The Reverend Elizabeth M. Edman is an Episcopal priest and a political strategist who has been expanding people's understanding of faith and sexuality for over twenty-five years. She has worked on the most pressing contemporary issues at the intersection of religion and sexuality, serving as an inner-city hospital chaplain to people with HIV/AIDS from 1989 to 1995 and helping to craft political and communications strategies for marriage-equality efforts. She lives in New York City.
"[Edman's] tone and personal examples are compelling. By turning
the conversation around to show what queerness can tell readers
about Christianity, this work provides a striking road map for
larger, more productive conversations and community building."
--Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
"An intellectual and provocative perspective challenging
Christians and others to reconsider the confines of spiritual
interconnection, harmony, and progressive inclusion in modern
religion."
--Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review "Edman's fellow progressive
Christians may pay closest attention to her absorbing argument.
Perhaps all Christians ought to."
--Booklist "A passionate argument...blend of personal,
political, and theological reflection on the experience of LGBTQ
people...reach LGBTQ readers who find themselves moved by Edman's
case for the spiritual resonance of queer identities and
values...This work will appeal to those with an interest in the
relationship between queerness and faith, and the thematic chapters
are easily adaptable for group study."
--Library Journal, Starred Review "Elizabeth Edman's
Queer Virtue is a powerful work of theological and
autobiographical reflection that illuminates the deep connections
between queerness and Christianity. This book will be a valuable
guide for anyone who navigates the liminal spaces between these
distinct yet mutually reinforcing worlds."
--Reverend Patrick S. Cheng, author of Radical Love: An
Introduction to Queer Theology "The once marginalized
discipline of gay studies is now decidedly back in the curriculum
and in the intellectual arena. This book is a sterling example of
the best of it, and on a subject--ethics and morality--that is an
emerging area of interest in all fields. It will be a little
classic, and will be read and argued about for a long time to
come."
--Harvey Cox, author of The Future of Faith and How to
Read the Bible "Edman writes with the tender hand, approachable
intelligence, and wise humility of that super-smart, big-hearted
priest you always want yet rarely find. Her warm and personal words
engage Judeo-Christian tradition, as well as pop culture. She
returns us to the radical roots of our faith, while showing us how
relevant its teachings still are. She calls us to community--a
powerful message for queer people who have been alienated from the
church. She takes words we think we know--'scandal, ' 'pride, '
'queerness'--and encourages us to consider them in a new light. And
at a time when narratives about Christianity are often
hyperindividualistic and oversimplified, she reminds us of a
vibrant gospel that's richly relational, comfortingly complex, and
inherently hopeful. A vital read."
--Jeff Chu, author of Does Jesus Really Love Me?: A Gay
Christian's Pilgrimage in Search of God in America "Hot Damn!
Rev. Edman's book is a breath of fresh, queer, air that scatters
away a dusty history of half-assed sexual apologetics with a
invigorating proclamation: that sex is good and queerness is Godly.
Writing from a place of deep love of queer communities, Edman
reveals that, just as in so many biblical stories, the ones who
'get' the Gospel are the ones who have been disregarded, disparaged
or abandoned by the so-called righteous. In pushing queer folks to
the sidelines, the Church has not only damaged God's children and
failed to live in love, but further, missed a central lesson about
what it means to follow Jesus. Edman shares her discoveries of the
virtue at the heart of queer communities with vivacious smarts and
a wicked sense of humor that compels her readers to ditch the false
binaries that keep us fettered and instead fully embrace our
gloriously multifaceted God-given identities. If you've wondered if
you can be fully queer and fully Christian, the answer is a
resounding 'yes, ' and Edman will show you the way."
--Emily Scott, pastor, St. Lydia's Dinner Church
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