詹姆斯·科恩和美国神学的危机

Celucien L. Joseph
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文的目的是探讨基督教神学在詹姆斯·h·科恩的政治神学著作和解释学中的公共功能。同时也是对美国白人神学的批判。在科恩的作品中,基督教神学被表达为一种公开的话语和上帝持续的解放运动的见证,并在社会中赋予权力,其目标是(1)让受压迫者和弱势群体获得自由,(2)重新调整世界的事物,使其朝着神圣的正义与和平发展,(3)为那些自愿(人类)行为者施加痛苦、苦难、压迫和各种形式的邪恶的地方带来治愈和恢复。本文试图用新的解释学视角和方法——反帝国主义、解放主义和后殖民主义——创造性地想象基督教神学作为公共见证的任务,在当代社会和我们的后殖民时代执行上帝的解放议程和和解使命(救赎、治愈、款待、完整、和解与和平)。这篇文章的基本论点是双重的。首先,它主张解放神学作为重新定义基督教神学的公众见证的重要作用。它不是神学中的“特殊利益”或仅仅是政治主题,而是表明黑人解放神学在将基督教神学从种族主义、压迫和帝国主义中“解放”出来方面发挥着特殊的作用。其次,通过促进对科恩作品的一些新的理解,并将其应用于一些新的语境中,本文正在运用科恩的公共神学来批判或唤醒占主导地位的白人神学,以一种新的思维方式来思考21世纪的整个神学领域。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
James Cone and the Crisis of American Theology
The objective of this essay is to investigate the public function of Christian theology in the (politico-theological writings and hermeneutics of James H. Cone. It is also to articulate a critique of white American theology. In Cone’s work, Christian theology is expressed as a public discourse and testimony of God’s continuing emancipative movements and empowering presence in society with the goal (1) to set the oppressed and the vulnerable free, (2) to readjust the things of the world toward divine justice and peace, and (3) to bring healing and restoration to the places in which volitional (human) agents have inflicted pain, suffering, oppression, and all forms of evil. This essay is an attempt to imagine creatively with new hermeneutical lenses and approaches—anti-imperial, liberative, and postcolonial—the task of Christian theology as public witness to carry out the emancipative agenda and reconciling mission (salvation, healing, hospitality, wholeness, reconciliation, and peace) of God in contemporary societies and in our postcolonial moments. The basic argument of this essay is twofold. First, it contends for the essential role of liberation theology as a public witness in redefining Christian theology in general. Rather than being a “special interest” or merely political theme in theology, it suggests that black liberation theology has a special role to play in “freeing” Christian theology from racism, oppression, and imperialism. Second, by promoting some new understanding of Cone’s work and applying it in some new context, this article is deploying Cone’s public theology to critique or awaken dominant white theology to a new way of thinking about the whole field of theology in the 21 st century.
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