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Rev. Dr. Eric Williams

Lecturer

An ordained minister of the Church of God in Christ, Eric Lewis Williams holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Communications and Sociology from the University of Illinois at Chicago, a Master of Arts degree in Theological Studies from the McCormick Theological Seminary, the Master of Divinity degree from Duke University and a Doctorate of Philosophy in Religious Studies from the University of Edinburgh in the United Kingdom.

Williams has taught theology, history and African American Studies at several institutions including: Western Theological Seminary; Ashland Theological Seminary (Detroit); Iowa State University; Shaw University; Virginia Union University; Boston College; and Harvard University. In addition to his teaching experience, for nearly seven years, Williams served as the Curator of Religion for the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History & Culture in Washington, D.C. In July of 2023, leaving the museum, Williams joined the teaching faculty of the Duke University School of Divinity in Durham NC. At Duke University, Williams serves as Assistant Professor of Theology and Black Church Studies, and Director of the Office of Black Church Studies.

Williams’ current research examines the meaning of religion within African American history and culture, and the role and influences of African religions within the Atlantic world. Williams is a co-editor of the T&T Clark Handbook of African American Theology and is currently completing a manuscript which explores theological significations in African American Pentecostal thought.

Williams’ research and studies have taken him to the continents of Africa, South America, Europe, extensively throughout the continental United States, Mexico, and to several islands of the Caribbean. Williams considers himself a transatlantic commuter, a collector of words, and an emergent jazzman in the world of ideas.