Foreword |
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xiii | |
Acknowledgments |
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xv | |
Introduction |
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xix | |
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What Is Black Church Studies? |
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xix | |
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The Historic Black Church Tradition |
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xxiii | |
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Explanation of the Black Church as Tradition |
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xxiv | |
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xxv | |
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Organization of the Book and Pedagogical Aims |
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xxviii | |
1. Black Church History |
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3 | |
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3 | |
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From Slave Religion to Liberating Faith: The Making of Black Christians |
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4 | |
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Race, Slavery, and the Great Awakenings |
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6 | |
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The Black Church as the Invisible Institution in the Old South |
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11 | |
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The Black Church as the Visible Institution in the Antebellum North |
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13 | |
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The Black Church and the Anti-slavery Struggle |
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14 | |
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The Black Church and the Civil War |
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15 | |
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Making the Invisible Institution Visible: The Evolution of the Modern Black Church Tradition |
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17 | |
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The Creation of the "Negro Church" after Emancipation |
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19 | |
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Black Denominationalism and the Consolidation of the Black Church in Modern America |
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21 | |
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Jim and Jane Crow, the Great Migration, and the Quest for the Promised Land |
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24 | |
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Black Pentecostalism in Early Twentieth-century America |
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27 | |
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The Black Church and the Civil Rights Movement |
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29 | |
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Confronting "America's Original Sin": The History of the Black Church's Future |
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38 | |
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Black Power and the Development of New Black Theologies |
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38 | |
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Black Churches and Presidential Campaigns in the PostCivil Rights Era |
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39 | |
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Formation of Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship |
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41 | |
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The "Stained Glass Ceiling" and the Elevation of Female Bishops in the AME Church |
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41 | |
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Rise of Black Megachurches and the "Gospel of Prosperity" |
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42 | |
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44 | |
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45 | |
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William Edward Burghardt Du Bois |
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45 | |
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45 | |
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46 | |
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47 | |
2. Black Biblical Studies |
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51 | |
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51 | |
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52 | |
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53 | |
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Scripture as Folk Wisdom (Inclusive) |
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53 | |
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Canon within a Canon (Exclusive) |
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54 | |
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The Task of Black Biblical Hermeneutics |
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55 | |
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55 | |
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The Black Condition as Biblical Connection |
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56 | |
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How Blackness Became Demonized in the Church |
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58 | |
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Black Presence as Biblical Connection |
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61 | |
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Overview of Black Biblical Hermeneutics |
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61 | |
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Historical Readings from the Black Church Perspective |
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61 | |
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Contemporary Readings from Black Biblical Scholars |
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62 | |
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66 | |
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67 | |
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67 | |
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67 | |
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68 | |
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69 | |
3. Black Theologies |
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73 | |
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73 | |
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74 | |
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75 | |
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The Three Aspects of Black Existence: Sacred Inheritance, Experience, and Scripture |
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77 | |
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77 | |
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77 | |
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79 | |
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80 | |
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God, Humanity, and the Spirit in the Black Sacred Cosmos |
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81 | |
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Compensatory and Constructivist Dimensions of Black Church Theology |
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85 | |
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Compensatory/Accommodationalist Piety |
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86 | |
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87 | |
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The Eschatological Vision |
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88 | |
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Black Liberation Theology |
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89 | |
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90 | |
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92 | |
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93 | |
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93 | |
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93 | |
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94 | |
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95 | |
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95 | |
4. The Black Church, Culture, and Society |
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99 | |
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99 | |
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Critical Perspectives for Studying Black Religion, Culture, and Society |
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101 | |
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Understanding Black Culture and Faith |
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101 | |
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Doing Research in Community |
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102 | |
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Insider/Outsider Participant Observation in Black Church Studies |
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103 | |
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Oral/Aural Culture and the Study of the Black Church |
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105 | |
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Visual Culture and the Study of the Black Church |
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106 | |
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Black Congregational Studies |
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106 | |
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Community, Church Work, Culture, and Crisis |
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106 | |
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Gender and Sexuality in Community/Church Leadership |
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107 | |
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Diasporan Studies and the Black Church |
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|
110 | |
