Forever in Thy Path: The God of Black Liberation - Tapa blanda

Singleton III, Harry H.

 
9781626984707: Forever in Thy Path: The God of Black Liberation

Sinopsis

Forever in Thy Path makes the case that the God of biblical revelation is today's God of black liberation and that black liberation will realize itself given that the eternal power of God's liberating presence will ultimately defeat the historical power of white supremacy. In this book the author employs "path" as a metaphor to denote the trek of black people on its liberating journey from the holds of ships to today. It affirms black strivings for freedom as consistent with divine will despite those strivings' branding as iconoclastic and ungodly by the white Christian establishment.

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Acerca del autor

Harry H. Singleton, III, teaches in the African American Studies Program at the University of South Carolina, Columbia. He earned an M.Div. degree from the Interdenominational Theological Center, Atlanta, and his doctorate from the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley. His previous books are Black Theology and Ideology, White Religion and Black Humanity, and Divine Revelation and Human Liberation.

De la contraportada

US$26.00

RELIGION / Christian Theology/ Liberation

RELIGION / Christianity / History

RELIGION / Christian Living / Social Issues


Orbis LOGO

978-1-62698-470-7

Cover design by Marco Gallo

Fragmento. © Reproducción autorizada. Todos los derechos reservados.

Introduction


As we now have the eightieth anniversary of the 1938 publication of Benjamin E. Mays, The Negro’s God as Reflected in His Literature, in our rearview mirror, we are indebted to Mays for the first landmark study on African Americans’ diverse understandings of God. It still serves as the most comprehensive study on God in the history of Black people in this country. Mays’s masterful work examines the different time periods in which Black people’s understanding of God evolved: first from 1760 to 1865 (Emancipation); then from 1865 to 1914 (World War I); and finally from 1914 to 1938 (the publication of the book). From those three periods, Mays was able to identify four images of analysis: physical and emotional security; otherworldly/compensatory; atheistic; and social reconstruction. Let us now examine these different periods more closely.

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