Were You There?


Price:
Sale price$21.00

Description

Contemporary Christian theology continues to struggle with the tragedy of inexplicable human suffering and the endurance of evil. The pressing issue of ""Where is God?"" in seemingly godless situations provides the focus of Were You There? Godforsakenness in Slave Religion. In this book, David Emmanuel Goatley investigates the doctrine of God in relation to the experience of those living under conditions of extreme oppression. In this experience of ""Godforsakenness"" Goatley finds an echo of Jesus' poignant cry from the cross, ""My God, why have you forsaken me?"" Were You There? approaches this question through a narrative methodology, particularly by examining the slave narratives as well as the spirituals that were products of the same era. Both these sources provide important ways of viewing the experience of ""Godforsakenness"" and the problem of God's presence or absence in the extremities and absurdities of human suffering. Using these insights as a hermeneutic, Were You There? then proceeds to an interpretation of Jesus' cry of dereliction in Mark.

Author: David Emmanuel Goatley
Publisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers
Published: 05/26/2021
Pages: 150
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.40lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.50w x 0.32d
ISBN13: 9781725288317
ISBN10: 1725288311
BISAC Categories:
- Religion | Christian Theology | General
- Religion | Christian Church | History
- Religion | Biblical Studies | General

About the Author
David Emmanuel Goatley is Associate Dean for Academic and Vocational Formation, Director of the Office of Black Church Studies, and Ruth W. and A. Morris Williams, Jr. Research Professor of Theology and Christian Ministry at Duke Divinity School. With previous appointments in university and seminary settings, he also served as an urban missionary, denominational executive, congregational pastor, and global missions executive. He is editor of Black Religion, Black Theology: Selected Writings of J. Deotis Roberts and author of A Divine Assignment: The Missiology of Wendell Clay Somerville.