Opinion John the Baptist’s Inherently Queer Mission

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John the Baptist’s Inherently Queer Mission​

A few months ago, I was invited to be a part of a new endeavor at my parish, St. James Wabash, in Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood. The invitation to co-lead an LGBTQIA+ ministry at the parish came as a welcome surprise. I was excited that my parish was willing to step out of its comfort zone and begin something so needed, but I was also hesitant, wondering how the congregation would receive the ministry.

The first Sunday that the ministry was announced, my co-leader and I stood in front of our parish community and invited those who identify as queer and allies to join us at a meeting to talk about our journeys. I was nervous but trusted that the Spirit would guide us.

We didn’t have a hard and fast agenda for our first meeting. The goal was to get a sense of the existing needs in the parish surrounding LGBTQIA+ issues. At that first gathering, I was delighted by the number of people who attended and that our conversation revealed the many and varied ways we each navigated being queer or allies in a church that does not always easily accept the experiences and lives of queer persons.

Reflecting on that meeting through the lens of today’s liturgical readings, I found myself going back to John the Baptist and his experience of proclaiming the coming of “one greater than he.” John is often portrayed as a bit “out there.” Mark names the kind of clothes he wears and the food he eats to show us that John was not like other people. He wears clothes made of camel hair, eats locusts and wild honey, and spends his days in the wilderness crying out about a coming savior. From what we can ascertain from Mark, we get the sense that John was on the fringes of the dominant community.

Applying a queer lens to today’s gospel, we might say that the mission of John the Baptist is inherently queer (this is not to say anything about his sexual orientation, which we will never know). According to theologian Patrick Cheng, queering means pushing beyond the binary, challenging the status quo, and turning authority on its head. Was that not exactly what John was doing? He urged people to repent, challenged the powers that be, and lived a life that made people question themselves and reflect on their actions in new ways. By applying the concept of queering to what John is doing, we allow ourselves to enter into his mission and experience it more fully.

When we look at John’s life through this lens, we see him as someone brave and courageous who believed so passionately in Jesus’ redeeming mission that he was willing to give his life for it. He preached urgency. He knew his time was limited, and he knew that people around him needed to reorient their lives and attitudes to make way for the coming of Jesus.

If we take in today’s LGBTQIA+ landscape in our church and world, we see justice advocates championing the cause for full inclusion and acceptance. A few that come to mind are Craig Ford, Bryan Massingale, Jim Martin, and Yunuen Trujillo, all who have written and spoken extensively on queer matters in the church. Catholic organizations like New Ways Ministry and DignityUSA provide resources and bring a corporate voice to LGBTQIA+ concerns. Like John, these people and organizations (and many more) have put themselves in positions of being criticized and misunderstood because they give voice to a community that is consistently marginalized within our church and world.

When I think of those attending our parish’s monthly support group, I see everyday people showing up to do the work. In their own way, they are acting bravely and courageously for the sake of love and inclusion. Their stories resonate with me: the struggle to be heard, to be known, to be seen, stories of hope and resilience—the commitment to continuing to show up even when it’s hard.

As we continue our Advent journey, let’s remember that it is a season of longing and mystery. It’s a time for us to remember that Christ came into the world as it was, and we must engage the world today as it is and not shy away. Let John’s urgency speak to you about how you can act on behalf of the most marginalized, awaiting the day when “kindness and truth shall meet, and justice and peace shall kiss.” There is no perfect moment. The time is now. May our lives proclaim Jesus’ liberating mission with urgency.
 
We didn’t have a hard and fast agenda for our first meeting. The goal was to get a sense of the existing needs in the parish surrounding LGBTQIA+ issues. At that first gathering, I was delighted by the number of people who attended and that our conversation revealed the many and varied ways we each navigated being queer or allies in a church that does not always easily accept the experiences and lives of queer persons.

