Lexington Books / Fortress Academic
Pages: 222
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-9787-0354-4 • Hardback • November 2018 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-9787-0356-8 • Paperback • July 2020 • $47.99 • (£37.00)
978-1-9787-0355-1 • eBook • July 2020 • $45.50 • (£35.00)
Jione Havea is a research fellow at Trinity Theological College (New Zealand) and honorary research fellow at Charles Sturt University's Public and Contextual Theology Research Center (Australia).
Foreword
Collin Cowan
1. Stand Down, Sit Up, and Talanoa
Jione Havea
Part One: Dare to Discern
2. Rescuing Christian Faith Traditions from Empire
Deenabandhu Manchala
3. Transforming Discipleship: Faith, Love, and Hope after Empire
Jooseop Keum
4. Turn to the World: A Mandate for Orthodox Theology
Eleni Kasselouri-Hatzivassiliadi
5. Appropriation of Religious Symbols as Political Capital
M. P. Joseph
6. Empire, Deep Solidarity, and the Future of Resistance
Joerg Rieger
Part Two: Dare to Disturb
7. Chanting Down the Shitstem—Resistance with Anansi and Rastafari Optics
Michael Jagessar
8. The Chicano Student Movement as Religious and The Spiritual Plan of Aztlán as Scriptural and Utopian
Jacqueline M. Hidalgo
9. Religion as the Ethico-Political Practice of Justice: Ambedkar as Guide
Y.T. Vinayaraj
10. Babblers to the Rabble, Prophets to the Powerful: Mission in the Context of Empire
Allan Aubrey Boesak
11. (Global) Climate Crisis and (Detroit) Water Struggle: “Re-Schooling” Christianity through Indigenous Challenge
James W. Perkinson
12. Redeeming Country: Indigenous Peoples under Empires and Nation States
Mark G. Brett
The common theme of these excellent essays is Christianity's role in decolonization and resisting empire. . . . this and other volumes in the series are well worth exploring by those grappling with how Christianity relates to global issues.
— Journal of Theology for Southern Africa
Timely and prophetic, this book provides astute social analyses and critical biblical and theological resources to disrupt the power of Empire. Writing from many parts of the globe, the authors offer ecumenical visions for working for justice and provide concrete case studies of resistance movements. It deserves to be widely read and studied.— Kwok Pui-lan, Candler School of Theology, Emory University
Postcolonial, liberative, and transgressive in orientation, the essays in Religion and Power critique the imperial power structures and challenge the theological frameworks that undergird the status quo of empire and sustain its exercise of power and control. Religion and Power is essential reading for anyone interested in cutting-edge scholarship by both established and emerging scholars representing the diverse breadth and critical depths of emergent decolonial scholarship, subaltern movements, indigenous communities, and marginalized voices on decolonizing empire and imperial structures.— Jonathan Y. Tan
I cannot reiterate too strongly the importance and significance of this text. For too long now, the issue of power, particularly, as it relates to the substantive role exercised by religion in the promulgation of empire and colonialism has remained the “elephant in the room.” Whether in terms of the embedded nature of colonialism within sacred texts or the extent to which the agency of indigenous and subaltern peoples has been compromised by the collusion between religion and the machinations of imperialism, there can be no doubting the often symbiotic relationship between religious traditions and power. This text offers important insights in our understanding of the dynamic between religion and power that cross disciplines, cultural contexts and epochs. As such, Religion and Power is a must read.— Anthony G. Reddie, director of the Oxford Centre for Religion and Culture, Regent's Park College, the University of Oxford; Extraordinary Professor of Theological Ethics at the University of South Africa
Religion and Power gathers together an exceptionally perceptive and daringly prophetic collection of timely essays by feet-on-the-ground theologians and biblical scholars from across the world. Probing and compelling analysis of the empire of Mammon is complemented with imaginative and credible alternatives for advancing the kingdom of God. I would want this book in the hands of all twenty-first century Empire resisters and kingdom activists in churches and seminaries around the world. — Sathianathan Clarke, Wesley Theological Seminary
The Council for World Mission has gathered many of the world’s finest radical activist theologians and asked them to reflect on the omnipresent evil of imperial power. The result is a truly stunning series of similarly focused, but differently themed volumes, of which Religion and Power is the first. This literary treasure awaits every seminary library, every teacher of theology, and every person with a heart for reclaiming the prophetic calling of Jesus--to be agitator and rabble-rouser, healer, and thinker, and to be inexorably committed to calling out and acting against injustice against anyone, anywhere, anytime.— Jenny Te Paa Daniel, Co-Director, Ohaki Educational Consultancy and Te Mareikura, National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, University of Otago
This is the first of a five-volume series on Theology in the Age of Empire. It constitutes an excellent beginning. The volume, Religion and Power, addresses, in multiple ways and from multiple perspectives, the highly fraught intersection between imperial-colonial projects and movements, on the one hand, and religious-theological institutions and discourses, on the other. It does this in a highly informed, highly creative, and highly sophisticated fashion throughout, including an introduction that brings the contributions together in a pointed and suggestive fashion. I await the volumes to come with great anticipation.— Fernando F. Segovia, Oberlin Graduate Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity, Vanderbilt University