Biblical Theology in Asian America: Family, Migration, and Divine Presence
October 7, 2025
Free Hybrid Event
Cooper Room, Erdman Center at Princeton Theological Seminary
About this Conference
How do we read the Bible as Asian Americans? How do the family stories in Scripture—with all their beauty and brokenness—speak to our own experiences?
At a time when Asian American Christians are navigating the profound challenges of migration, intergenerational conflict, and cultural displacement, the Biblical Theology in Asian America Conference offers a groundbreaking space for exploring Scripture in ways that deeply resonate with these lived realities.
This isn’t your typical academic conference. We are creating space for pastors, teachers, and ministry leaders to encounter the Bible with both theological depth and emotional honesty.
This Year’s Focus: Family Stories That Mirror Our Own
We are diving into the complex family dynamics woven throughout the Old Testament—stories that often feel remarkably familiar to those of us navigating life between cultures. Think about Jacob and Esau’s rivalry, the silence surrounding Dinah’s trauma, or Ruth’s journey as an immigrant daughter-in-law. These aren’t sanitized Sunday school narratives; they are messy, complicated, and deeply human stories that resonate with the realities many Asian American families know well.
This conference pairs rigorous biblical scholarship with psychological insight. You will hear from Old Testament scholars who understand the Hebrew text alongside marriage and family therapists who work directly with Asian American communities. Together, they will help us discover how Scripture speaks not just to our minds, but to our hearts shaped by migration, cultural adaptation, and the ongoing work of generational healing.
What Makes This Conference Different
We know ministry and family life are complex, and we’re committed to offering both practical tools and deep theological reflection. We are making room for the realities that many of us live with daily: the pain of misunderstood children and disappointed parents, the weight of cultural expectations, the grief of languages and traditions lost or never fully learned. We believe Scripture has something profound to say about these experiences—not by erasing the difficulty, but by meeting us in it with wisdom, hope, and concrete pathways forward.
Who Should Attend?
This conference is designed for Asian American pastors, ministry leaders, counselors, and anyone seeking to integrate their faith with their cultural experience in deeper ways. Whether you’re preaching regularly, leading small groups, or simply trying to understand how Scripture speaks to your own family’s story, you’ll find resources and community here.
This interdisciplinary, public-facing event is uniquely designed to bridge biblical scholarship, pastoral theology, and mental health—equipping and empowering faith leaders to engage Scripture thoughtfully and pastorally within their own communities.
This conference will explore:
- Family patterns in Genesis: How sibling rivalry, parental favoritism, and gendered silences in ancient families illuminate our contemporary struggles
- Emotional landscapes: Jealousy, grief, betrayal, and longing as spiritual realities worth examining
- Rupture and repair: What it looks like to heal generational wounds in both our households and our churches
- Biblical ambiguity: Learning to sit with unresolved tensions and divine mystery
- Embodied faith: Reading Scripture with our whole selves—our histories, our hurts, and our hopes
Sponsors
Plenary Speakers & Respondent

Roger Nam
Roger S. Nam, PhD is Professor of Hebrew Bible and Director of the Doctor of Ministry Program at Emory University/Candler School of Theology. His scholarship bridges Hebrew Bible and ancient Near Eastern history, with a focus on how economic and social realities shaped biblical texts and communities. He is the author of multiple books, most recently, The Theology of the Books of Ezra and Nehemiah (Cambridge University Press, 2024). Before entering academia, he served as a pastor in Seoul, Korea and worked as a financial analyst in the Silicon Valley. This year marks his 18th year as a professor in theological education.
Chloe Sun

Chloe Sun
Chloe T. Sun is Professor of Old Testament and the Program Director of the Chinese Studies Center at Fuller Seminary. She previously taught at Logos Evangelical Seminary in Los Angeles. She publishes in both Chinese and English and conducts Bible seminars locally and internationally in Hong Kong, Singapore, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, and Europe. Her recent English publications include Attempt Great Things for God: Theological Education in Diaspora (Eerdmans, 2020), Conspicuous in His Absence: Studies in the Song of Songs and Esther (IVP Academic, 2021), and Exodus, A Pastoral and Contextual Commentary (Langham, 2024).
Jessica ChenFeng

