In this book Alvin Padilla, Roberto Goizueta, and Eldin Villafane bring together an impressive array of Hispanic scholars from across the theological disciplines to articulate just such a comprehensive construction of Hispanic theology. Their purpose is to delineate the common elements in Hispanic biblical studies, theology, and ethics and to draw these together into a statement of what Hispanic theology has to say to the larger theological community, and to the church. To do so they organize their presentation around four theological streams that run through Hispanic theology:
* Reading Scripture from the Margins: The contributors will present a reading of the biblical text that incorporates into its interpretative methodology the experience of alienation and marginalization, the central feature of Hispanic sociohistorical reality.
* Subversive and Liberating Memories: The contributors discover the subversive and liberating stories and voices within the Christian tradition and demonstrate how the memory of these "liberate" Hispanics and others from contemporary oppression.
* Liberating Truth: The authors offer fresh perspective on theological truth, incorporating the distinctive Hispanic sources, locus, and expressions.
* Liberating Praxis: Drawing on current Hispanic religious experience (for example, spirituality, church life, and ministry), the authors reflect on the way Hispanic religious experience is changing and how it will change the landscape of Western Christianity in the 21st century."
Roberto Segundo Goizueta, Ph.D. (Systematic Theology, Marquette University; M.A., Systematic Theology, Marquette; B.A., Political Science, Yale University, 1976), is the Margaret O'Brien Flatley Professor Emeritus of Catholic Theology in the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences at Boston College. He is a former president of the Catholic Theological Association of America and is an honorary member of the St. Thomas More Chapel Board of Trustees. In 1996 he received the Virgilio Elizondo Award from Academy of Catholic Hispanic Theologians of the United States.