With James Cone’s death, comes the death of Black theology. This statement is hyperbolic in that a variety of theologians—some trained by Cone and others not—will continue to write theological texts ...
In 1975’s God of the Oppressed, theologian James H. Cone described how Christian responses to the 1967 Detroit riot revealed not only an insensitivity to black suffering but, as he argued, a larger ...
Bill Moyers interviews theologian James Cone. The recent reappearance of nooses is a haunting reminder of the dark side of American history, when after the civil war black Americans were forced to ...
On the C-SPAN Networks: James Cone is a Professor for the Union Theological Seminary with two videos in the C-SPAN Video Library; the first appearance was a 1986 Forum. The year with the highest ...
“It was truly amazing how Martin Luther King could sustain his hope for a beloved community at a time when nobody, black or white, seemed to believe in it or even care.” ...
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