The African Woman’s Suffering: Hermeneutics, Geography, and Liberation Theology
The once peripheral voices of African women theologians are prophetically calling for justice-oriented ways of reading the biblical text.
The once peripheral voices of African women theologians are prophetically calling for justice-oriented ways of reading the biblical text.
In this essay, theologian J. Kameron Carter considers what’s wrong with theodicy questions, or questions about God, suffering, and evil, in relationship to the recent earthquake in Haiti.
In part two of this three-part interview, Christian historian and cultural critic Eugene McCarraher reflects on the “Obama Doctrine,” Niebuhrian realism, and the usefulness of maps.