35 International contributors reflect on finding Goddess within (and without) Christianity and Islam.
“By altering tradition — and amending the translation from the (now) traditional “He” to “She” — does the collective consciousness of the Ummah shift?
Do we authentically reclaim The Divine Feminine inside Allah that was acknowledged 1400 years ago?
Do we eliminate the neo-patriarchal paradigm that infects the Islam of our “modern” era?” -Shahla Khan Salter
Contributors include:
Dr. Amina Wadud, Andrew Gurevich, Anna Ruiz, Bonnie Odiorne, Ph.D., Carol P. Christ, Ph.D.,
Dominique Christina, Donna Snyder, Glenys Livingstone, Ph.D., Helen Hye-Sook Hwang, Ph.D.,
Rev. Dr. Karen Tate, Kelly Stewart Hall, Kim Mohiuddin, Laurence Galian, Liona Rowan,
Lisa Artis, Marianne Widmalm, Marilyn McFarlane, Mary Petiet, Mary Saracino,
Monette Chilson, Nano Boye Nagle, Nicola O’Hanlon, Noor-un-nisa Gretasdottir, Patty Kay,
Penny-Anne Beaudoin, Poet on Watch, Rachael Patterson, Shahla Khan Salter,
Shehnaz Zindabad, Susan Klahr, Susan Morgaine, Susannah Gregan, Tamara Albanna,
Trista Hendren, Vanessa Rivera de la Fuente, Victoria A. Brownworth and Wynn Manners.
Excerpted from the newly released anthology Jesus, Muhammad and the Goddess.
The Sisterhood of the Misunderstood Jesus
by Monette Chilson
Sisters, for far too long, you have been preached to about a God who is called Father, but never Mother. About a Jesus who called men, but not women, as his disciples. You have taken these words, spoken as they were from holy stations, into your hearts. They have shaped you and just may have kept you from fully living God’s grand and glorious plan for you. Continue reading
You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.