The Justice Briefing with Dr. Jemar Tisby Podcast Por Dr. Jemar Tisby arte de portada

The Justice Briefing with Dr. Jemar Tisby

The Justice Briefing with Dr. Jemar Tisby

De: Dr. Jemar Tisby
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The Justice Briefing is your weekly guide to understanding current events through a historically grounded, theologically rooted, justice-centered lens. Instead of framing the world through fear or culture-war panic, we draw from the spirit of justice—from the biblical prophets to the Civil Rights Movement. This isn't just commentary; it’s discipleship for truth and justice.

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Cristianismo Espiritualidad Ministerio y Evangelismo Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • The Birth of a New Kind of Christian Film Studio
    Apr 10 2026

    People keep asking me, “How did it go?”

    And I understand the question.

    But there’s actually a better question.

    The better question is, “What did last night signal?”

    What happened last night was more than just a sold-out film premiere.

    It was a signal. A shift. A glimpse of what the future of Christian storytelling could be.

    This film is the first official production of Tisby Studios.

    It’s proof that there is an audience for what I call Transformational faith films—stories that don’t just resolve tension, but channel it into action.

    This is not a one-off project.

    It’s the beginning of a pipeline.

    Take Action

    If this reflection with you—if it challenged you, unsettled you, or stayed with you—here are a few ways to take the next step:

    1. Become a paid subscriber

    Most of the support for this film came from this community.

    If you want to see more projects like this—films that tell honest stories about faith, history, and justice—become a paid subscriber to Footnotes. Or upgrade to our FOUNDING TIER.

    That’s how we keep building.

    👉🏾 JemarTisby.Substack.com

    2. Host a screening in your community

    This film is meant to be experienced together.

    Not alone on a screen, but in a room where people can turn to one another at the end and ask:

    “What are we going to do?”

    If you want to bring Jesus Was a Migrant to your church, school, or organization, start here:

    👉🏾 jesuswasamigrant.com

    3. Share this post

    If this vision resonates with you, share it.

    This is how movements grow—person to person, room to room.

    If last night showed us anything, it’s this:

    The future of Christian storytelling won’t be safe, simple, or sentimental—it will be truthful, communal, and transformational.

    And the question now isn’t what we watched.

    It’s: What are we going to do next?

    P.S. Mark your calendar for a LIVE ONLINE SCREENING of Jesus Was a Migrant.

    April 16, 7:30 pm ET. (registration details forthcoming)

    Book a screening: JesusWasAMigrant.com

    Support transformational faith films: JemarTisby.Substack.com

    Más Menos
    22 m
  • Four Types of Christian Films
    Apr 2 2026

    Right now the Christian film industry is dominated by what I’ve called “Devotional” films.

    These films are often produced by people promoting a conservative—even fundamentalist—and heavily right-leaning version of Christianity.

    Not every film needs to do everything. And each type of film has its place.

    But we need more films in the Transformational category.

    Too many stop with personal piety and holiness. Which is not bad but it’s incomplete.

    Not enough films show how faith turns worldly logic upside down.

    Not enough Christian films show how the heavenly Kingdom confronts earthly kingdoms.

    Not enough Christian films interrogate laws, policies, and institutions.

    This is the work of Tisby Studios and our first production--Jesus Was a Migrant.

    Watch the trailer: HERE

    Host a screening: HERE

    Support more Christians films in the transformational category. Become a paid subscriber today: JemarTisby.Substack.com

    Watch: How to Watch a Movie (As a Christian)

    Watch: Homestead Movie Review


    Más Menos
    44 m
  • 'Get Out,' 'Sinners,' and the Rise of Black Horror Films
    Mar 27 2026

    The scariest thing about the movies Get Out and Sinners isn’t the body-snatching or the blood-sucking. It’s how accurately they show us what whiteness does.

    These films are not just horror stories. They are commentaries on extraction, exploitation, and colonization.

    In this episode, Dr. Jemar compares the two films and the use of horror to convey deeper social truths.

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    Learn about new short documentary and schedule a screening: jesuswasamigrant.com

    Invest in truth-telling at the intersection of faith, history, and justice: JemarTisby.Substack.com

    Más Menos
    31 m
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