Theology After Gaza: A Global Anthology
This is a book about genocide and Gaza. Gaza has become the moral compass of our world today. In this war, theology was weaponized against the Palestinian people by both Israeli politicians and Christian Zionists. It is a book inspired by Palestinian liberation theologies. The book foregrounds scholarly and practical responses to the Israeli invasion of a part of the occupied Palestinian territories widely referred to as Gaza in the media and popular discourse. However, the book also situates Gaza and Palestine in the longue duree of settler colonialism, colonialities of power, and the underside of modernity. Theology After Gaza: A Global Anthology is fruit of the urgency of the time. Inspired by Palestinian liberation theologies, it articulates some of the "death of God," and the moral and ethical outrage familiar to those versed in Western Christianity and theology. It also explores Gaza as an exteriority--an exteriority to Western Christianity and theology, to the international system, and as a counter witness to Zionism. This anthology is the first-of-its-kind, timely, and relevant contribution that tackles a relevant issue of global importance with well-known authors and prolific writers, including Jewish and Muslim scholars.
1148051030
Theology After Gaza: A Global Anthology
This is a book about genocide and Gaza. Gaza has become the moral compass of our world today. In this war, theology was weaponized against the Palestinian people by both Israeli politicians and Christian Zionists. It is a book inspired by Palestinian liberation theologies. The book foregrounds scholarly and practical responses to the Israeli invasion of a part of the occupied Palestinian territories widely referred to as Gaza in the media and popular discourse. However, the book also situates Gaza and Palestine in the longue duree of settler colonialism, colonialities of power, and the underside of modernity. Theology After Gaza: A Global Anthology is fruit of the urgency of the time. Inspired by Palestinian liberation theologies, it articulates some of the "death of God," and the moral and ethical outrage familiar to those versed in Western Christianity and theology. It also explores Gaza as an exteriority--an exteriority to Western Christianity and theology, to the international system, and as a counter witness to Zionism. This anthology is the first-of-its-kind, timely, and relevant contribution that tackles a relevant issue of global importance with well-known authors and prolific writers, including Jewish and Muslim scholars.
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Overview

This is a book about genocide and Gaza. Gaza has become the moral compass of our world today. In this war, theology was weaponized against the Palestinian people by both Israeli politicians and Christian Zionists. It is a book inspired by Palestinian liberation theologies. The book foregrounds scholarly and practical responses to the Israeli invasion of a part of the occupied Palestinian territories widely referred to as Gaza in the media and popular discourse. However, the book also situates Gaza and Palestine in the longue duree of settler colonialism, colonialities of power, and the underside of modernity. Theology After Gaza: A Global Anthology is fruit of the urgency of the time. Inspired by Palestinian liberation theologies, it articulates some of the "death of God," and the moral and ethical outrage familiar to those versed in Western Christianity and theology. It also explores Gaza as an exteriority--an exteriority to Western Christianity and theology, to the international system, and as a counter witness to Zionism. This anthology is the first-of-its-kind, timely, and relevant contribution that tackles a relevant issue of global importance with well-known authors and prolific writers, including Jewish and Muslim scholars.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798385233656
Publisher: Cascade Books
Publication date: 08/14/2025
Pages: 394
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Mitri Raheb is the founder and president of Dar al-Kalima University in Bethlehem. The most widely published Palestinian theologian to date, Raheb is the author and editor of fifty books that deal with modern Middle Eastern church history, contextual theology, and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, including Decolonizing Palestine: The Land, the People, the Bible (2023); In the Eye of the Storm: Middle Eastern Christians in the Twenty-First Century (2023); Resisting Occupation: A Global Struggle for Liberation (2022); and The Politics of Persecution: Middle Eastern Christian in an Age of Empire (2021).



Graham McGeoch works for the Council for World Mission. He is visiting professor at the University of Pretoria, South Africa. His most recent publications are Teologia da Libertação na América Latina: novas sementes de inquietação [Liberation Theology in Latin America: New Seeds of Disquiet] (2024) and World Christianity and Ecological Theologies (2024).

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“When human beings, leaders—supported by world leaders—become killers of other human beings, children of God, we need a new theology to understand, to continue believing and hoping in God, good, almighty, and loving all his children. I thank Pastor Mitri for his work, thought, and prayer.”

—Michel Sabbah, former Roman Catholic Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem



“What liberative message can be uttered in the aftermath of the settler colonialism, genocide, and a raging war inflicted upon the people of Gaza? With thousands killed and wounded, and with the utter destruction of the infrastructure, what can theology say, what can it even offer? Raheb and McGeoch gathered Palestinians and allies to wrestle with these questions. Thanks to their deliberations, we can begin to get a better handle on what theology can look like after Gaza.”

—Miguel De La Torre, professor of social ethics and Latine studies, Iliff School of Theology



“Now more than ever is there a need for a revivified liberation theology in the wake of the Gaza genocide. This book offers a crucial antidote to the dehumanization and decontextualization of the Palestinians and of faith more broadly. It illuminates and enlightens in the face of unconscionable depravity.”

—Ussama Makdisi, professor of history, UC Berkeley

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