According to Cone, Black theology is representative of the “historical fight for justice.” Black theology cannot be separated from power and politics. Black theology is what gave Black people the motivation to fight for their future and go against society, politics, and discrimination. “The term ‘Black Theology’ was created in this social and religious context. It was initially understood as the theological imagination in the struggle of freedom independently of white theologians” (570). Cone defines Black Theology as a “theology of black liberation”(571). Black Theology is said to have been “born in the context of the black community as black people were attempting to make sense out of their struggle from freedom”(571). Cone says, “Black theology can be found in our songs, prayers and sermons…it is the
God is supposed to liberate the oppressed. If He is to liberate them then some reinforcements in faith must be made. Cone is concerned also because churches today do not still uphold the visions of liberation as the Historical Black churches and leaders did. The churches today are not an institution concerned about the justice for all black people but are concerned with petty things such as raising money for a new root. He challenges the Black community to go beyond institutional survival and restore the hopes and dreams a better heaven and earth. .
Black theology helped black people to be set free from white racism. While whites used Christianity to give reason for slavery, blacks used it to go against the immorality of slavery. Faith empowered the weak and distraught black community into restoring itself. Society has degraded the black community, and t