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The Black Atlantic, the Middle Passage, and Religious Experience |
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110 | |
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Migration and Reconstruction of Religious Traditions |
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111 | |
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The Politics of Pluralism |
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112 | |
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114 | |
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115 | |
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115 | |
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116 | |
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116 | |
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117 | |
5. African American Christian Social Ethics |
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121 | |
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121 | |
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Chattel Slavery and the African American Moral Condition |
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122 | |
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The Black Church as a Surrogate World |
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123 | |
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The Black Church and the African American Moral Dilemma |
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126 | |
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The African Moral Sphere and Our Modification of It |
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127 | |
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The Moral Agency of the Oppressed |
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128 | |
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African American Virtue Ethics |
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129 | |
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132 | |
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133 | |
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133 | |
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134 | |
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135 | |
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135 | |
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Approaches to Liberation Ethics in the Black Church |
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136 | |
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138 | |
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Pragmatic Accommodationists |
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|
139 | |
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139 | |
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139 | |
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Positive Thought Materialists |
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|
140 | |
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Contemplative Communitarians |
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|
140 | |
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140 | |
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141 | |
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142 | |
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143 | |
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143 | |
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144 | |
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144 | |
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145 | |
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145 | |
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146 | |
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146 | |
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147 | |
6. Christian Education in the Black Church Tradition |
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151 | |
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151 | |
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Discipleship as Aims and Means |
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152 | |
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What Is Practical Theology? |
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|
153 | |
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What Is Christian Education? |
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153 | |
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Christian Education as Practical Theology in the Black Church |
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154 | |
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Understanding Ways Christian Education Functions in the Black Church |
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155 | |
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Compulsory Mis-Education: The Historic Context |
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156 | |
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The Role of the Pastor as Primary Teacher: The Role of Laity as Teacher |
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157 | |
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Typical Structures That Provide Experiential Education in Congregational Life |
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|
158 | |
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163 | |
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Prophetic and Political Dimensions of Ministry |
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|
167 | |
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Educational Theory Intersects with Black Liberation Theology |
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|
169 | |
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Black Liberation Pedagogy |
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169 | |
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Black Liberation Theology and Black Liberation Pedagogy |
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|
170 | |
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The Challenge for Black Church Education in the Twenty-first Century |
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173 | |
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174 | |
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175 | |
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175 | |
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175 | |
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176 | |
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176 | |
7. Black Christian Worship as Nurture |
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179 | |
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|
179 | |
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|
180 | |
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Current-day Circumstances of Black People Calling for Nurture |
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|
181 | |
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Worship as Nurturing Response |
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|
182 | |
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|
183 | |
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Content in the Nurturing Process of Black Worship |
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185 | |
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Methods of Nurturing Pathways |
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|
189 | |
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189 | |
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Methods of Proclamation through the Sermon |
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|
191 | |
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193 | |
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Nurturing Content and Method in Baptism and Holy Communion |
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|
195 | |
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|
196 | |
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|
197 | |
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The Roles of Pastor and Congregation in Nurture |
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|
197 | |
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|
197 | |
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|
198 | |
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|
198 | |
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Anne E. Streaty Wimberly and Edward P. Wimberly |
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|
199 | |
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|
199 | |
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|
200 | |
8. Black Preaching Praxis |
|
203 | |
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|
203 | |
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Practical Theology and Black Preaching |
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|
204 | |
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African Spirituality and Preaching |
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|
206 | |
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Interpretation and Transformation |
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|
209 | |
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The Preaching Event in Faith Community |
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212 | |
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213 | |
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Preaching as Telling the Story |
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216 | |
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The Manner of Interpretation |
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|
218 | |
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Apprenticeship TraditionsLearning to Preach |
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220 | |
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222 | |
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223 | |
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223 | |
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Henry H. Mitchell and Ella Pearson Mitchell |
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|
224 | |
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|
225 | |
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|
225 | |
Notes |
|
227 | |
Glossary |
|
247 | |
Bibliography |
|
259 | |
Authors' Biographies |
|
275 | |
Index |
|
277 | |