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It is remarkable that African Americans, the descendants of slaves, embrace Christianity at all. The imagination that is necessary to parse biblical text and find within it a theology that speaks to their context is a testimony to their will to survive in a hostile land. Black religion embraces the cross and the narrative of Jesus as savior, both theologically and culturally. But this does not suggest that African Americans have not historically, and do not now, struggle with the reconciliation of the cross, black life, suffering. African Americans are well aware of the shared relationship of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
It is remarkable that African Americans, the descendants of slaves, embrace Christianity at all. The imagination that is necessary to parse biblical text and find within it a theology that speaks to their context is a testimony to their will to survive in a hostile land. Black religion embraces the cross and the narrative of Jesus as savior, both theologically and culturally. But this does not suggest that African Americans have not historically, and do not now, struggle with the reconciliation of the cross, black life, suffering. African Americans are well aware of the shared relationship of Christianity with the white oppressors of history. The religion that helped African Americans to survive is the religion that was instrumental in their near genocide.
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Autorenporträt
Larry Donell Covin Jr. is the author of Thirteen Turns: A Theology Resurrected from the Gallows of Jim Crow Christianity. He is the Systematic Theologian-Religion Scholar at Historic Trinity UCC Church (1742) York, Pennsylvania. He earned a BS from Albany State University, MDiv from the Interdenominational Theological Center, DMin from Lancaster Theological Seminary at Moravian University, and a Postdoctoral-Research ThM from Princeton Theological Seminary. For over twenty years he taught at the university and seminary level.