Children of the waters of Meribah
Book Description
In this profound theological exploration, Allan Boesak embarks on a courageous journey of self-examination within the landscape of Black liberation theology. Drawing from his 2017 Yale Divinity School Beecher Lectures, Boesak poses essential questions about the evolution and future direction of a movement that has fundamentally transformed religious, social, and academic discourse for decades.
At the heart of this work lies a compelling inquiry: What critical lessons might Black liberation theology have overlooked as the world has shifted around it? Boesak invites readers into an honest reckoning with the theological tradition's responses to the challenges faced by oppressed communities across Africa, the United States, and beyond over the past quarter-century.
Through meaningful dialogue with feminist theologians, particularly African feminist voices, Boesak creates a rich trans-disciplinary conversation that pushes beyond traditional boundaries. Writing from his perspective as a Black liberation theologian from the Global South, he offers thoughtful, if tentative, responses to the pressing questions that emerge when theological reflection meets lived experience.
This work serves as both a critical assessment and a constructive vision, particularly amplifying the vital questions raised by women within the theological discourse. Readers seeking to understand how spiritual traditions adapt, grow, and confront their own limitations will find in these pages a model of intellectual courage and theological integrity that speaks to contemporary struggles for justice and liberation.
Who Is This For?
π Reading Level: Medium (200-400 pages) (~7 hours)
π Length: 239 pages
What You'll Discover
- β Explore Social justice
- β Study Bible from spiritual perspective
- β Explore Black theology
- β Explore Christianity
- β Explore Feminist criticism
- β Explore History