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In the 21st century, preaching on race and racialization requires consistent engagement at the intersection of texts, contexts and identity. Race, Preaching, and Ricoeur provides hope for a renewed homiletic capable of engaging race across different communities.
List of contents
Introduction
David Schnasa Jacobsen and Scott Donahue-Martens
Chapter 1: A "Hermeneutics of the Self" and Preaching Toward Open Friendship
Eunjoo Mary Kim
Chapter 2: A Journey to Discover Oneself
Yohan Go
Chapter 3: Crooked Sanctuaries: Preaching in the Situation of Racialized Trauma
Scott Donahue-Martens
Chapter 4: "Praying Standing": A Sermon on Luke 13:10-17
Anna Carter Florence
Chapter 5: Oneself as Not Another: Hermeneutics in Action and the Practice of Black Love
James Henry Harris
Chapter 6: The Pedagogy of Preaching Liberation
Tony Baugh
Chapter 7: Fragility, Responsibility, and Recognition in Preaching about Racism
Carolyn B. Helsel
Chapter 8: Troubling Traditions: A Sermon with Commentary on 2 Timothy 3:14-17
Scott Donahue-Martens
Chapter 9: Trading in the Master's Tools: Preaching, White Racism, and Paul Ricoeur's Hermeneutics of Text and Self
David Schnasa Jacobsen
Chapter 10: Paul Ricoeur Between Hermeneutical Contingency and Ideological Critique: A Sermon with Commentary on Matthew 15:21-28
Jacob D. Myers
Chapter 11: A Guide to Ricoeur for Homiletics
Scott Donahue-Martens
Conclusion
David Schnasa Jacobsen and Scott Donahue-Martens
About the Editors and Contributors
About the author
David Schnasa Jacobsen is Professor Emeritus at Boston University School of Theology and Director of the Homiletical Theology Project.Scott Donahue-Martens teaches a variety of theology classes ranging from homiletics and hermeneutics to Hebrew Bible and pastoral care.David Schnasa Jacobsen is Professor Emeritus at Boston University School of Theology and Director of the Homiletical Theology Project.Scott Donahue-Martens teaches a variety of theology classes ranging from homiletics and hermeneutics to Hebrew Bible and pastoral care.