PostEverything

Compassion without Capture w/ Neil Shenvi

Neil Shenvi on Wokeness, Truth, and the Church

What does it mean to respond to wokeness without panic, caricature, or reactionary tribalism?

In this episode of Post Everything, Brad Edwards and John Houmes sit down with Neil Shenvi, co-author of Post-Woke, to talk about the cultural position of Christianity in 2026, the power of contemporary critical theory, and how churches can form people who are neither ideologically captured nor politically naive.

The conversation explores the complexity of our current moment: Are we in a “negative world,” an apathetic world, or something even more fragmented? How should Christians think about “woke natives,” younger generations shaped by DEI frameworks, oppressor/oppressed binaries, and moral urgency? And how do pastors offer both compassion and clarity when so much of the culture is driven by polarization, fear, and identity conflict?

Shenvi argues that critical theory is not merely a tool or political lens, but a worldview with its own account of identity, justice, truth, and righteousness. But he also warns Christians against responding with simplistic anti-woke rhetoric or drifting toward equally unbiblical reactionary movements on the right.

Together they discuss:

  • Christianity’s changing cultural position
  • Why “woke” ideas appeal to younger generations
  • The importance of reading primary sources and steelmanning arguments
  • The danger of raising kids with no immunity to bad ideas
  • How critical theory reshapes identity, justice, and moral authority
  • Why worship is essential for resisting all totalizing worldviews
  • How the Church can remain biblical without becoming reactionary

This is a conversation about formation, truth, and the future of the Church in a deeply contested cultural moment.

Key Themes

  • Negative world, apatheism, and cultural fragmentation
  • Compassionate clarity as a Christian posture
  • Critical theory as a worldview, not just a method
  • The formation of Gen Z and “woke natives”
  • Identity, social binaries, and hegemonic power
  • Reading primary sources instead of caricatures
  • The danger of anti-woke overreaction
  • Worship as resistance to ideological capture

Chapters

00:00 Intro

02:37 Christianity’s Cultural Position

07:03 Clarity Without Dismissal

13:36 Dialogue, Sources, Truth

18:45 Theory Becomes Religion

25:29 Four Pillars Explained

30:48 When Theory Corrupts

33:41 Poison, Not Meat

35:34 The Woke Right

40:20 Gen Z's Tension

43:39 Can't Split Jesus

47:51 Formation Without God

52:10 Trust Replaces Power

57:23 Love and Truth

01:00:40 Worship Reorients Everything

01:05:33 Pillars as Religion

01:12:44 Justice Without King

01:19:23 God First Vertically

01:28:29 Get to Church