Millennial Womanism

To be a millennial woman of African descent in ministry and religious studies, is to be a woman who is not starting from scratch.

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I believe that we must challenge traditional models of “networking,” and articulate what healthy, fruitful, mutually challenging and sisterly relationships look and feel like.

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Womanism is a method of using Black women’s lived experience to identify everyday solutions and disruptions to Empire.

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The Womanist Challenge of Self-Examination and Truth-Telling for Black Millennial Men

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If what we create will shape others, whether we mean for it to or not, then we have to do it on purpose.

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By Racquel Gill, Being a millennial woman of African descent in ministry is to acknowledge that I represent an institution of complexity. I am learning to appreciate how the black church has been a healing station throughout generations while also mourning how it has served as a site of trauma. When there were so few […]

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If the black church is the home of black genius and social engagement, the Millennial Womanist is the necessary architect.

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Wholeness is a journey that one must be committed to traveling, as the destination will not be obtained overnight.

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Black women are preaching and teaching are using their epistemologies to resurrect scriptures that have been oppressive to Black women and charging the conditions and characters to ensure that Black women reach spiritual liberation.

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One reality is that spiritual activism and faith advocacy through relationship building, autoethnography, and social media has its own set of struggles. However, it is a way to make information a bit more publicly accessible.

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