What do the theological disciplines have to do with reparations? Historically, many churches and theologians defended and supported race-based slavery and subsequent forms of racial hierarchy and violence. While today many in our society see reparations as an important step towards addressing the harm perpetrated against Black Americans, the theological disciplines have often ignored this crucial topic.
The time is now for biblical scholars, theologians, and religious historians to make a prophetic case for reparations. Each essay in Reparations and the Theological Disciplines does precisely that. Written for students, scholars, pastors, and church people, the essays in this volume draw on the riches of Scripture, Christian theology, history, and praxis to make the case for an ethic of remembrance, reckoning, and repair.
Recenzijas
What makes reparations for entrenched inequity so urgent in our society is that it is the place where the hard question of economics and the hard questions of race converge. It is abundantly clear that nothing less than reparations are required for our society to move toward peaceable, generative wellbeing. For this reason, this book is both welcome and urgent. It is welcome because it mobilizes in a most compelling way the inescapable evidence in our deepest theological tradition on behalf of reparations. It is urgent because the church, for the sake of the body politic, must be awakened to the requirements and possibilities latent in our tradition. The book makes it possible that the issue of reparations can be seriously and honestly taken up in local communities that are willing to engage the resources of our shared faith. These several writers pull no punches about the truth-telling that the tradition requires. We may hope for a broad, deep engagement with the sharp-edge insistence of this rich study.
Walter Brueggemann, Columbia Theological Seminary -- Walter Brueggemann, Columbia Theological Seminary
Abbreviations
Introduction: Toolbox for a Journey of Remembrance, Reckoning, and Repair.
Michael Barram, Drew G. I. Hart, Gimbiya Kettering, and Michael J. Rhodes
Part One: Reparations and the Bible
Chapter One: Reparations in Exodus, Matthew Schlimm
Chapter Two: Bypassing the Bible: Why Exodus 21 and Deuteronomy 15 Did Not
Influence and Have Not Influenced Reparations Proposals, Stacy Davis
Chapter Three: Witness: The Job: How to Talk to White People About
Reparations, Gimbiya Kettering
Chapter Four: From Here to Jubilee: Reading Torah in Dialogue with Darity and
Mullens Case for Reparations, Michael J. Rhodes
Chapter Five: Reparational Reasoning: The Biblical Jubilee as Moral Formation
for a More Just Future, Michael Barram
Chapter Six: Witness: Zacchaeus and the Call to Repair: A Sermon on Luke
19:1-10, Duke L. Kwon
Chapter Seven: You Cannot Pay Back What You Have Never Owned: A Conversation
on Reparations and Pauls Letter to Philemon, Angela N. Parker
Chapter Eight: Philemon as a Plea for Reparations Then and Now, Michael J.
Gorman
Part Two: Reparations and Christian Theology
Chapter Nine: The Reparational God, Mark Labberton
Chapter Ten: Myth, Belonging, and Reparative Ethics: A Theological and
Pedagogical Account, Drew G. I. Hart
Chapter Eleven: Dont Make Me Feel Guilty: Why Penal Substitution
Interferes with Reparations and Reconciliation, Mako A. Nagasawa
Chapter Twelve: Witness: Reparations or Atonement: Searching for an
Appropriate Vessel, Rodney S. Sadler Jr.
Chapter Thirteen: Reparations NOW: For The Glory of God, Ekemini Uwan
Chapter Fourteen: Catholic Social Thought and Reparations, Christina McRorie
Part Three: Reparations in History and Contemporary Praxis
Chapter Fifteen: The DC Compensated Emancipation Act as Precedent for
Reparations, Renee K. Harrison
Chapter Sixteen: Reparation as Reckoning, Malcolm Foley
Chapter Seventeen: Witness: The Call for Truth and Reparations in Minnesota,
Jim Bear Jacobs, Pamela R. Ngunjiri, and Curtiss Paul DeYoung
Chapter Eighteen: Bear Fruits Worthy of Repentance: A Black Administrators
Perspective on the Challenge and Promise of the Virginia Theological Seminary
Reparations Program, Joseph Downing Thompson Jr.
Conclusion, Drew G. I. Hart
About the Contributors
Michael Barram is professor of theology and religious studies at Saint Marys College of California.
Drew G. I. Hart is associate professor of theology at Messiah University and program director of Thriving Together Congregations for Racial Justice.
Gimbiya Kettering, M.F.A., rooted in the Church of the Brethren, leads workshops about racism in the church and gospel-based social justice.
Michael J. Rhodes is lecturer in Old Testament at Carey Baptist College.