A Theology of the Spirits

Main Article Content

Kurt Buhring

Abstract

Anthony Reddie has said that while Black Theology has always spent a great deal of time and effort on Jesus, there has been “comparatively little on the Holy Spirit.” Recognizing this reality, one hope of this paper is to invigorate and contribute to a conversation on the Spirit in Black Theology. After a brief examination of the intriguing work of Jawanza Eric Clark, who challenges taken-for-granted views of original sin and Christocentrism, the paper will explore understandings of spirit(s) within select religions of Africa and the African diaspora. The study will build from these pieces with a consideration of possibilities for constructive pneumatologies within contemporary Black Theology. The paper’s interest in the Holy Spirit is concerned primarily with the relationship between divine power and presence and human potential and responsibility, and especially in creative formulations of this dynamic that call for human action toward social justice, wholeness, and positive transformation.

Author Biography

Kurt Buhring

Kurt Buhring is Associate Professor of Religious Studies & Theology at Saint Mary’s College (IN). He is the
author of Spirit(s) in Black Religion: Fire on the Inside (Palgrave Macm illan, 2022) and Conceptions of God,
Freedom, and Ethics in African American and Jewish Theology (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008). Both of these texts are a part of Palgrave Macmillan’s “Black Religion/Womanist Thought/Social Justice” series.

Article Details

Section
Pneumatology and Eschatology in Black Theology: Spirit/s and Black Flourishing in the World to Come
How to Cite
Buhring, K. . (2024). A Theology of the Spirits. Black Theology Papers Project, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.52214/btpp.v8i1.12515