Description
In recent years black theology has become increasingly about oppression and liberation. But is there a different story to tell? Can the black experience be one of flourishing and allyship, and not only a nihilistic existence of struggle and deconstruction? Drawing on a fresh reading of Jeremiah, and his own Pentecostal tradition, Joe Aldred offers a fresh understanding of the Black British experience which draws on an eschatology of hope, and an acknowledgement that after the cross and the lynching tree comes the empty tomb and the chance to fully flourish without apology – or as Jeremiah puts it to those in exile, to ‘settle, build and grow’.