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Bill Moyers interviews theologian James Cone about the cross and the lynching tree as symbols of tragedy and triumph.
With the noose and the lynching tree entering the national
discussion in the wake of recent news events, Bill Moyers
interviews theologian James Cone about how these powerful images
relate to the symbol of the cross and how they signify both tragedy
and triumph. "It was the poor, black victims being lynched. In Rome
time, it was poor Jews being lynched. The analogy is almost perfect
there," he says. "So, how are we today going to understand what was
happening to Jesus unless we see what was happening to black people
in those trees?" Dr. Cone is the Charles A. Briggs Distinguished
Professor of Systematic Theology at Union Theological Seminary in
New York. He is best known for his groundbreaking works: Black
Theology & Black Power (1969) and A Black Theology of
Liberation (1970); he also is the author of the highly
acclaimed God of the Oppressed (1975) and Martin &
Malcolm & America: A Dream or a Nightmare? (1991).