In a powerful address originally delivered to church congregations, Professor C. Justin Robinson draws striking parallels between biblical narratives of oppressed peoples and the contemporary Caribbean condition. The analysis reveals how ancient stories of survival under empire rule mirror modern regional challenges, offering both sobering reflections and hopeful pathways forward.
The biblical journey from Genesis to Revelation consistently portrays small nations navigating domination by powerful empires—from Abraham’s departure from Mesopotamia to Jesus’s execution under Roman authority. This framework provides a compelling lens through which to examine Caribbean history and current realities. The region’s economic structures echo Pharaoh’s Egypt, where enslaved populations built infrastructure for their own oppression. Similarly, Caribbean nations historically produced commodities for foreign consumers under arrangements dictated from distant capitals, creating economic dependencies that persist today.
Professor Robinson identifies tourism dependence, food importation despite fertile lands, and brain drain masked as development strategy as modern manifestations of this colonial legacy. The post-war international order that once provided protective walls for small nations is now being dismantled by the very powers that established it, leaving Caribbean countries vulnerable in an increasingly volatile global landscape.
The analysis turns to biblical wisdom for guidance in navigating contemporary challenges. Jesus’s instruction to “render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s” provides a framework for engaging with powerful nations without surrendering cultural identity or sovereignty. The prophet Jeremiah’s counsel to build houses and plant gardens during Babylonian exile offers a blueprint for self-reliance—investing in local institutions, developing agricultural sovereignty, and creating sustainable communities rather than waiting for external rescue.
Caribbean strengths are reframed as modern-day David’s stones against Goliath: climate expertise, digital potential, energy sovereignty capabilities, proven models of regional integration through the OECS, and the power of unified voice. The parable of the Good Samaritan underscores the necessity of regional cooperation, questioning why successful integration models for smaller populations cannot scale across CARICOM.
The address concludes with an urgent call to action, invoking Esther’s courage and Isaiah’s willingness to serve. The most liberating realization, according to Professor Robinson, is recognizing that no external savior will emerge—true freedom requires Caribbean people to build economies their citizens choose rather than endure, embracing self-determination as both practical necessity and moral imperative.
