Jesus’ resurrection can be read as a coming out story. Jesus came out into a changed body and new way of life. The resurrection was a transgressive move from death to life, defying expectations and norms, it is full of the hope of possibility. Christ went beyond the boundaries of the binary categories of life or death.
Likewise, queer people come out into a new identity and can never go back to what it was before. Thanks to queer people, the binary categories of gender and gender roles are expanded.
Death that tells us we are limited. Death that tells us that we have to conform. The resurrection tells us there are options. The resurrection tells us there can be life by defying expectations.
Jesus' resurrected body was scarred, it had the wounds that were part of his transition from life to death and back again. Those who pursue medical and surgical transition are sometimes told they are mutilating their bodies, but no, it is part of the process of transitioning. Physical bodies are important, they show our journey. We're all wounded and that doesn't affect the heavenly perspective of perfection.
Others may look back and see the empty tomb that contains your deadname & the misgendered identity of how they saw you, but they’ll also see your life reborn as you move forward in your new identity.
Many queer people constructed a persona to survive and fit into a world that only accepted being cisgender and heterosexual. We buried our true selves under layers of performance and denial. That identity has die in order for our queer selves to come forward and bring us into authentic life. There is no freedom like walking out of the tomb of shame into the light of authenticity and pride. Friends and family may mourn the version of us they thought they knew, but what’s really dying is the mask. What’s being coming forward into new, truer and committed versions of ourselves and a new way of living. In order to live fully, the false self must die.
Speaking of the empty tomb, Mary Magdalene was witness to the resurrected Christ, and she wasn't believed. It took the apostles having their own experience for them to believe. Likewise, not everyone will believe the truth of our lived experience as we witness and testify of our queerness since they don't have that experience, but it doesn't make our truth any less true.
The LGBTQ journey is sacred. It is a journey of trials, transformation, and return. It’s a path only a small percentage of people walk. It's a journey into self, into courage, into joy. When we make that journey, we find peace, resolution, pride, and a deeply rich life. It is a path we didn’t choose, but that life is gifted to us.
Easter is a chance to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus and the hope that death isn't the end. Easter is an opportunity to celebrate your own resurrection into authenticity, pride, and love.