About the Author: Rev. Curtis Paul DeYoung

Rev. Curtiss Paul DeYoung, Ed.D. arrived in 2014 to begin his tenure as the Executive Director of Community Renewal Society (CRS), a historic faith-based civil rights organization in Chicago working for systemic racial and economic justice through the unique programmatic combination of church-based community organizing, policy advocacy, and investigative journalism. CRS partners with over 85 congregations that are deeply rooted in the United Church of Christ and broader Christian community, and fully embraces interfaith and other community partners that share its goals. Since he arrived, DeYoung has transformed the organization’s board and staff (which was majority white) to one now more consistent with the organization’s racial justice mission (currently at nearly 70% persons of color in these positions of leadership). Prior to coming to CRS, Curtiss DeYoung served in academic and community work for over thirty years, with a central concern for social justice, peace, and reconciliation. DeYoung was professor of Reconciliation Studies and co-chair of the Department of Anthropology, Sociology, and Reconciliation Studies at Bethel University in St. Paul, MN. DeYoung also worked for many years in urban multicultural nonprofit and church settings in Minneapolis, MN. An ordained minister in the Church of God (headquartered in Anderson, IN), he has served on staff at congregations in Minneapolis, New York City, and Washington, DC. He earned degrees from the University of St. Thomas (MN), Howard University (Washington, DC), and Anderson University (IN). He is an author and editor of ten books on reconciliation, interfaith social justice activism, multiracial congregations, racism, and cultural diversity. DeYoung’s book on social justice activists and their spirituality, Living Faith: How Faith Inspires Social Justice, has been translated into Portuguese and French. The book features Aung San Suu Kyi, Malcolm X, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and also includes Oscar Romero, Dorothy Day, Fannie Lou Hamer, Nelson Mandela, Thich Nhat Hanh, Winona LaDuke, Mohandas Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Roberta Menchu, Elie Wiesel, and others. His most recent book, Radical Reconciliation: Beyond Political Pietism and Christian Quietism, was co-authored with South African antiapartheid activist and theologian Allan Boesak. Archbishop Desmond Tutu writes the foreword. DeYoung is a national expert on issues of racial justice and reconciliation. He consults and speaks internationally, with extensive relationships among activists and peacemakers in South Africa and the Holy Land. Curtiss DeYoung has been married to Karen since 1984 and has three adult children living in Minneapolis, New York City, and Los Angeles.
  • By Published On: September 11, 2019

    The Peoples' Bible highlights the role of cultures in shaping the Bible and the way people read the Bible today. Relying on the best insights of historical-critical, liberationist, postmodern, and postcolonial interpretation the contributors include the editors of the volume plus Kosuke Koyama, Randall C. Bailey, Fernando F. Segovia, Elsa Tamez, Clarice Martin, Hee An Choi, Gale A. Yee, Daniel L. Smith-Christopher, and many more.

  • By Published On: August 22, 2019

    Building on the enthusiastic reception of and critical acclaim for The Peoples' Bible, hailed as "a rich resource" (Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza) that "will empower people to reclaim the Bible as a multicultural, dialogical, and living tradition" (Kwok Pui-lan), this colorful and engaging biblical textbook brings those same new perspectives in biblical studies to the college classroom.

  • By Published On: September 30, 2010

    This book was conceived by the passion of the author to discover and share the living faith of “leaders in the twenty-first century who will guide us in our search for a more just world.” He is Professor of Reconciliation Studies at Bethel University in Saint Paul, Minnesota and has spent over twenty years of his life seeking to understand the essence of social justice and reconciliation.