There is a Quaker saying: If God has ever spoken, then God has never stopped speaking.
There has never been a world where human subjectivity does not fundamentally shape spirituality. If any spirituality has ever had any meaning or power or use, then it has never been reliant on spirituality being “pure” of human influence. So much of religion has sought to overcome the divide between the lover (the worshipper) and the beloved (the Divine); so why are we shocked that religion itself emerges from that unity?
What would it look like to be conscious and self-possessed in our spirituality? To be invigorated by the active role we all could take in our spiritual choices? To sing the glory of that choice itself, to engage with doubt and stories, to be honest about what we need from our cultures and our communities and ourselves? What if the human body and mind is a spiritually valid source of faith?
Read Part Two of How to have a hot gay love affair with God on substack.
Read Parts One here.













