George V. Pixley Explained

Honorific Prefix:The Reverend
George V. Pixley
Birth Date:1937
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois, US
Other Names:Jorge V. Pixley
Spouse:Janyce Babcock
Module:
Child:yes
Religion:Christianity (Baptist)
Ordained:1963
Module2:
Child:yes

George V. Pixley (Chicago, 1937 - 2023) was an American Christian theologian.

Biography

He completed his undergraduate studies in Wheaton College (Illinois) and in Kalamazoo College, where he met and married Janyce Babcock. In the Faculty of Theology of the University of Chicago obtained the PhD in Biblical Studies. In 1963, Pixley was ordained as a Baptist pastor, and he was appointed professor of Bible at the Evangelical Seminary of Puerto Rico. In 1969–1970 he was invited to teach lectures at the Evangelical Higher Institute of Theological Studies ISEDET, in Buenos Aires, where he worked too, as a professor at the Lutheran Theological Faculty. Between 1975 and 1984 he was professor at the Baptist Seminary of Mexico, as well as professor of History of Israel at the Theological Institute of Higher Studies of Mexico City. In 1985 he returned to the United States, but decided to go to Managua, where he taught at the Managua Baptist Seminary between 1986 and 2002.[1] [2]

In October 2002, he and his wife retired and since then reside in California,[3] where he is Director of Latin America Project, in the Center for Process Studies at Claremont School of Theology.[4]

Theology

He is an exponent of the radical academic line of liberation theology.[5] Pixley has produced a synthesis of biblical studies, liberation theology, and process philosophy.[6] [7] According to Franz Hinkelammert, recent Pixley's work on the theology and Alfred North Whitehead's process philosophy shows that the liberation theology has entered a process of renewal. Pixley opens up to the dimension of God, to the "God's drama in the history", especially when he examines the book of Job. In all his argumentation, he defends the "option for the poor": God is the God of all, rich and poor, but "if he did not choose the option for the poor, he would be a partial God in favor of the rich", then, it would be an option against the poor.[8]

Books

All his works have been published in Spanish or English; several have been translated to Portuguese,[9] a book to French and German,[10] and other to Indonesian.[11]

Notes and References

  1. Bosch Navarro, Juan y Juan José Tamayo Acosta (eds.) 2001. Panorama de la teología latinoamericana: 449–463. Estella: Verbo Divino
  2. Saranyana, Josep Ignasi (dir.) y Carmen-José Alejos Grau (coord.) 2002. Teología en América Latina Volumen III "El siglo de las teologías latinoamericanistas (1899–2001)": 494–499. Madrid: Iberoamericana.
  3. Almada, Lucas (2006) Jorge Pixley, actuales desafíos latinoamericanos; Metodistas & Ecuménicos, October 9, 2006.
  4. http://www.ctr4process.org/projects/latin-america-project Latin America Project
  5. Escobar, Samuel (1987) La fe evangélica y las teologías de la liberación: 192–195. El Paso, Texas: Casa Bautista de Publicaciones.
  6. Pixley, George V. (2003) "Creativity and Struggle: Process Philosophy and Liberation Theology ". Seminar paper, Claremont School of Theology, December 2, 2003.
  7. Romero García, Gorgias (2009) "Reseña"; RIBLA 62: 105–109.
  8. Hinkelammert, Franz (2009) "Apresentação"; in J. Pixley O Deus libertador na Bíblia: Teologia da libertação e Filosofia processual: 7–12. São Paulo: Paulus, 2011.
  9. O Reino de Deus, Paulinas, 1986; Êxodo, Paulinas, 1987; A História de Israel a partir dos pobres, Vozes, 1991; Vida no espírito, Vozes, 1999.
  10. Les Pauvres, choix prioritaire, París, Cerf, 1990; Die Option für die Armen, Patmos, 1987.
  11. Kerajaan Allah: Artinya bagi Kehidupan Politis, Ideologis dan Kemasyarakatan, BPK Gunung Mulia, 1998.