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Marks of His Wounds - Gender Politics and Bodily Resurrection (Hardcover)
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Marks of His Wounds - Gender Politics and Bodily Resurrection (Hardcover)
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It is a central tenet of Christian theology that we will be
resurrected in our bodies at the last day. But we have been
conditioned, writes Beth Felker Jones, to think of salvation as
being about anything but the body. We think that what God wants for
us has to do with our thoughts, our hearts, or our interior
relationships. In popular piety and academic theology alike, strong
spiritualizing tendencies influence our perception of the body.
Historically, some theologians have denigrated the body as an
obstacle to sanctification. This notion is deeply problematic for
feminist ethics, which centers on embodiment. Jones's purpose is to
devise a theology of the body that is compatible with feminist
politics. Human creatures must be understood as psychosomatic
unities, she says, on analogy with the union of Christ's human and
divine natures. She offers close readings of Augustine and Calvin
to find a better way of speaking about body and soul that is
consonant with the doctrine of bodily resurrection. She addresses
several important questions: What does human psychosomatic unity
imply for the theological conceptualization of embodied difference,
especially gendered difference? How does embodied hope transform
our present bodily practices? How does God's momentous "yes" to the
body, in the Incarnation, both judge and destroy the corrupt ways
we have thought, produced, constructed, and even broken bodies in
our culture, especially bodies marked by race and gender?
Jones's book articulates a theology of human embodiment in light
of resurrection doctrine and feminist political concerns. Through
reading Augustine and Calvin, she points to resources for
understanding the body in a way thatcoheres with the doctrine of
the resurrection of the flesh. Jones proposes a grammar in which
human psychosomatic unity becomes the conceptual basis for
sanctification. Using gender as an illustration, she interrogates
the difference resurrection doctrine makes for holiness. Because
death has been overcome in Christ's resurrected body, human
embodiment can bear witness to the Triune God. The bodily
resurrection makes sense of our bodies, of what they are and what
they are for.
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