The Disappearance of Eve and the Gender of Christ proposes a solution to this problem. It revises Paul's original formula and with it a set of common claims about Christ's sex and gender. It accepts Christ as the new Adam and the new Eve and accepts that Christ is, theologically speaking, trans*.
Carnahan offers a new theology of sex and gender as a calling within a context of responsibility as a framework for making sense of Eve, Christ, and ourselves. He shows how, from first-century Roman culture to medieval mystical experience and into our own time, there exists a long tradition of seeing Christ as transgressing and even transitioning across sex and gender boundaries.
The Disappearance of Eve and the Gender of Christ proposes a solution to this problem. It revises Paul's original formula and with it a set of common claims about Christ's sex and gender. It accepts Christ as the new Adam and the new Eve and accepts that Christ is, theologically speaking, trans*.
Carnahan offers a new theology of sex and gender as a calling within a context of responsibility as a framework for making sense of Eve, Christ, and ourselves. He shows how, from first-century Roman culture to medieval mystical experience and into our own time, there exists a long tradition of seeing Christ as transgressing and even transitioning across sex and gender boundaries.
The Disappearance of Eve and the Gender of Christ: Why Traditional Soteriology Requires a Trans* Savior
210
The Disappearance of Eve and the Gender of Christ: Why Traditional Soteriology Requires a Trans* Savior
210Product Details
| ISBN-13: | 9798889833055 |
|---|---|
| Publisher: | Augsburg Fortress, Publishers |
| Publication date: | 04/15/2025 |
| Pages: | 210 |
| Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d) |