Jessica ChenFeng
Jessica ChenFeng, PhD, LMFT is an associate professor of marriage and family therapy at Fuller Theological Seminary. She has been a practicing MFT for almost 20 years and consults with academic, healthcare and church organizations to improve the well-being of people within their relationships and communities. She is the director of Fuller’s Asian American Well-being Collaboratory. Her research, clinical and community work center around Asian American identities/relationships, generation, trauma, and Christian spirituality. She resides in the greater Los Angeles area with her spouse and two children. Whenever she gets the chance, she loves reconnecting with her love for analogue: paper planners and stationery, baking, and sewing.
Daniel D. Lee

Daniel D. Lee
Dr. Daniel D. Lee is the founding academic dean of the Asian American Center and associate professor of theology and Asian American studies at Fuller Seminary. An ordained Presbyterian minister, he has served in a number of ministry contexts, including campus ministry, chaplaincy, immigrant church, pan-Asian ministry, and multi-ethnic churches. He is author of Doing Asian American Theology: A Contextual Framework for Faith and Practice (2022) and Double Particularity: Karl Barth, Contextuality, and Asian American Theology (2017), as well as the editor of The Theology of Asian Americans and Pacific Peoples: A Reader, 1976, complied by Roy Sano (2023).
Panelists
Rev. Alex Chang

Rev. Alex Chang
Rev. Alex Chang is Lead Pastor of Princeton Alliance Church, a multi-ethnic church with over eighty-five ethnicities represented. Although he grew up as a pastor’s kid in a Korean immigrant church, ministry was never part of his vocational plans originally. He earned a BA in Economics from Boston College and worked as a banker for several financial institutions in New York City before moving to Princeton to earn his MDiv from Princeton Theological Seminary. He is an ordained minister in the Christian & Missionary Alliance (C&MA) denomination and also serves as Vice-Chairman on the Metropolitan District Executive Committee of the C&MA. He is currently pursuing a DMin at Fuller Theological Seminary.
Marie Chan

Marie Chan
Marie Chan writes picture books that highlight hidden figures in Asian American history. Being the daughter of Taiwanese immigrants inspired Marie to create a curriculum using diverse children’s books to amplify underrepresented voices and build cross-cultural awareness. Marie has a Master of Arts in Education, taught in Los Angeles County, and has served on the board of Pittsburgh Urban Christian School. She has volunteered extensively helping international students and refugees.
God has also given Marie diverse motherhood experiences through the international adoption of an older child, a biological child after years of struggling with infertility, and the unexpected stillbirth of her son. Marie shares how God transforms our valleys of hurt to doors of hope when we process our pain in the presence of Christ and community. She writes about grief and loss on her blog, calmmamabear.com.
Currently, Marie leads an adoption support group focused on trauma-informed parenting at her church. Marie lives in California with her husband, two children with a third in heaven, and their giant 12-pound rabbit. You can often find Marie at her local library checking out many diverse books.
Marie is a member of the Redbud Writers Guild, Entrusted Women, and Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI). Marie was awarded a BIPOC scholarship sponsored by Christopher Paul Curtis and SCBWI for her biography of Mamie Tape. Mamie Takes a Stand received a 2024 Eureka! Gold Award for Excellence in Children’s Nonfiction from the California Reading Association and was listed in the Center for the Study of Multicultural Children’s Literature’s Best Books of 2024.
Chrislyn Choo

