The objective of this essay is to investigate the public function of Christian theology in the (politico-theological writings and hermeneutics of James H. Cone. It is also to articulate a critique of white American theology. In Cone’s work, Christian theology is expressed as a public discourse and testimony of God’s continuing emancipative movements and empowering presence in society with the goal (1) to set the oppressed and the vulnerable free, (2) to readjust the things of the world toward divine justice and peace, and (3) to bring healing and restoration to the places in which volitional (human) agents have inflicted pain, suffering, oppression, and all forms of evil. This essay is an attempt to imagine creatively with new hermeneutical...
White Christian theology is plagued by a history of construction, accommodation, and reinforcement o...
In recent decades, the advent of ideologies such as Liberation Theology and Critical Race Theory hav...
Following the Civil Rights and Black Power movements of the 1960’s and 70’s, a new tradition of theo...
PhD (Dogmatics), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusJames Cone has offered a salient critiqu...
Fifty years ago (1970) saw the publication of James Cone’s seminal second book, A Black Theology of ...
This essay inspired by the memory of James H. Cone (1938–2018) and Katie G. Cannon (1950–2018), expl...
James Cone is widely respected as the ‘Father of Black Theology’ and one of the most important theol...
Thesis advisor: Andrew L. PrevotAnti-Black racism and white supremacy are critical and interrelated ...
In 1969 James Cone, AME minister and professor of theology, published Black Theology and Black Power...
In the 1997 preface to this remarkable book, James Cone criticizes his original Christological empha...
Black liberation theologians come to terms with white supremacy by collectively remembering the stor...
Who can save us from redemption? Some of the earliest accounts of the African slave trade claimed th...
Reverend Dr. James Hal Cone has unquestionably been a key architect in defining Black liberation the...
Black liberation theologians come to terms with white supremacy by collectively remembering the stor...
With an attention to womanist theological critiques of hetero-patriarchal-white- sexist America espe...
White Christian theology is plagued by a history of construction, accommodation, and reinforcement o...
In recent decades, the advent of ideologies such as Liberation Theology and Critical Race Theory hav...
Following the Civil Rights and Black Power movements of the 1960’s and 70’s, a new tradition of theo...
PhD (Dogmatics), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusJames Cone has offered a salient critiqu...
Fifty years ago (1970) saw the publication of James Cone’s seminal second book, A Black Theology of ...
This essay inspired by the memory of James H. Cone (1938–2018) and Katie G. Cannon (1950–2018), expl...
James Cone is widely respected as the ‘Father of Black Theology’ and one of the most important theol...
Thesis advisor: Andrew L. PrevotAnti-Black racism and white supremacy are critical and interrelated ...
In 1969 James Cone, AME minister and professor of theology, published Black Theology and Black Power...
In the 1997 preface to this remarkable book, James Cone criticizes his original Christological empha...
Black liberation theologians come to terms with white supremacy by collectively remembering the stor...
Who can save us from redemption? Some of the earliest accounts of the African slave trade claimed th...
Reverend Dr. James Hal Cone has unquestionably been a key architect in defining Black liberation the...
Black liberation theologians come to terms with white supremacy by collectively remembering the stor...
With an attention to womanist theological critiques of hetero-patriarchal-white- sexist America espe...
White Christian theology is plagued by a history of construction, accommodation, and reinforcement o...
In recent decades, the advent of ideologies such as Liberation Theology and Critical Race Theory hav...
Following the Civil Rights and Black Power movements of the 1960’s and 70’s, a new tradition of theo...