A Black Theology of Divine Violence

This paper claims that the black church community had a well-articulated theology which included a prominent place for a Black Theology of Divine Violence. The investigation of the early Black historical narration including the spirituals, abolitionist writings and oral narratives reveal that Black...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Donald Henry Matthews
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2019-11-01
Series:Black Theology Papers Project
Online Access:https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/btpp/article/view/3860
Description
Summary:This paper claims that the black church community had a well-articulated theology which included a prominent place for a Black Theology of Divine Violence. The investigation of the early Black historical narration including the spirituals, abolitionist writings and oral narratives reveal that Black Christians advocated and used violence as a necessary action for the achievement of black liberation. Black Christians did not understand the use of violence as being antithetical to the Theological Ethical norms of Christian Love. They testified, sang and wrote about the presence of the Divine in their violent actions for freedom. This fact has been overshadowed by the nonviolent strategy of Martin L. King, Jr. and the Civil Right movement. The position of this paper is that King’s theology made a virtue out of a necessity. It understands nonviolent theological ethics as a strategy rather than the only ethical response to Black suffering.
ISSN:2641-2799