ABSTRACT

While the intersection between race and religion has been an important site for research for the sociology of religion and religious studies (in its descriptive dimensions) as well as theology (in its religiously normative dimensions), neither of these disciplines has incorporated recent work in the analytic philosophy of race. Analytic philosophy of race, for its part, has largely neglected the race/religion intersection, while analytic theologians by and large ignore the theological significance of race altogether. In the first section of this chapter I aim to draw together these distinct disciplinary contributions—social-historical, philosophical, and normative-theological—into a single integrated framework for a research program in analytic theology. I call that framework “religious racial formation theory,” and I claim that the work of specifying a determinate religious racial formation theory is not merely a (normatively driven) sociological and historical task but a necessarily philosophical one. In a second section I then detail what sorts of metaphysical determinations are required in order to yield an adequate explanation of the intersection uncovered by the sociohistorical data summarized in the first section.