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Race and Rhyme

Race and Rhyme

SKU:9780802867131

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A leading womanist biblical scholar reads passages from the New Testament in dialogue with modern-day issues of racial justice. The narratives and letters of the New Testament emerged from a particular set of historical contexts that differ from today's, but they resonate with us because of how the issues they raise "rhyme" with subjects of contemporary relevance. Listening for these echoes of the present in the past, Love Sechrest utilises her cultural experience and her perspective as a Black woman scholar to reassess passages in the New Testament that deal with intergroup conflict, ethnoracial tension, and power dynamics between dominant and minoritised groups. After providing an overview of womanist biblical interpretation and related terminology, Sechrest utilises an approach she calls "associative hermeneutics" to place select New Testament texts in dialogue with modern-day issues of racial justice. Topics include: antiracist allyship and Jesus's interaction with marginalised individuals in the Gospel of Matthew cultural assimilation and Jesus's teachings about family and acceptance in the Gospel of Luke gendered stereotypes and the story of the Samaritan woman in the Gospel of John the experience of Black women and girls in the American criminal justice system and the woman accused of adultery in the Gospel of John group identity and the incorporation of Gentiles into the early Jesus movement in Acts privilege and Paul's claims to apostolic authority in 2 Corinthians coalition-building between diverse groups and the discussion of unity in Ephesians government's role in providing social welfare and early Christians' relationship to the Roman Empire in Romans and Revelation

About the Author

Love Lazarus Sechrest is vice president for academic affairs, dean of faculty, and associate professor of New Testament at Columbia Theological Seminary. Her scholarship is centered on womanist and African American biblical interpretation and New Testament ethics; she co-chaired the Society of Biblical Literature's African American Biblical Hermeneutics Section from 2012 to 2017 and gives presentations on race, ethnicity, and Christian thought in a variety of academic, church, and business contexts. She is the author of A Former Jew: Paul and the Dialectics of Race and Can "White" People Be Saved? Triangulating Race, Theology, and Mission. A second-career scholar, she previously worked as a senior manager in the aerospace industry at General Electric.

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