Chrislyn Choo
Chrislyn Choo / 朱琦恩 (she/her) weaves stories of shalom. An Emmy-winning producer, facilitator, and multimedia artist, she guides communities through the sacred work of reconnecting with their roots. In collaboration with heritage keepers like Parents Are Human, Asian American Christian History Institute, and My China Roots (as seen in Found on Netflix), she nurtures spaces that honor the multitudes we carry and metabolize grief and joy into collective resilience, so we can become better ancestors today. From STORY Conference and Filmshop to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing and East-West Center in Hawaii, her speaking and facilitation bridge the crossroads of cultural transformation and community care – equipping family historians, filmmakers, and faith leaders to steward our stories with reverence and integrity.
Rooted in the U.S., China, and Malaysia, Chrislyn feels most alive in the tender work of crystallizing 只可意会, 不可言传: what can be deeply felt, yet eludes words. She is now dreaming up offerings that transform family lore into living heirlooms and catalyze healing across generations.
Peter Li

Peter Li
Peter Li was born and raised in Hong Kong, and studied computer science and linguistics at UC San Diego and University of Pennsylvania. He was called by God into full-time ministry ten years ago and received theological degrees from Knox Seminary and Missio Seminary. He currently pastors the Cantonese congregation at his home church, Chinese Christian Church and Center in the heart of Philadelphia’s Chinatown.
Moderators
David C. Chao

David C. Chao
Dr. David C. Chao is the director of the Center for Asian American Christianity at Princeton Theological Seminary. He teaches courses on Asian American theology and organizes academic programming in Asian American theology and ministry. His research and writing focus on Asian American theology, the uses of Christian doctrine for liberation, the convergence and divergence of Protestant and Catholic dogmatics, and the theology of Karl Barth.
His first book, titled Concursus and Concept Use in Karl Barth’s Doctrine of Providence, is under contract with Routledge. He is grant co-author and project editor for the $300,000 translation grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities to the Karl Barth Translator’s Seminar. He is co-leader of a $250,000 Henry Luce grant project titled “Religiously-Inspired Asian American Coalitional Justice Work.” He is principal investigator of a Louisville Institute-funded project titled “Stories of Faith, Resilience, and Politics: First-Generation East Asian American Christians.”
Chao is a graduate of Yale University (BA), Regent College (MDiv), and Princeton Theological Seminary (ThM, PhD). He is a member of the American Academy of Religion and the Association for Asian American Studies. Chao has a wide range of pastoral experience with Chinese American, Korean American, and Pan-Asian churches and ministries and is an active member of the Presbyterian Church (USA).
Read his article “Evangelical or Mainline? Doctrinal Similarity and Difference in Asian American Christianity: Sketching a Social-Practical Theory of Christian Doctrine” here. You can also check out “The 1517 Project and World Christianity: Migration and the Uses of Doctrine” here or download the free PDF version here. This paper was presented at the 2023 Asian American Theology Conference “Multiple Belongings in Transpacific Christianities: Christian Faith and Asian Migration to the US.”
Lisa Cleath

Lisa Cleath
Lisa J. Cleath is Assistant Professor of Old Testament at PTS. She researches topics at the intersection of ancient Middle Eastern studies and critical theory, including the politics of textual authority in the ancient Middle East, postcolonial framing of Second Temple Jewish identity, historical trauma in biblical literature, and whiteness in North American Biblical Studies. Her current book project is entitled “Political Textuality in the Ancient Middle East: Hybridizing Treaty Practices in Biblical Literature.”
CAAC Event Team
Roberto Solis Abraham | Podcast Production Lead

Roberto Solis Abraham | Podcast Production Lead
Roberto Solis Abraham serves as co-pastor of Iglesia de Cristo in the El Salvador neighborhood of Saltillo, Mexico. He is married to Danea and together they have four daughters. Roberto is also an active member of Nurturing Communities, a network of Christ-centered intentional communities.
Daniella Jacob | Public Scholarship Editor

