Christians of Color Are Rejecting “Colonial Christianity” and Reclaiming Ancestral Spiritualities
This is how quickly it happened. One moment we were passing sumptuous kebob platters around…
Read MoreThis is how quickly it happened. One moment we were passing sumptuous kebob platters around…
Read MoreWhy did this ultimately tragic movement, led by a young white man, appeal to so many African-American women?
Read MoreSadly, there is still a fair amount of ignorance and bigotry toward black non-believers in African American communities due to the stereotype that atheists are immoral, rudderless, and not authentically black. This belief is especially insidious for black women. Mainstream African American culture places a high premium on black female caregiving, piety, and sacrifice. The patriarchal traditions of the Black Church, with their emphasis on charismatic black male leadership and biblical literalism, play a key role in socializing black women to be subservient and self-sacrificing.
Read MoreAfrican-American people were taught Christianity in the context of oppression. When people are disempowered, they are often empowered at someone else’s expense, whether it’s women or children or gay people. How do we get through that?
Read MoreWhat is the black church and what does it mean to say that the black church is dead? A provocative assertion and prophetic challenge by a prominent interpreter of African-American religion occasions a lively and varied set of responses. Updated with a response to those responses by Eddie Glaude, Jr., whose article sparked the discussion.
Read MoreThe Rev. Wright controversy begs the question: Has “The Black Church” outgrown its usefulness?
Read MoreMaybe the real “straight-talk express” should run for the nation’s highest office himself; the one test for president Wright cannot pass is the one the mainstream media insist on more than any other.
Read MoreAnyone who thinks that full agreement with your pastor is necessary has never been to church…
Read MoreIt is simply assumed that black politicians live or die by the support of black preachers—but is it true?
Read MoreNew books by Anthea Butler, Willam Hart, Edward Blum, and Victor Anderson, among others, deepen the discussion of race and religion in the US.
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