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Born to preach: Essays in honor of the ministry of Henry and Ella Mitchell
Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, Mar 2003 by Roberts, Samuel K
Born To Preach: Essays in Honor of the Ministry of Henry and Ella Mitchell. Edited by Samuel K. Roberts. Valley Forge: Judson, 2000, n.p. paper.
This volume honors Henry and Ellen Mitchell, faculty members of the Samuel DeWitt Proctor School of Theology at Virginia Union University. The essays are all by fellow faculty members, African Americans all. They include: "Biblical Criticism and the Art of Preaching: What in the World is Preaching the Gospel?" by Boykin Sanders (pp. 1-21); "The Cultural Affinity Between the Ancient Yahwists and the African Americans: A Hermeneutic for Homiletics," by Jerome Clayton Ross (pp. 22-39); "Preaching in the Context of Poverty, Economic Marginalization, and the Ideal of Social Justice," by Robert Wafawanaka (pp. 40-54); "The Sermon as a Submitted Statement," by Miles Jerome Jones (pp. 55-62); "The Solitary Place," by Nathan Dell (pp. 63-70); "The Moral Task of African American Preaching," by Samuel Kelton Roberts (pp. 71-81); "Of Self, Sound, and Sacredness," by Victoria L. Pratt (pp. 82-99); "Women and Preaching: Telling the Story in Our Own Voice," by Patricia A. Gould-Champ (pp. 100-12); "Re-texturization of a Tradition: A Womanist Hermeneutical Complex for Understanding the Religio-Historical Value of the African American Sermonic Genre," by Alison P. Gise Johnson (pp. 113-33); "A Worthy Legacy: Preaching to Teach," by Gloria C. Taylor (pp. 134-46).
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