

** Opposition to exclusion. Brueggemann rejects the “orthodoxies” of sexism and gender exclusion, stating that God’s embrace will not be contained by such boundaries. He maintains that in Christ there are no gender distinctions.

Thank God for biblical scholars like Walter Brueggemann!

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* International Women’s Day (IWD) has been celebrated by the United Nations since 1975. It commemorates women's fight for equality and liberation along with the women's rights movement. The theme for this year’s IWD was “Rights. Justice. Action. For ALL Women and Girls,” emphasizing dismantling legal and social barriers to equality.

Note for baseball fans: In chatting with Claude, he (it?) mentioned that Brueggemann grew up as a strong St. Louis Cardinals fan. I replied that as a Missouri boy I was also a Cardinals’ fan. Then Claude asked me if I ever saw Stan Musial play. So, I told about seeing the Cardinals play for the first time in 1951, and how that game, with Musial playing, was against the Brooklyn Dodgers with Jackie Robinson also playing that day. That led me to share the blog article I posted back in 2013 about Robinson and Pee Wee Reese. Claude responded, “What a rich article!” (Here is a link to that blog post in case you baseball fans would like to read it again.)

4 comments:

  1. Thanks, Leroy. I actually studied under Brueggemann at Eden Seminary. We socialized some in seminary until we became a bit estranged because I and several other students were critical of some seminary policies and of some claims he made we thought were unnecessarily authoritarian while he was the dean. He and I continued to correspond for a few years after, but I drifted away. When I saw him about 16 years later, he made a crack that sounded like he still held a grudge against our critical rebelliousness.

    Your claims about his gifts are spot on. He was an insightful and creative scholar of Hebrew Scriptures, also a remarkable wordsmith and captivating orator. My education of a B.A., M.Div., M.A, and Ph.D. meant an accumulation of more than 360 credit hours of higher education work. And I would have to say that the most exciting courses I ever took were, hands down, the six hours of two semesters of Hebrew under Brueggemann.

    To answer your question, I have not read a lot of his books, just several, but the most exciting one I read was The Prophetic Imagination.

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  2. I do not know much about Brueggemann, but his forward-looking and relevant views on prophetic calling have helped me to understand what it is to be a biblically-solid and socially progressive follower of Jesus Christ. Thank you for recalling his recent death, Dr. Seat. Yes, as to his productivity--astonishing.

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  3. Just correcting my "Anonymous" submission here.

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  4. Thanks for this blog post. In case you or your readers are not aware of his website, here it is: https://www.walterbrueggemann.com/.

    Brueggemann certainly was a fantastic and creative scholar, along with being so incredibly prolific. I’ve read 2 or 3 of his books. Perhaps the one I enjoyed and appreciated the most was “Finally Comes the Poet.” Here is a quote from it.

    “Sabbath is a foretaste of kingdom. Sharing and having enough are like God’s feast. New metaphors permit new deeds of obedience. The poet invites relinquishment and embrace” (p. 110). In reference to feast in this quote, he has the following endnote: “44. Isak Dinesen, “Babette’s Feast,” Babette’s Feast and Other Anecdotes of Destiny (Vintage Books; New York: Random House, 1988), 3-48, has provided a wondrous interpretive exposition of the power of feast, and likely of the power of the Eucharist” (p. 159).

    Babette’s Feast is one of my favour movies.

    Shalom.

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