First published in 1969, "Black Theology & Black Power" provided the first systematic presentation of black theology. Relating the militant struggle for liberation with the gospel message of salvation, James Cone laid the foundation for an original interpretation of Christianity that retains its urgency and challenge today.
Black Theology, Black Power
See James S. Tinney's excellentarticle,"TheMoral Majority: Operating Underthe Hoodof ReligiousRight," Dollars and Sense, specialissue,vol. 7,no. 2, June/July 1981,pp. 6873. 7. It is reallyamazingthat somany liberal white theologians and ...
These books, which offered a searing indictment of white theology and society, introduced a radical reappraisal of the Christian message for our time.
I am grateful to C. Eric Lincoln, my colleague at Union, for the invitation to write this work for the C. Eric Lincoln Series in Black Religion. His confidence and encouragement have been invaluable to me.
birth to the black church and was the soil for the roots of black theology) allowed enslaved African Americans to keep alive memories of African indigenous religions. To these, they added their own commonsense wisdom from everyday ...
This examination of modern black theology creates a new paradigm known as Integrasegreology, which offers a corrective theory to the polarization of the ideologies of Malcolm X and Dr. Martin...
After the Jewish Holocaust , Christian theologians were forced to ask whether antiJudaism was so deeply woven into the core of ... which , according to British historian Basil Davidson , " cost Africa at least fifty million souls " ??
"How two forms of song helped sustain slaves and their children in the midst of tribulation. With a new introduction by Cheryl Townsend Gilkes"--
Black Faith and Public Talk continues Cone's theme of power in the public realm and examines the economic, political, cultural, gender, and theological implications of black faith and black theology.
Black Theology: A Documentary History, 1966-1979