Daniella Jacob | Public Scholarship Editor
Daniella Jacob is a Malayali-American, born and raised in Houston, Texas. She is currently an undergraduate student at Bryn Mawr College studying Religion and Anthropology. As a Public Scholarship Editor at the CAAC, she has enjoyed helping thinkers of all generations and denominations putting to words what may be hard to explain. After Bryn Mawr, Daniella hopes to continue her research through graduate school.
Josh Livingston | Public Scholarship Editor

Josh Livingston | Public Scholarship Editor
Josh Livingston is a member of Englewood Christian Church in Indianapolis, IN. He serves as the Director of Congregational Engagement at Englewood Community Development Corporation. He is also a Public Scholarship Editor and Program Manager at Princeton Theological Seminary’s Center for Asian American Christianity.
Register Now for FREE
Registration for live attendance is closed.
In-person location: Cooper Room, Erdman Center (20 Library Pl, Princeton, NJ 08540, United States)
Schedule | Tuesday, October 7, 2025
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Cooper Room, Erdman Center
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10:00 AM – 10:20 AM
Check-In and Coffee
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10:30 AM – 10:45 AM
Opening Remarks | Dr. David Chao
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10:45 AM – 11:45 AM
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11:45 AM – 12:45 PM
Between Wrestling and Blessing: Jacob and his Messy Family | Dr. Chloe Sun
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12:45 PM – 1:45 PM
Lunch Break
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1:45 PM – 2:45 PM
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2:45 PM – 3:45 PM
Theological Response | Dr. Daniel Lee
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3:45 PM – 4:00 PM
Break
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4:00 PM – 5:00 PM
Panel Discussion: Asian American Faith Leaders | Alex Chang, Marie Chan, Chrislyn Choo, Peter Li | Moderated by Lisa Cleath and David Chao
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5:00 PM
Closing Remarks
Sessions
This opening talk situates the Hebrew Bible’s complex family stories—sibling rivalries, migration journeys, and household economies—within their ancient Near Eastern context. These narratives emerged not from abstract theology but from lived realities of cultural displacement. For Asian American communities navigating filial expectations, generational rifts, and economic pressure, these biblical dynamics feel strikingly familiar—and at times, deeply subversive. This session frames the day’s conversations by offering historical grounding and interpretive tools for reading family and faith with greater depth.
Watch Roger Nam’s introduction video here.
This presentation examines Jacob’s family dynamics, including his experience as a migrant and its impact on his social location as an ethnic minority within a dominant culture, his ongoing struggles with his brother, his relationships with his elder sons, and his daughter Dinah. It also explores generational patterns such as parental favoritism, sibling rivalry, barrenness, and fatherly passivity. Additionally, it highlights how God’s election of Jacob and Jacob’s mediation of God’s blessings show that even amidst family chaos, grace and purpose can be found. The presentation aims to illustrate that despite the complexity of many Asian American families, there is hope for reconciliation and for God’s purposes to be fulfilled.
Watch Chloe Sun’s introduction video here.
We each grew up with a relationship to characters of the Bible: which character was someone to emulate? Who was not the ideal model for a leader, a parent, or spouse? These assessments can sometimes parallel the way our families talked about relatives or community members: the good daughter who takes care of her parents, the terrible church elder who squandered money or the faithful pastor who sacrifices so much. In this presentation, we consider Jacob’s family system: intergenerational and gendered hopes, betrayal, alignment and rejection that allow us opportunities to connect with their contextual realities and curiosities for our own Asian American Christian lives today. We will consider the complex nuances of Bible characters beyond the one-dimensional individual perspectives of their personhood and behaviors.
This presentation will invite attendees to reconsider our assessments (judgements) of Bible characters and increase our empathy (of others and self) through understanding Jacob’s family with a sociocontextual and relational lens. It will highlight relationships in context, reflecting on dynamics of rupture and opportunities for repair.
Travel
The address of the conference location is 20 Library Pl, Princeton, NJ 08540, United States. Click here to view information on travel and airport ground transportation options.