Adams discussed her book and the work her soul must have with Katie Geneva Cannon Center for Womanist Leadership Director Melanie Jones.
Adams discussed her book and the work her soul must have with Katie Geneva Cannon Center for Womanist Leadership Director Melanie Jones.
KGCCWL Director Melanie Jones interviews Austin Miles, leading RVA painter, muralist, and graphic designer, who shares about the meaning-making behind her artistry celebrating Black women.
New York Theological Seminary was historically a space in which many of the early Womanist theologians shared their research and reflections on how the experiences of African American women relate to the construction and practice of theologies and ministries in the Christian tradition as well as other religious expressions.
Portraits of Hope: The Queen of Soul, The Unctuous, Trailblazing Womanist,
A Black millennial woman in ministry in the 21st century is audacious and courageous. She is willful and responsible. She is serious.
Millennial womanist theology is needed because we need relevant resources to journey towards holistic understandings of life and love.
To be a millennial woman of African descent means that blackness is not an afterthought but a foundational reality from which all else departs.
I believe that we must challenge traditional models of “networking,” and articulate what healthy, fruitful, mutually challenging and sisterly relationships look and feel like.
Womanism is a method of using Black women’s lived experience to identify everyday solutions and disruptions to Empire.
As a recovering church boy, I am the product of Holy Ghost filled church mothers and deaconesses, anointed, unlicensed and unordained prophetesses, and Black women who cook in church kitchens, and clean and usher in sanctuaries.