The God of the Ostracised: The use of Lived Religion Theory in advancing Queer Spirituality

Author:

Ntombana Luvuyo1,Sibanda Francis2

Affiliation:

1. Professor Department of Sociology and Anthropology Nelson Mandela University

2. Postdoctoral Candidate Department of Sociology and Anthropology Nelson Mandela University

Abstract

The South African Constitution and the law have ensured noticeable progress in acknowledging the LGBTQI community’s rights. Consequently, there is now a legal framework that protects LGBTQI people, and any discriminatory behaviour and utterances can be prosecuted by law. The struggle now lies within the religious sector, where limited progress has been made. This paper focuses on the progress made within the Christian religion in terms of creating policies and regulations to protect LGBTQI community members’ safety. We focus on same-sex relationships by arguing that even today, such relationships are not openly accepted by the Church. Using lived religion theory, we revisit Ntombana et al.’s (2020) findings and argue that queer people are closer to God and more spiritual than the homophobic Christians who attend daily Christian fellowship meetings. As queer people are in the minority and oppressed by the church system, we use Tutu and Boesak’s theology to argue that they are closer to God than homophobic Christians. We highlight that during the COVID-19 lockdown, the Christian community suffered, while the queer community flourished because their spirituality is not based on the Church’s orthodox tradition but on their relationship with God.

Publisher

Africajournals

Reference43 articles.

1. Bentley, W. (2012). A decade of the same-sex debate in the Methodist Church of Southern Africa (2001-201). Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae, 38(Supplement), 205–220.

2. Block, K. (2021). LGBTQ+ Experiences in Conservative Christian Communities. Master of Arts in the Department of Sociology. University of Victoria: British Columbia.

3. Block, K. (2023). Complicit silence, fluid identities and a shift to personalized faith: LGBTQ+ experiences in conservative Christian communities. Studies in Religion / Sciences Religieuses, 52(2), 234–250.

4. Boesak, A. A. (2011). Founded on the Holy Bible… A Bible-believing Judge and the ‘Sin’ of Same-Sex Relationships. Journal of Gender and Religion in Africa, 17(2), 5-23.

5. Boesak, A.A. (2015). Kairos, Crisis, and Global Apartheid: The Challenge to Prophetic Resistance. New York: Palgrave MacMillan.

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