Credible Witness is a weekly podcast exploring what it means to live out an authentic faith in today’s world. Each episode features a compelling story of a Christian leader navigating social tension and personal sacrifice in pursuit of their calling to follow Jesus. Hosted by Nikki Toyama-Szeto, executive director of Christians for Social Action, the podcast invites listeners to listen with courage and imagine a more credible church—rooted in love, truth, and communal hope. For more information, visit crediblewitness.us.
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Credible Witness is a weekly podcast exploring what it means to live out an authentic faith in today’s world. Each episode features a compelling story of a Christian leader navigating social tension and personal sacrifice in pursuit of their calling to follow Jesus. Hosted by Nikki Toyama-Szeto, executive director of Christians for Social Action, the podcast invites listeners to listen with courage and imagine a more credible church—rooted in love, truth, and communal hope. For more information, visit crediblewitness.us.
Walter Kim on the Impoverished Gospel, Belonging, and Public Faith
Credible Witness
1 hour 1 minute 30 seconds
1 month ago
Walter Kim on the Impoverished Gospel, Belonging, and Public Faith
How can Evangelicalism today reclaim its gospel identity through love, hospitality, justice, and comprehensive good news?
“I think anything other than that is an impoverished gospel.”
Pastor Walter Kim, president of the National Association of Evangelicals, joins host Nikki Toyama-Szeto on *Credible Witness* to wrestle with the future of evangelicalism. From Luke 4’s vision of Jesus’s inaugural message—”The Spirit of the Lord is upon me …”—Kim reclaims the gospel as comprehensive. It is meant for transforming individuals, communities, institutions, and systems.
He reflects on his immigrant journey, the gift of hospitality, raising a daughter with Down syndrome, and his deep longing for the church to embody “all of Jesus for all of life.” Alongside sobering reflections on spiritual poverty in the American church, Kim shares hopeful stories of holistic community transformation in Boston, Charlottesville, and Malawi.
With honesty and empathy, he calls Christians to move beyond ideological “whack-a-mole” and into a witness shaped by hospitality, solidarity, repentance, and joy. For Kim, this is not just about evangelical identity—it’s about reclaiming the credibility of Christian witness in a fractured world.
Key Moments
Walter Kim’s immigrant background and early encounters with Christian hospitality
Reflections on Korean American church life, belonging, and faith formation
Diverse ministry contexts: Yale, Vancouver, Boston, and Charlottesville
Story of his daughter with Down syndrome and discovering holistic gospel in Malawi
Contrast of economic prosperity vs. spiritual poverty in America
Evangelicalism’s “identity crisis” and politicization
Critique of “ideological whack-a-mole” and fear-driven church witness
Rethinking evangelicalism through multicultural expressions of faith
Personal story of racial vulnerability with a friend in Charlottesville
Vision of a comprehensive gospel shaped by empathy, hospitality, and delight
Helpful Links and Resources
Luke 4:18–19 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke+4%3A18-19\&version=NRSV](https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke+4%3A18-19&version=NRSV)
National Association of Evangelicals [https://www.nae.org/](https://www.nae.org/)
Christianity Today [https://www.christianitytoday.com/](https://www.christianitytoday.com/)
World Relief [https://worldrelief.org/](https://worldrelief.org/)
Regent College [https://www.regent-college.edu/](https://www.regent-college.edu/)
Park Street Church, Boston [https://www.parkstreet.org/](https://www.parkstreet.org/)
Public Faith by Miroslav Volf [https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780802829319/public-faith/](https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780802829319/public-faith/)
About the Contributors
Walter Kim is president of the National Association of Evangelicals, serves on the boards of *Christianity Today* and World Relief, and has pastored churches in Boston, Vancouver, and Charlottesville. He previously served as a chaplain at Yale University. As a Korean American and son of immigrant parents, he brings a global and deeply personal perspective to questions of Christian witness and evangelical identity.
Nikki Toyama-Szeto is executive director of Christians for Social Action and host of *Credible Witness*. She leads conversations at the intersection of faith, justice, and culture, inviting guests to share wisdom from their lived experience of discipleship and social engagement.
Show Notes
Walter Kim on Jesus’s Luke 4 inauguration speech defining the gospel
“I think anything other than that is an impoverished gospel.”
Holistic gospel: personal salvation and systemic transformation
Evangelical identity crisis and demographic shifts in the U.S.
Immigrant church growth and Boston’s revival through global Christianity
Story of Kim’s daughter with Down syndrome speaking in Malawi
Contrast between economic and spiritual poverty
Evangelicalism’s entanglement with politics and fear-driven witness
“Ideological whack-a-mole” and cultural antagonism
Learning from Asian American expressions of honor/shame in evangelism
Hospitality, belonging, and community across ministry contexts
Racial vulnerability, friendship, and solidarity in Charlottesville
Recovering joy and delight as a vision of God’s love
Examples of holistic community transformation in Boston and Charlottesville
Vision for evangelical renewal rooted in repentance, empathy, and comprehensive gospel
Credible Witness
Credible Witness is a weekly podcast exploring what it means to live out an authentic faith in today’s world. Each episode features a compelling story of a Christian leader navigating social tension and personal sacrifice in pursuit of their calling to follow Jesus. Hosted by Nikki Toyama-Szeto, executive director of Christians for Social Action, the podcast invites listeners to listen with courage and imagine a more credible church—rooted in love, truth, and communal hope. For more information, visit crediblewitness.us.