
doi: 10.1111/dial.12120
AbstractThis article develops the concept of Christ not as static body but as chrism for bodies. Christ as chrism travels in the matrix of relationality, on a vector toward the benefit of others. Conceptualizing christ as chrism potentially avoids both exclusionary and colonizing tendencies in Christian polity, and frames a Christian ethics that, while vulnerable and risky, marks the sanctity of the one giving Christ away.
feminism, Religion, kenosis, Messiah, sin, Practical Theology, Christianity
feminism, Religion, kenosis, Messiah, sin, Practical Theology, Christianity
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