ABSTRACT

God and Difference interlaces Christian theology with queer and feminist theory for both critical and constructive ends. Linn Marie Tonstad uses queer theory to show certain failures of Christian thinking about God, gender, and sexuality. She employs queer theory to dissect trinitarian discourse and the resonances found in contemporary Christian thought between sexual difference and difference within the trinity. Tonstad critiques a broad swath of prominent Christian theologians who either use queer theory in their work or affirm the validity of same-sex relationships, arguing that their work inadvertently promotes gendered hierarchy. This volume contributes to central debates in Christianity over divine and human personhood, gendered relationality, and the trinity, and provides original accounts of God, sexual difference, and Christian community that are both theologically rich and thoroughly queer.

chapter |24 pages

Prelude

part |120 pages

Part 1

chapter |31 pages

Dramas of Desire

chapter |40 pages

Suffering Difference

Graham Ward's Trinitarian Romance

chapter |35 pages

Speaking “Father” Rightly

Kenotic Reformation into Sonship in Sarah Coakley

chapter |12 pages

Interlude

part |42 pages

Part 2

part |105 pages

Part 3

chapter |31 pages

A Topography of the Trinitarian Imaginary

“Through a Critical Mimesis” 1 to God

chapter |34 pages

The Lord of Glory

chapter |33 pages

Apocalyptic Ecclesiology

Temporality, Futurity, and the Reproduction of God's Body

chapter |6 pages

Postlude