Queertivity
New Ark United Church of Christ, Newark, DE
September 30, 2018
I need you with me this morning. I’m taking a risk with you today. I’m sharing some thoughts that are still taking shape but I also feel they are true.
This past summer at Fa Lane’s ordination, the moderator of the Chesapeake Association, Dorothy King, named some of the qualities that Fa would bring to her ministry. One of them is creativity. But from where I was sitting, and listening to the pitch and cadence of Dorothy’s voice, I heard “queertivity”. My mind and heart leapt with delight.
At once I remembered a quote, an idea attributed to Albert Einstein: “No problem can be solved by the same consciousness that created it.” Queertivity. It will be the queer minds, the marginalized minds, the neurodivergent minds, all those who’ve been underrepresented, kept and pushed away from the table, their voices silenced, their identity debased, ignored or erased—these are the ones who possess the consciousness to solve humanity’s problems.
These identities interact and interconnect at a level so profound that we can’t say the future we fight for is equality for only one identity. We can’t assume that if we lift up women, liberation, justice and equity will come for everyone who is disenfranchised. The future is all genders and it is black and brown and queer and trans and differently abled and neurodivergent and the least of these.
The future is intersectional because the old rules of patriarchy, abuse and safeguarding of power, elevating some at the expense and destruction of everyone else are how we got here. It’s going to take a different consciousness, it’s going to take queertivity to solve the problems created by patriarchy, abusive power, and exclusivity. Queertivity, the creativity of that different consciousness, comes as a result of embracing intersectionality.
The unnamed Syro-Phoenician woman, mother to a daughter with a demon, possessed queertivity. Alone, gentile and female, she approached a Jewish rabbi. Jesus may have had no place to put his head but compared to her, he was privileged and protected and had power she did not. However many times we’ve read this story, did we ever consider the courage, tenacity and vulnerability it took for this woman to bow down at his feet and beg Jesus to heal her daughter?
Then in one of the most un-Jesus moments in the gospels, Jesus responds to her in a way that can only be described as partisan and demeaning. He says to her, “Let the children be fed first, for it is not fair to take the children’s food and throw it to the dogs.” The children he refers to are the children of Israel, and then Jesus goes so far as to say that healing this foreigner’s daughter would be unfair and then he calls them dogs.
Let’s stop there for a moment. I for one am heartened to have this account of Jesus behaving like a privileged male of the patriarchy, about ready to withhold his power from someone who desperately needs it, precisely because the story does not end there. The incarnation is not about humanity becoming perfect but about the divine entering into a fragile humanity in need of healing. And healing can be as uncomplicated, impactful and powerful as changing one’s mind, one’s consciousness, in the presence of community we cannot escape even when we want to.
Jesus changes course. |
This nation is demon-possessed by capitalism and greed, patriarchy and white supremacy, nationalism and partisanship, violence and abuse of power, and it seems as though there are enough of us who have Finally. Had. Enough. But not before everyone who has power attempts every opportunity to control and hold onto whatever power they can; not before toxic masculinity can throw a tantrum, deflect and obfuscate in a high stakes, public job interview; not before they finish stripping away all of the hard-won freedoms and protections of the past 50 years.
Which means we have to use our queertivity, embrace our intersectionality, and invest our privilege, our power, our money in those who have had to beg just for the right to exist safely in public space, to have what they need to live. Wherever, whenever we resist, protest, speak truth to BS, we have to bring Jesus in the room, into the conversation. Which means we bring our black and brown neighbors, our trans and queer neighbors, our immigrant and refugee neighbors, our Muslim and Jewish and Hindu and Buddhist and atheist and Baha’i and Sikh neighbors, our differently abled neighbors, neighbors whose first language isn’t English, our neurodivergent neighbors, our unemployed and underemployed neighbors, our street neighbors, our neighbors on Medicare and Medicaid, our marginalized and criminalized neighbors.
The time is now here when the first shall indeed be last, and the last shall finally be first. And we have to get out of the way. The future is intersectional. “No problem can be solved by the same consciousness that created it.” Queertivity is the new consciousness. Thanks be to that Power that is making all things new.
Benediction
We are diverse. That is something to celebrate, not hide or stifle or deny. Or fix.
We are wonderfully and fearfully made in God’s image, each and every one of us, and none of us are broken or unworthy yet we all need healing and safe space, equality and justice.
We are agents of change, whether we need to get out of its way or we are the change we have been waiting for.
And so may the Holy One, source of queertivity, bless you and keep you; the Holy One make their face to shine upon you and be gracious to you; the Holy One lift their countenance upon you and give you peace. Amen.
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