黑人解放神学与 "黑人宣言"

J. Floyd-Thomas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2019 年是几个重要的、实质上相互交织的周年纪念日。1619 年,"二十多个黑人 "被强行带入陷入困境的詹姆斯敦殖民地,并被当作奴隶贩卖,这一年也是已故神学家詹姆斯-科恩的《黑人神学与黑人力量》首次出版 50 周年,同时也是 "黑人宣言 "首次出版 50 周年,"黑人宣言 "是一份大胆的预言性文件,引发了一场关于种族、宗教和赔偿关系的划时代辩论。本文探讨了康恩的黑人解放神学与福曼对 "黑人宣言 "的表述之间的共同点。一方面,康恩的《黑人神学与黑人力量》是第一部将当代争取种族、政治和社会经济平等的斗争与基督教系统神学的关键问题相结合的学术论文。通过对植根于黑人经验的神学发出强有力的预言性呼吁,这部先驱性著作确立了黑人解放神学在神学教育和黑人教会实践中不可否认的地位。另一方面,这份声明主要由詹姆斯-福曼(James Forman)与黑人革命工人联盟(League of Black Revolutionary Workers)共同起草,于 1969 年 4 月 26 日在密歇根州底特律市获得了全国黑人经济发展会议(NBEDC)的认可。黑人宣言 "反映了其在 20 世纪 60 年代末社会政治大熔炉中的起源,它呼吁神学和教派范围内的白人宗教机构为美国黑人奴隶制的历史性破坏以及随之而来的结构性压迫支付 5 亿美元的赔偿金,这些压迫在当代仍然影响着非洲人后裔。在这份富有传奇色彩的声明中,宣言概述了一个富有远见的计划议程,即如何利用这笔钱来纠正几个世纪的奴役和种族隔离对黑人妇女、男子和儿童造成的系统性压迫。为了认识和参与这两种文化艺术品的重要性,本文将比较和对比康恩和福曼各自对黑人宗教思想的贡献的神学历史意义和影响,以及在黑人教会研究和更广泛的黑人神学项目的持续范围内从他们的共同遗产中汲取的教训。
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Black Liberation Theology and the “Black Manifesto”
The year 2019 marked several significant and substantially intertwined anniversaries. The same year that marked the 400th year since the earliest arrival of “Twenty and more negroes” were brought by force and sold into bondage as human chattel into the floundering Jamestown colony in 1619 was also remembered as the 50th anniversary of the debut publication of late theologian James Cone’s Black Theology and Black Power and, to no lesser extent, the “Black Manifesto,” a boldly prophetic document that sparked a landmark debate about the nexus of race, religion, and reparations. This paper explores the common ground between Cone's Black liberation theology and Forman's presentation of the “Black Manifesto.” On the one hand, Cone’s Black Theology and Black Power was the first academic treatise to merge the contemporaneous struggles for racial, political, and socioeconomic equality with the critical concerns of Christian systematic theology. By offering a forcefully prophetic call for a theology rooted in the Black experience, this pioneering work established Black liberation theology as an undeniable force within theological education and Black church praxis. On the other hand, prepared largely by James Forman in conjunction with the League of Black Revolutionary Workers, this statement endorsed by the National Black Economic Development Conference (NBEDC) on April 26, 1969 in Detroit, Michigan. Reflecting its genesis at the tail end of the 1960s within that sociopolitical crucible, the “Black Manifesto” called on white religious institutions across the theological and denominational spectrum to pay $500 million in reparations for the historic ravages of Black chattel slavery in the United States as well as the ensuing structural oppression that still impacted people of African descent contemporaneously. Within this legendary statement, the manifesto outlined a visionary programmatic agenda for how this money would be used to redress the systematic and systemic forms of oppression that plagued Black women, men, and children as a result of centuries of both enslavement and segregation. In an effort to recognize and engage the importance of both cultural artifacts, this paper will compare and contrast the theo-historical significance and impact of Cone’s and Forman’s respective contributions to Black religious thought as well as the lessons to be gleaned from their mutual legacies within the ongoing scope of Black Church Studies and the broader Black theology project.
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