
Conspirituality Brief: Antifascist Christianity: Black Jesus (Pt. 1)
Oct 11, 2025
Explore Dietrich Bonhoeffer's transformative journey from white European Christianity to the radical embrace of Black Jesus in Harlem. Delve into the origins of the 'White Christ' tied to colonialism and examine how racial capitalism reshaped theological perspectives. Witness the contrast between the triumphalist hymn 'A Mighty Fortress Is Our God' and the soulful 'Were You There,' marking Bonhoeffer's shift from power to empathy. Discover how Black anti-fascism emerged through solidarity and resistance against systemic oppression.
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Bonhoeffer's Transformative Encounter
- Bonhoeffer arrived in the U.S. formed by a European, triumphalist Christendom and left transformed by a struggling, solidaristic Black Jesus.
- That shift reframes theology as tied to political orientation: triumphalist Christology supports empire while Black Jesus resists it.
Triumphal Worship Becomes Political Tool
- Repetitive, triumphant invocation of Jesus can become content-free yet emotionally powerful, serving reassurance rather than accountability.
- Matthew links this ritualized 'White Jesus' worship to a theology that sanctifies status and relieves adherents of justice obligations.
Racial Capitalism Reframes Political Theology
- Cedric Robinson's concept of racial capitalism reframes capitalism as continuing feudal racial hierarchies rather than breaking from them.
- Matthew uses this to show Black theological responses offered a fundamentally different orientation than European doctrinal disputes.






