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Itumeleng Mosala's biblical and theological work has covered a wide
range of interests, including social justice in the early monarchy of
Israel, African traditional beliefs and Christianity, theological
education for liberation, the African Independent Churches, black theology
and women, the relationship between religion and socio-political
structures, colonialism, violence and the prophets, black organic
intellectuals, Christianity and socialism, democracy, Wesley and
Methodism, land, wealth, and poverty, and others. However, it is for his
detailed analysis of the use of the Bible in Black Theology that Mosala is
best known and which, I would argue, is his most significant contribution
to biblical and theological reflection in the South African context and
beyond. [Source] |
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