Guest viewing is limited

Islam and the Problem of Black Suffering (1 Viewer)

bingbing88

CMTeamPK Member
Staff member
Jan 19, 2023
5,626
10
38
38
Vn
Offline
f29762b05d37a3f9e5e3311753ffb28c.jpeg

Sherman A. Jackson, "Islam and the Problem of Black Suffering"
English | 2014 | ISBN: 0199368015, 0195382064 | PDF | pages: 230 | 13.1 mb
In his controversial 1973 book, Is God a White Racist?, William R. Jones sharply criticized black theologians for their agnostic approach to black suffering, noting that the doctrine of an ominibenevolent God poses very significant problems for a perennially oppressed community. He proposed a "humanocentric theism" which denies God's sovereignty over human history and imputes autonomous agency to humans. By rendering humans alone responsible for moral evil, Jones's theology freed blacks to revolt against the evil of oppression without revolting against God. Sherman Jackson now places Jones's argument in conversation with the classical schools of Islamic theology. The problem confronting the black community is not simply proving that God exists, says Jackson. The problem, rather, is establishing that God cares. No religious expression that fails to tackle the problem of black suffering can hope to enjoy a durable tenure in the black community. For the Muslim, therefore, it is​

essential to find a Quranic/Islamic grounding for the protest-oriented agenda of black religion. That is the task Jackson undertakes in this pathbreaking work. Jackson's previous book, Islam and the Blackamerican (OUP 2006) laid the groundwork for this ambitious project. Its sequel, Islam and the Problem of Black Suffering, solidifies Jackson's reputation as the foremost theologian of the black American Islamic movement.


Fikper

Rapidgator

NitroFlare

Uploadgig

Links are Interchangeable - No Password - Single Extraction
 

Users who are viewing this thread

35,787Threads
48,443Messages
9,821Members
manuguruLatest member
Top