A review by kabookworm
Bonhoeffer's Black Jesus: Harlem Renaissance Theology and an Ethic of Resistance by Reggie L. Williams

challenging informative reflective slow-paced

5.0

This slim book is in fact thick and dense. It carries deep theological discussion in a heavy historical context. The pace is slow, but the content is rich. 

Dietrich Bonhoeffer never fails to fire me up, and this short biography of the impact of his experience in Harlem is no exception. This is a side of Bonhoeffer’s story I had never heard of before, and I completely agree with the author that, without his time in Harlem, Bonhoeffer may never had fought so fiercely against the racist Christian nationalism that justified the rise of the Nazi Party. 

The Jesus that Bonhoeffer encountered among the Black community in Harlem was so unlike the Jesus he had known in his white, academic sphere that the very foundation of Bonhoeffer’s faith was turned upside down. Here was a Christ who suffers with the marginalized. Here was a Christ who saves people’s bodies as well as their souls. Here was a Christ reclaimed from those who crucified Him over and over with every time they turned a blind eye to the outcome of their racism. 

I could go on, but a flimsy book review is no match for Williams’s potent analysis, exploration, and discussion. I am still chewing on and soaking in all that I have learned in these pages. If you’ve never encountered Harlem Renaissance theology before, I can assure you: just like Bonhoeffer’s, your faith will never be the same.