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Coming into our own: helping African American families to name, claim and live out their spirituality

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MLA citation style (9th ed.)

Joyce Florence Gillie. Coming Into Our Own: Helping African American Families to Name, Claim and Live Out Their Spirituality. Catholic Theological Union. rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/072ecda3-f1a2-4a8f-9350-4aaa5ed83abd.

APA citation style (7th ed.)

J. F. Gillie. Coming into our own: helping African American families to name, claim and live out their spirituality. https://rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/072ecda3-f1a2-4a8f-9350-4aaa5ed83abd

Chicago citation style (CMOS 17, author-date)

Joyce Florence Gillie. Coming Into Our Own: Helping African American Families to Name, Claim and Live Out Their Spirituality. Catholic Theological Union. https://rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/072ecda3-f1a2-4a8f-9350-4aaa5ed83abd.

Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.

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Abstract
  • The author addresses the question 'how do we call people to Christian discipleship in the Postmodern era?' Providing an overview of the Premodern, Modern, and Postmodern eras, she names both the understanding of them as a time in history and the African/African-American social-political and spiritual reality of the time. She uses the African-American family to provide a generational vandtage point for viewing and discussing the topic of Postmodern culture, racism, the hip-hop generation, black spirituality, and the Catholic faith. Bringing Postmodern culture in dialogue with the attributes of black spirituality and the Catholic faith, she contextualizes a pastoral response.
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Last modified
  • 02/16/2024

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