Prologue
Part 1. Historical Explication
I. The Historical Context
II. The Host of Witnesses
Part 2. Theological Meditation
III. King As Critical Thinker
IV. King Among Theologians
V. Theological Implications
Part 3. Practical Application
VI. Beloved Community
VII. Beloved Community and Beyond
Epilogue
Richard W. Wills Sr. is Assistant Professor of Systematic Theology and Ethics at the Samuel DeWitt Proctor School of Theology, Virginia Union University.
"Richard Wills's Martin Luther King Jr. and the Image of God is the
most illuminating account to date of the central theological themes
in King's life and thought. King emerges as a skillful and
synthetic thinker and practitioner who stands in continuity not
only with the Hebrew prophets and the radical Jesus but with the
seminal theological minds of the Christian tradition. And in
reconnecting King to the religious past, Wills offers new ways
of
appropriating King's legacy as a resource for contemporary
religious thought and social activism."
--Charles Marsh, Director of the Project on Lived Theology and
Professor of Religious Studies, University of Virginia
"Christian anthropology asks the big questions: Who are we? What
ought we to do? What might we become? Martin Luther King raised the
same questions-and answered them in ways that have challenged
succeeding generations. Richard Wills brings a wealth of data and
insight to his portrait of King the theologian. He reminds us that
under King's leadership the Movement was bursting not only with
political promise but theological meaning as well. This is a
carefully nuanced, yet exciting book."
--Richard Lischer, author of The Preacher King: Martin Luther King,
Jr. and the Word that Moved America
"Richard Wills' eagerly-awaited book offers a truly original
perspective on one of the best known religious figures of the past
hundred years. It is a helpful introduction to King's religious
thought that will reward beginners and specialists alike. It
deserves a wide audience."
--Clayborne Carson, Professor of History and Director of the Martin
Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute, Stanford
University
"It turns out that there is indeed more to say about the theology
of our nation's greatest civil rights leader. Wills makes
exceptionally good use of the King archives, leaving no stone
unturned in the quest for clarifying how King honed a theology in
service of racial justice. . . as a fresh reconsideration of the
theology of one of America's greatest public figures, this volume
is enormously successful."--Horizons
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