Social Justice and Theology
Black Liberation theology offers a much needed critic of classical theology, and the various ways in which it favors, and even fosters the racially oppressive behavior and attitudes that many white people have towards marginalized people. However, while Black Liberation has adequately pushed back against the issue of white supremacy, it has done so without giving a sufficient attention to the issue of patriarchy, which has an oppressive affect on women of color. It is an issue of intersectionality. While the issue of racial oppression is extremely important, it should not be elevated to a point where it is deemed to be more important than the liberation of women of color. This paper will look into the role of the Black Liberation Theology in shaping social justice with regards to women of color and classical theology.
Introduction
Almost all liberation theologies and movements have arisen out of a non-religious context. The liberation movements of The Latin Americans, Black Americans, American women, Black South Africans and Asians, have had ideologies that are a break from "Christian theology." "
As a shared assessment, liberation theologies promote thoughtful questions into the normative usage of religious Scripture, convention and understanding in Christian theology. Liberation theologians stress that the leading theologies of the West have been utilized to support the conventional mandate of the time (Grant, "Black Theology" 320). The church and its representatives have been too content with whatever the ruling classes deemed feasible. The interpretation of God's word has remained flexible and open to whatever twists the regime sees as more adjusting and convenient. This is one of the major reasons why religious doctrine of the time has never appealed to liberation theologians; their opinions were opposed by the political establishments of the time.
Paradoxically, the disapproval that liberation theology has towards classical theology has become against liberation theories themselves. Just like many European and American theologians that have accepted the Western oppression sewn in the theologies of the past, some liberation theologians too have accepted the oppressive aspects of their liberation struggles. The problem arises where one evil is replaced by another, when racism is abandoned, sexism is accepted. Where classism is questioned, racism and sexism have opened sails. And where sexism is rejected, racism and classism are often overlooked (Grant, "Black Theology" 320).
What is asserted in this essay is the position of the black woman and the clout of assumptions surrounding them in the liberation theory, in general, and black theology in particular. The Black liberation is a critique of the classical theology and how it harbors white supremacy and racial radicalism towards the marginalized communities. While the Black Liberation theology has resisted white supremacy, it has ignored the issues of patriarchy; so tightly knit with the problem of marginalization. This leaves the women of color oppressed, and ultimately, it is also a problem of intersectionality. The problem of racial tyranny is an imperative issue; however, it should not be raised so high that the freedom and rights of black women take a back seat to it.
The Black Liberation Movement and the theology it revolves around, is dipped in religious salvation. Their approach to Jesus is more literal -- a poor, oppressed human being, who rose from his trials as a free man-reborn, no longer a slave to the bounds of his earthly existence. It is not hard to see how his premise connects extremely well with the Black Liberation Movement. The "Holy Spirit" is not just holy, but also free! The image of God in the black churches of the time was a grand entity, one that sets His believers free, quite like the way He saved the Jewish slaves through Moses. According to James Hal Cone, a black theologian and strong advocate of the black liberation ideology, spoke of God as the champion of the victimized, specifically the African-American community (Cone, "A Black Theology of Liberation" 56-7).
However, like most other theologies and options, the Black Liberation Theology focuses on the black Man not woman. Their brand of oppression was a double edged sword, racism and sexism. Their experiences and desire for freedom and liberation is overlooked, making the black feminists feel that the black liberation theology can only gain legitimacy once it discards ALL forms of bias, which of course means race and gender (Hopkins, 30) During the earlier days, the Black Liberation Movement catered only to the men; women of color were discriminated in white and black churches.
Black Theology
The historical progress of the Black Church, their sessions and groups within principally White churches, have...
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