Michael McBride is director of the advocacy campaign Live Free, which is part of the PICO National Network, a faith-based organizing group. He is pastor of The Way Christian Center in Berkeley, Calif.
Michael McBride is director of the advocacy campaign Live Free, which is part of the PICO National Network, a faith-based organizing group. He is pastor of The Way Christian Center in Berkeley, Calif.
Host: Professor Rothney Tshaka, University of South Africa Guest Lecturer: Professor Vuyani Vellem The subject of our Seminar is to reflect on the relationship between ideology and faith, which produces spirituality. No one in South Africa today especially an exponent of Black Consciousness and Black Theology of Liberation will doubt that the ideology of racism, having […]
Why would someone give up a faculty position at Princeton Theological Seminary to become the dean of a divinity school? The Rev. Dr. Yolanda Pierce offers two answers. One is that God said go. The second reason, as she explains to co-host Bill Lamar, is that she wants to be at the table as theological […]
How do we deal with the Ausar, Auset and Heru story when it is so link to our Joseph, Mary and Jesus story?
The Millennial Womanism Project (TMWP) Presents “Millennial Womanists To Watch”
Frankly, the church is overdue for its #MeToo moment. Congregations and denominations, seminaries and parachurch organizations all are implicated in the pervasiveness of sexual assault and harassment. Too often the church is the prime location for attitudes that protect perpetrators to the continual harm of their victims.
We believe in a faith that uses the past to inform our present practice. The ways in which the Black church tradition situates and values memory and remembering is evidence of our cultural retention of Sankofa.
God has always listened to the cries of women and has empowered them.
Rev. Dr. Otis Moss, III, pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, Debriefs on his inaugural study tour to Ethiopia.