The Wounds Are the Witness, Yolanda Pierce
The Wounds Are the Witness, Yolanda Pierce
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The Wounds Are the Witness
Black Faith Weaving Memory into Justice and Healing

Author: Yolanda Pierce

Narrator: Yolanda Pierce

Unabridged: 6 hr 9 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 02/04/2025


Synopsis

From celebrated scholar Dr. Yolanda Pierce comes this indelible meditation on Black faith, suffering, hope, and the healing possibilities of justice, written in the venerable tradition of James Cone and Kelly Brown Douglas. What do we do with wounds—our own, others', and a nation's? We can turn away, avert our gaze. We can make a spectacle of suffering. Or like the doubting disciple who longed to touch Jesus's side, we can acquaint ourselves with the wounds: both the story they tell and the healing they prefigure. In The Wounds Are the Witness, Yolanda Pierce, dean of Vanderbilt University Divinity School and author of In My Grandmother's House, weaves together her own memories, vignettes from Black life, and scenes from scripture, especially the passion of Christ. To work for liberation in a broken world, we cannot look away from crucified flesh. Bones from the Middle Passage, GI Bill benefits denied to Black veterans, women inmates shackled while giving birth: we must take all such wounds seriously. They testify to both the pain and the faith of a people. With the lyrical eye of a poet and the moral precision of a preacher, Pierce casts readers into the astounding story of God's healing. From the curative powers of a spiderweb to the work of justice in history, politics, medicine, higher education, and the Black church, Pierce asks: Where are the remedies for the battered and broken? What does accountability look like? Is there any cure? Healing takes time, Pierce writes, and even the wounds of the risen Christ do not immediately close. When the wounds become the witness, we find a faith reimagined and a hope transfigured. They tell the truth: about the extent of the injury and the extraordinary work of healing.

About Yolanda Pierce

Yolanda Pierce is professor and dean of Howard University School of Divinity. She is a scholar of African American religious history, womanist theology, race, and religion, as well as a public theologian, activist, and commentator. An alumna of Princeton University and Cornell University, Pierce served as the founding director of the Center for the Study of African American Religious Life at the National Museum of African American History & Culture. Pierce's writing has appeared in Time, Sojourners, and the Christian Century, and she is the author of the book Hell Without Fires. Pierce lives in Washington, DC.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Robert on February 11, 2025

THE WOUNDS ARE THE WITNESS: Black Faith Weaving Memory into Justice and Healing. By Yolanda Pierce. Minneapolis, MN: Broadleaf Books, 2025. 196 pages. We are witnessing a backlash against Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion that is leading, under the Trump Administration, to the complete rollback of D......more

Goodreads review by Haerlee on January 12, 2025

From celebrated scholar Dr. Yolanda Pierce comes this indelible meditation on Black faith, suffering, hope, and the healing possibilities of justice, written in the venerable tradition of James Cone and Kelly Brown Douglas. What do we do with wounds--our own, others', and a nation's? We can turn away......more

Goodreads review by Hallelujah Brews on February 17, 2025

"The Wounds are the Witness" by Dr. Yolanda Pierce 5⭐️/5⭐️ I didn't know what I was opening up when I grabbed The Wounds are the Witness. My decision to read it was pretty superficial. First, I liked the cover. It is beautiful and eye-catching art. Second, the author is the dean at Vanderbilt Divinit......more

Goodreads review by free form enterprises on March 18, 2025

A book that puts salve on our wounded hearts Words are inadequate to describe how this book gets under one's skin. Dr Pierce has a way of tapping the memories that have been overgrown by our life experiences. She helps us see how things we sometimes prefer to ignore have silently become the bedrock o......more