An #EasterSunday thread: Easter, not only this year, but every year isn’t just about a victory won. It isn’t a good guys vs bad guys, winner take all, we’ve triumphed and we’re number 1. This triumphalist language strikes me as a decidedly US American phenomenon 1/
a holdover from Cold War sentiments when the US emerged as the world power—democracy, freedom, capitalism, the good and the brave destroyed communism! USA! USA! It goes without saying that American triumphalism is an extension of American exceptionalism 2/
epitomized in the MAGA slogan but the emphasis is on how it justifies the imperial projects of global capitalism and a militaristic by-any-means-necessary approach to upholding the dominant position in the world. 3/
The way we talk about resurrection sometimes takes up this triumphalism, Jesus, the super-human (@BrianMerritt), conquered and destroyed death, and because he did, we are able to as well. But we know that death, not life, not even victory over life, is inevitable. 4/
And what this Easter moment, here in 2020 reminds me again, as a follower of Jesus, is that life and death are entangled, and even more people today have intimate knowledge about this very fact. The hope is not found just in the platitudes of “we will rise again” 5/
but the reminder that it is Jesus who shows up in numerous ways, whether as loved ones, as strangers, as medical workers, as teachers, and even in those we least expect doing what looks like the most marginal work--workers who are considered essential...6/
like cashiers, custodial staff, and gardeners. God raised Jesus from the dead not as an exercise of power because God’s power does not replicate empire through military or economic might but it is found in those who plant, who heal, who journey with, who teach. 7/
So perhaps in this Easter season, as we edge slowly towards a post-pandemic time towards a different normal, may we be rooted in, grounded in the inevitability of our precarity, our fragility, even our indeterminacy. 8/
As we continue forward led by Jesus who goes ahead of us—carrying guarded hallelujahs (@LouNyiri) and weeping in the dark, may we recognize what and who is essential to our lives and find hope in the beauty, empathy and creativity of the Spirit we’ve witnessed so far. 9/9
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Last thoughts. [Procrastinating from diss writing.]
How #BEEFnetflix demonstrates the entanglement of purity culture, race, and masculinity, and why religion is a helpful analytic (or, what keeps tripping me up besides feeling disillusioned about it all): 1/
In light of all that’s resurfaced about David Ch*e it’s impossible to think or talk about this show now apart from the violence and trauma of sexual assault. @reappropriate talked about his disgusting behavior here back in 2014. reappropriate.co/2014/04/did-ko… 2/
I had originally intended to do something on evangelical Christianity, purity culture, race and sexuality for my PhD program, a story: In March 2015, the state of Indiana sentenced 33-year-old Asian-American woman, Purvi Patel to 20 years in prison on charges of feticide—1/
an act that causes the death of a fetus—and neglect of a dependent. She received a 30-year-sentence on the felony neglect charge, 10 of which were suspended. A six-year sentence for feticide will be served concurrently. 2/
She was the first woman in the U.S. to be charged, convicted and sentenced on a feticide charge. This was eventually overturned. At the time, Lynn Paltrow, Executive Director for National Advocates for Pregnant Women, predicted: 3/