James H.Cone简介:个人探索

IF 0.3 0 RELIGION BLACK THEOLOGY Pub Date : 2023-01-02 DOI:10.1080/14769948.2023.2179133
Jarel A. Robinson-Brown (Fr)
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For Black Christians to bring the whole of their existence into the search for knowledge about God, meant that power, class, race, and history become particularly relevant to our speech about God. What becomes clear in reading this personal exploration is that few have done theology such as this with the boldness and intellectual honesty of James H. Cone, and no one in Britain has called us to renewed engagement with Cone’s work in the way that Anthony G. Reddie has done in this powerfully lucid personal exploration. Reddie’s admiration of Cone is palpable – referring as he does to Cone as “arguably the greatest theologian of the twentieth century, and one of the greatest of all time”. (1). After reading this text, those engaging with this exploration will be inclined to agree. The author intends that this work will enable its readers to see the uniqueness of Cone’s voice and vision as a theologian speaking into a context in which Black people’s spiritual experiences and suffering were not taken seriously. This lack of attention to Black people’s experiences however did not mean that Black people were not doing theology amongst ourselves – making sense of a world in which we knew God to be active despite the suffering we have endured under racism and white supremacy. Cone long understood that Black folk have been doing theology, in some ways part of his genius was in enabling Black folk to call what they were already doing by that name, but what he particularly sought to interrogate and succeeded in critiquing was the “desecration of the very nature of Christian theology by the sin of White supremacy” (2). Black Liberation Theology is Cone’s response to the desecration of the very nature of Christian theology as he saw it. For Cone, any notion of God being on the side of the oppressor had to be overturned. God had to become Black because as Cone himself remarks: “There is no place in black theology for a colorless God in a society where human beings suffer precisely because of their color” (49). If God can be understood as Black, then all Black people can be seen as of inherent worth and value, and theology exercised in the face of racist violence would need to reflect this truth. Black liberation theology therefore takes the reality of God as a given, but goes further as Cone’s work in this exploration makes clear, to suggest that God does indeed take sides. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

在反思神学的任务时,神学家j rgen Moltmann曾经说过:“神学的核心只有一个问题:上帝”。值得注意的是,我认为,这么多年来,很多神学都在谈论上帝,好像只有上帝对神学的任务很重要,更糟糕的是,好像上帝真的在做神学。然而,至关重要的是,Moltmann继续说:“神学家将把他们的整个存在都投入到对上帝知识的探索中。”神学的任务是把我们的一切,我们所见、所知、所经历的一切,与我们基督徒所称的信仰的核心真理进行对话。当神学这样做的时候,关注它周围的世界和它里面的世界,它达到了新的深度,每一代都以新的方式谈论永生的上帝。对于黑人基督徒来说,把他们的整个存在都投入到对上帝的知识的探索中,意味着权力、阶级、种族和历史与我们对上帝的演讲特别相关。在阅读这本个人探索的过程中,我们清楚地看到,很少有人像詹姆斯·h·科恩那样大胆而诚实地研究神学,在英国,也没有人像安东尼·g·雷迪那样,呼吁我们重新投入到科恩的著作中,进行这种强有力的、清晰的个人探索。雷迪对科恩的钦佩是显而易见的——他提到科恩“可以说是20世纪最伟大的神学家,也是有史以来最伟大的神学家之一”。读过这篇文章后,参与这一探索的人会倾向于同意。作者希望这部作品能让读者看到科恩作为一个神学家的独特声音和视角,在黑人的精神经历和痛苦没有被认真对待的背景下说话。然而,缺乏对黑人经历的关注并不意味着黑人在我们中间不做神学研究——理解一个我们知道上帝是活跃的世界,尽管我们在种族主义和白人至上主义下忍受着痛苦。科恩早就明白,黑人一直在研究神学,在某种程度上,他的天才之处在于使黑人能够用这个名字来称呼他们已经在做的事情,但他特别想要质问并成功地批评的是“白人至上的罪恶对基督教神学本质的亵渎”(2)。黑人解放神学是科恩对他所看到的基督教神学本质的亵渎的回应。对科恩来说,任何上帝站在压迫者一边的观念都必须被推翻。上帝必须变成黑人,因为正如科恩自己所说:“在黑人神学中,没有一个没有肤色的上帝的位置,在这个社会中,人类正是因为他们的肤色而受苦”(49)。如果上帝可以被理解为黑人,那么所有黑人都可以被视为具有内在的价值和价值,而面对种族主义暴力的神学则需要反映这一真理。黑人解放神学因此认为上帝的存在是既定的,但是更进一步,正如科恩在这一探索中的工作所表明的那样,表明上帝确实有立场。上帝不是隐喻,也不是组织原则,而是体现在被压迫者身上
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Introducing James H. Cone: A Personal Exploration
When reflecting on the task of theology, the theologian Jürgen Moltmann once remarked that “Theology has at its heart only one problem: God”. It is worth noting I think, that so much theology throughout the years has approached the task of speaking about God as though only God mattered to the task of theology, and worse still as though God actually did theology. Yet, crucially, Moltmann continues: “Theologians will bring the whole of their existence into their search for knowledge about God”. It is the task of theology to engage all that we are, all that we see and know and experience and to bring that into dialogue with the truth that we as Christians name at the heart of our faith. When theology does this, pays attention to the world around it and within it, it reaches new depths and speaks of the living God afresh to each generation. For Black Christians to bring the whole of their existence into the search for knowledge about God, meant that power, class, race, and history become particularly relevant to our speech about God. What becomes clear in reading this personal exploration is that few have done theology such as this with the boldness and intellectual honesty of James H. Cone, and no one in Britain has called us to renewed engagement with Cone’s work in the way that Anthony G. Reddie has done in this powerfully lucid personal exploration. Reddie’s admiration of Cone is palpable – referring as he does to Cone as “arguably the greatest theologian of the twentieth century, and one of the greatest of all time”. (1). After reading this text, those engaging with this exploration will be inclined to agree. The author intends that this work will enable its readers to see the uniqueness of Cone’s voice and vision as a theologian speaking into a context in which Black people’s spiritual experiences and suffering were not taken seriously. This lack of attention to Black people’s experiences however did not mean that Black people were not doing theology amongst ourselves – making sense of a world in which we knew God to be active despite the suffering we have endured under racism and white supremacy. Cone long understood that Black folk have been doing theology, in some ways part of his genius was in enabling Black folk to call what they were already doing by that name, but what he particularly sought to interrogate and succeeded in critiquing was the “desecration of the very nature of Christian theology by the sin of White supremacy” (2). Black Liberation Theology is Cone’s response to the desecration of the very nature of Christian theology as he saw it. For Cone, any notion of God being on the side of the oppressor had to be overturned. God had to become Black because as Cone himself remarks: “There is no place in black theology for a colorless God in a society where human beings suffer precisely because of their color” (49). If God can be understood as Black, then all Black people can be seen as of inherent worth and value, and theology exercised in the face of racist violence would need to reflect this truth. Black liberation theology therefore takes the reality of God as a given, but goes further as Cone’s work in this exploration makes clear, to suggest that God does indeed take sides. God is not a metaphor, nor organizing principle, but enfleshed in the oppressed
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来源期刊
BLACK THEOLOGY
BLACK THEOLOGY RELIGION-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
50.00%
发文量
26
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