Overview
“Unless we look honestly at our past, it is unlikely that we shall know what to do in the present for the shaping a creative Black future.”—James H. Cone
“For My People is an indispensable part of James Cone’s theological corpus. It reveals his contribution to Black Theology as a discipline, recounting his turn to ‘extra church’ sources, and it seals his legacy as one of the most significant theologians in America's history, reminding the Christian community at large to engage in prophetic self-criticism.”—Raymond Carr, president, Society for the Study of Black Religion
Originally published in 1984, James Cone’s For My People remains an important landmark in the development of Black Theology. While tracing the origins of the movement, its relation to the Black Church, its engagement with other liberation theologies from the Global South, and the emergence of Womanist theology, he also offered telling reflections on the path ahead.
Assessing this work, the great scholar C. Eric Lincoln observed: “For My People spares neither kith nor kin, but addresses itself to the whole range of factors in North American religion that make for the traditional black church/white church dichotomy, and the spiritual and social consequences that attend it. For My People is a strong commentary on both the role and the vitality of black theology, as well as on the pervasiveness of the problems that sustain the need for it.”
In a new foreword, Josiah Young, who finished his PhD with Cone at Union Theological Seminary and now teaches at Wesleyan Theological Seminary in Washington, DC, reflects on the significance of this work within the corpus of Cone’s writing, and assesses the ongoing relevance of this work for the life of the Black Church, the ongoing project of Black and Womanist Theology, and the liberating application of the Gospel to our world today.
James H. Cone, who died in 2018, was Bill and Judith Moyers Distinguished Professor of
Systematic Theology at Union Theological Seminary, NYC. Widely regarded as the father of Black Liberation Theology, he was the author of many books, including Black Theology & Black Power and a modern classic, The Cross and the Lynching Tree, winner of the 2018 Grawemeyer Award in Religion.
Cover design: Michael Calvente
Also Of Interest
Related Materials
Click Here For The Table Of Contents
Click Here For The Book Introduction