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1 - It was the only place

Marie Cartier
Affiliation:
University of California, Irvine
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Summary

God does not live in a dogmatic scripture … but instead abides very close to us indeed … breathing right through our own hearts. I respond with gratitude to anyone who has ever voyaged to the center of that heart, and who has then returned … with a report for the rest of us that God is an experience of supreme love.

Baby … you … are my religion …

INTRODUCTION

Pre-Stonewall gay bars functioned as centers of communities, in the way that churches, as structures, function as the centers of many communities. For while many people do not go to church per se, if they belong to the religion the church symbolizes and houses, the structure of the church will also provide a structure to their own lives—for the occasional visit, for the identification it provides, for the knowledge of a community they could enter into—however they choose to do that, as well as for the list of attributes that we might assume religion provides—identity formation, community involvement, exploration of meaning, and a sense of something bigger than self. Religion is “the desire for depth … the experience … of the world imagined.” In religious studies we often call that “desire for depth,” a sense of the sacred.

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Baby, You Are My Religion
Women, Gay Bars, and Theology Before Stonewall
, pp. 1 - 32
Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2013

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