A word on Colonizer Christianity and the imperative for an African-Centered corrective with respect to our Faith.
A word on Colonizer Christianity and the imperative for an African-Centered corrective with respect to our Faith.
Rev. Heber Brown, III interviews Dr. Monica A. Coleman, Professor of Constructive Theology and African American Religions at Claremont School of Theology in southern California, about the Yoruba Faith Tradition.
The gOD-Talk conversation series will be piloted on Friday, August 24, 2018, at the California African American Museum in Los Angeles and kick-off officially on January 26, 2019 on the campus of Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia. Each curated conversation will be streamed live.
How do we deal with the Ausar, Auset and Heru story when it is so link to our Joseph, Mary and Jesus story?
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.
Rev. Dr. Otis Moss, III, pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, Debriefs on his inaugural study tour to Ethiopia.
By Lawrence W. Rodgers, In the 1992 Spike Lee movie “Malcolm X,” there is a scene where Malcolm Little, also known as Detroit Red or Red, is incarcerated. He meets the fictional Brother Bane character, a member of the Nation of Islam. In the film, he plays a large part in Malcolm’s conversion. Brother Bane challenges […]
Dr. Mark Ogunwalè Lomax is the Senior Pastor, First Afrikan Church in Lithonia Georgia and Associate Professor of Homiletics at the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta Georgia.