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Jaxon Washburn

Portrait of Jaxon Washburn

Jaxon Washburn is a Ph.D. student in Near Eastern Languages and Cultures with a focus on Armenian Studies at UCLA. He holds a Master of Theological Studies in History of Christianity from Harvard Divinity School (2023) and dual bachelor’s degrees in Religious Studies and History from Arizona State University (2021), both earned summa cum laude.

Raised in an interfaith household, Jaxon has long been passionate about religious studies and interfaith activism, with early speaking engagements at venues including the Parliament of the World’s Religions and the United Nations. He formerly served as youth advisor for the Arizona Interfaith Movement and as a member of the Mormon Transhumanist Association. He went on to serve a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Armenia⁠—an experience that profoundly shaped the trajectory of his academic career.

At Harvard Divinity School, Jaxon deepened his commitment to both scholarship and faith. He worked as a Research Associate with the Harvard Pluralism Project, contributing to efforts promoting religious literacy and interreligious engagement. His studies there also led to a published essay, “Mormonism: The Most American ‘Religious Other,’” in the Harvard Divinity Bulletin (Fall/Winter 2022). During his time at HDS, he developed a strong interest in Armenian religious history, studying Classical Armenian and working with Dr. Christina Maranci following the reestablishment of Harvard’s Mashtots Chair for Armenian Studies.

Jaxon’s current research interests encompass the history of Christianity, Eastern and Armenian Christianity, mediums of interreligious exchange, and religious pluralisms in the South Caucasus. His earlier work on intersections between Hindu and Latter-day Saint traditions around themes of transfiguration and divine embodiment has broadened into a wider exploration of how religious communities interact, exchange, and develop across cultural boundaries.

Videos by Jaxon Washburn

Refuge of the Worlds
19:44

Jaxon Washburn

Refuge of the Worlds

2018.04.20

Jaxon Washburn examines themes of transfiguration and divine embodiment in both Hindu and Latter-day Saint traditions, placing the Bhagavad Gita in dialogue with the Book of Moses. He compares the cosmic visions granted to Arjuna by Krishna and to Moses by God, noting how both mortals required supernatural assistance to withstand the divine presence and both experienced profound humility afterward. Washburn argues that these parallel narratives demonstrate how mortal transfiguration precedes cosmic knowledge—a theme central to Mormon transhumanism—and suggests that studying such cross-traditional parallels can deepen Latter-day Saints' understanding of their own theology of divine embodiment and eternal progression.