For more than five hundred years, the poor and the disenfranchised of Latin America, the Caribbean, and Africa have been victimised by colonialism, capitalism, and cross; they have been, and are, “crucified peoples”.
And yet, just as the crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth did not lead to the utter defeat and silencing of the community that had cohered around him, so political, economic and cultural conquest has not vanquished the spirit of the “crucified peoples” of the Third World. Resistant and defiant, they have struggled, often unto death, to maintain their lands, languages, customs and dignity. For these men and women, Christianity is a tool not solely of submission and domination but also of liberation, while the cross symbolises not only death but also the tenacious struggle for life in the midst of death-dealing powers. For liberation theologies, then, the cross is an unrelentingly ambiguous symbol, signifying and inspiring cruelty and compassion, domination and resistance. For them, atonement has little to do with speculative theories about a past event that purportedly abolished human evil for all time and everything to do with strategies for surviving and struggling against the human evils they encounter daily in this time. For them, the work of Christ is far from over, and they understand themselves to be engaged in it with every breath.