Ebook
The poems in this collection ask--How can we become just people? What is human justice? Is there a justice that is equal and/or appropriate for all human beings? How can an individual in action, speech, and behavior be just? How does one think of oneself as just in interaction with others? These poems also address prevalent injustices to children and of society’s frequent denial of its responsibility to them, the privileged and the underprivileged. Further, how do we wish to live in a society--isolated, completely independent, self-centered? Living in a society implies association with others. How do we wish to relate to others? The poems query: how will the governments under which we live initiate and execute just rule and governance for all citizens? The book concludes with a lyrical case study of apartheid, especially in Israel that claims to be a democracy. Some of the poems acknowledge that the US’s democracy has failed in many ways and has an ongoing need of recovering the principles of justice and equality. Americans know well the meaning of ethnic cleansing in their own land. The poems here make no claim at successful resolutions to the issues raised. They do point to the ongoing need of repentance for wrongs done, and for steering a steady course to guarantee the rights of freedom and justice for all people.
The many verses in S T Kimbrough Jr.’s Becoming Just speak to me. They remind me there is no ‘just’ for justice. Not really. For justice is more than just race, or just gender, or just creed, or just nationality, or just us. Becoming just is a constant quest for decency to all, a concerted push for equality, an evolution within ourselves and in the parts we play to the world.
——John Archibald, 2018 Pulitzer Prize winner in Commentary
S T Kimbrough Jr. raises a myriad of critically poignant questions about justice issues confronting the world, including our own paradigmatic status on democracy and rights. He does not offer platitudes, but stresses an ongoing need for repentance, and a steady course guaranteeing freedom and rights: love kindness, do justice, so it rolls down like water and an ever-flowing river; this is indeed to walk humbly with our Lord.
——Charles Amjad-Ali, Luther Seminary, emeritus
The foreword to S T Kimbrough Jr.’s new book of poems, Becoming Just, opens with Martin Luther King’s words, ‘The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.’ These poems further the bending of that arc in a fascinating and challenging way. The poems largely focus on personal, societal, and governmental injustices, and the reader is left with the challenge of ‘What can I do to right these injustices?’
——William N. Clark, attorney
S T Kimbrough Jr. holds a PhD from Princeton Theological
Seminary and is currently a research fellow of the Center for
Studies in the Wesleyan Tradition at Duke Divinity School in
Durham, North Carolina, and he has taught on leading faculties in
the US (Princeton, New Brunswick, Wesley [Washington, DC], Drew
University) and abroad (Bonn University [Germany]). He is author of
many books by Wipf and Stock ,including: The Lyrical Theology of
Charles Wesley; Radical Grace: Justice for the Poor and
Marginalized; Partakers of the Life Divine:
Participation in the Divine Nature in the Writings of Charles
Wesley; May She Have a Word with You? Women as Models of How to
Live in the Writings of Charles Wesley; A Theology of the
Sacraments as Interpreted by John and Charles Wesley, and
twelve books of poetry.
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