jarreloliveira's review against another edition

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5.0

A much-needed conversation to determine what reparations look like in the 21st century and beyond. And this book is written primarily for the Christian conscience because the adherent and reader have a written framework by which to guide them on the path of restitution and reconciliation. Now, this is not to say that other religions or worldviews, even, say, secular efforts cannot venture into the topic of reparations and come up with wholesome resolutions. What the authors intend to promote is the idea that the Christian conscience produced a society within the American west or perhaps the Americas in general that favored one race over all others. This conflation of faith or perhaps the misuse and distortion of faith with a supremacist ideology spawned the centuries of genocide we are still attempting to reconcile to this very day.

What is troubling and also new to me is that reparation is not a monetary issue alone. We cannot give a monetary value that can reduce the amount of suffering experienced in the past nor can we pay people a one-time amount to do away with the compounding consequence and legacy of centuries of white supremacy.

The authors identify the cultural, communal, personal, financial, emotional, and spiritual life-long commitment Christians must make to not only better our racial relations but also stand for the just cause of restitution.

If we limit reparation or the repair of a dilapidated society to an economic layer alone we miss the point altogether.

Reparation is not a hush-money payout. They're not giveaways. This effort is a conscious commitment to continual relationship repair and restoration between several communities who have for centuries been at odds and whose disparities must be amended by the very people who claim to hold the words of the Divine Creator.

If the Christian conscience will not take on this task with a clean heart and a clear conscience, without bitterness or ill will, then someone else will with the aim of returning harm-for-harm and economic distress for the same.

Mind you, this is also a call for the federal government to take on as well. It is not new nor is it impossible for the government to pay out reparations to the families of former slaves, native Americans, or the poor within the land because this same government paid reparations to former slaveowners through Abraham Lincoln's District of Columbia Emancipation Act.

Reparations are doable but their success and fruition depend upon the tenderheartedness and gracefulness of regenerate minds and souls.

Push for them, in Christ's name. Push.

frances_chan's review against another edition

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challenging hopeful informative medium-paced

5.0

eaclapp41's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative reflective medium-paced

5.0

terryjstokes's review against another edition

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5.0

A great theological and historical premise for reparations. I appreciated the breakdown of repair into the areas of not just wealth but also truth and power. I also appreciated their framing of white supremacy as a cultural order (with individual, interpersonal, and systemic components, but yet beyond all of those).

As with most things I've read on reparations, I did wish for more space to be given to what reparations can/has looked like.

lizhutcherson's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

2.0

mjvanhusen's review against another edition

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4.0

(4.25/5) The style in which it was written reminded me of a See, Judge, Act CST-esque argument which made it quite easy to follow. It’s the first more “academic” book I’ve read in awhile so it took my brain a little time to adjust. I appreciated the use of scripture and the historical context in which the texts emerged in order to support the cause of reparations.

“The church must take seriously the work of repair because, in the most profound way, love is simply who we are.”

dbtabm's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective medium-paced

5.0

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