Reflecting on that meeting through the lens of today’s liturgical readings, I found myself going back to John the Baptist and his experience of proclaiming the coming of “one greater than he.” John is often portrayed as a bit “out there.” Mark names the kind of clothes he wears and the food he eats to show us that John was not like other people. He wears clothes made of camel hair, eats locusts and wild honey, and spends his days in the wilderness crying out about a coming savior. From what we can ascertain from Mark, we get the sense that John was on the fringes of the dominant community.
Applying a queer lens to today’s gospel, we might say that the mission of John the Baptist is inherently queer (this is not to say anything about his sexual orientation, which we will never know). According to theologian Patrick Cheng, queering means pushing beyond the binary, challenging the status quo, and turning authority on its head. Was that not exactly what John was doing? He urged people to repent, challenged the powers that be, and lived a life that made people question themselves and reflect on their actions in new ways. By applying the concept of queering to what John is doing, we allow ourselves to enter into his mission and experience it more fully.

When we look at John’s life through this lens, we see him as someone brave and courageous who believed so passionately in Jesus’ redeeming mission that he was willing to give his life for it. He preached urgency. He knew his time was limited, and he knew that people around him needed to reorient their lives and attitudes to make way for the coming of Jesus.

If we take in today’s LGBTQIA+ landscape in our church and world, we see justice advocates championing the cause for full inclusion and acceptance. A few that come to mind are Craig Ford, Bryan Massingale, Jim Martin, and Yunuen Trujillo, all who have written and spoken extensively on queer matters in the church. Catholic organizations like New Ways Ministry and DignityUSA provide resources and bring a corporate voice to LGBTQIA+ concerns. Like John, these people and organizations (and many more) have put themselves in positions of being criticized and misunderstood because they give voice to a community that is consistently marginalized within our church and world.
What a queer interpretation of the Bible.

queer.png
 
I like the way Lovecraft used the word Queer in his horror stories, it got right to the heart of it.

Anytime you are met with these "The Founders were gay" or "Marcus Aurelius was a rainbow Faggot" propaganda articles from the Yahvists, just respond - Let's talk about how much of a Faggot David was, when he buttfucked Uriah. Or call Jedidiah a degenerate racemixer. Even if you don't understand, the writers of the propaganda will.
 
According to theologian Patrick Cheng, queering means pushing beyond the binary, challenging the status quo, and turning authority on its head. Was that not exactly what John was doing?
It takes a huge narcissist to take the basic concept of change and go "That's so ME!"

Only time ive seen something similar is when Sargon of Akkad found out what projection is and then tried to pass it off as "Sargon's Law"
 
These people only want to corrupt and destroy, it is their whole identity. They have nothing else in there life except tearing down the fabric of reality with their wickedness. LGBTQP+ people serve Satan when they contort the meanings of things related to God. The Rainbow is a good example.
 
The strange hermit living in the desert calling for people to repent, and generally being viewed as nuts by his contemporaries, is more akin to the Westboro Baptist Church than any kind of nebulous queer identity.
 
More historical fanfiction. At some point, Fate is going to be considered as a legitimate source of History if it continues to go down this hole because they're trying to retcon a good chunk of historical figures as faggots.

These people only want to corrupt and destroy, it is their whole identity. They have nothing else in there life except tearing down the fabric of reality with their wickedness. LGBTQP+ people serve Satan when they contort the meanings of things related to God. The Rainbow is a good example.
The rainbow is sadly the biggest victim in all of these leftoid garbage. A beautiful and natural occurrence is now the universal symbol for buttsex. Letting the sodomites use such natural beauty to represent their perverse selves is one of the biggest failures of mankind as a whole.
 
Any guesses as to how empty the Churches of any priest who listens to and repeats this shit?
 
Mark names the kind of clothes he wears and the food he eats to show us that John was not like other people. He wears clothes made of camel hair, eats locusts and wild honey, and spends his days in the wilderness crying out about a coming savior. From what we can ascertain from Mark, we get the sense that John was on the fringes of the dominant community.
Wait wasn't John the Baptist born to some elderly woman or something? Probably had something to do with it.
 
we might say that the mission of John the Baptist is inherently queer (this is not to say anything about his sexual orientation, which we will never know).

So queer isn't just a made up stupid free victim point "sexual orientation", now it is also not a sexual orientation. Queer is therefore literally everything.

What a worthless way to look at the world.
 
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