Black theology emphasizes "victim status....it doesn't help you when you get cancer or your husband leaves you."

An review from Craig Vincent Mitchell, Assistant Professor of Christian Ethics, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary at Amazon:
By covering such figures as James Cone, Cornell West, and Jeremiah Wright, we see all of the nuances involved with their approaches to the subject. His explanation of victimology, Marxism, and aberrant Christian doctrine make a noxious mix of ideas that would make any true Christian wary of anything even approaching black liberation theology. His keen insight into these ideas and his clarity of writing make this book a jewel. Anthony has done the Christian community a great service by writing this book. There was a significant need for a work of this type and its arrival is long overdue
Victimology is pervasive, not only in black liberation theology but in a large segment of the general black consciousness. But as it relates to theology it provides an opportunity for those preoccupied with race and any perceived or real social disadvantages to project onto and into it a divine narrative in which they are victims and those not agreeing or opposing in any manner are the perpetrators of sin against their group. It is a very crafty work of the devil, this black liberation theology, which borrows for its narrative much from Marxism. It is a form of great religious exploitation. Possibly this book needs to be displayed in the front of every Christian book store. If, upon reading it I am satisfied with its content (I anticipate so) I am seriously considering it as a 6 week adult Sunday school session.