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Jesus & Sacred Androgyny

The Christian messiah points to a mystic male/female state.

Jonathan Poletti
14 min readJun 14, 2019
Photo by Anton Trava from Pexels

“T”he truth is, a great mind must be androgynous,” says Coleridge, the English poet. It was in college, not in church, that I encountered an idea of humans ideally being . . . both?

I was hesitant. Being male and female seemed to double the work I’d have to do. Then it was the opposite of everything I’d been trained to be.

In Christianity, as it had been explained, the more a man is a man, the more God likes him. And the more a woman is a woman, the more kids she’s having, and the better dinner tastes.

But great writers throughout history seem to take a different view. Virginia Woolf tries to explain: “In each of us two powers preside, one male, one female… The androgynous mind is resonant and porous… naturally creative, incandescent and undivided.”

Her incandescence led her to take a stroll through the Ouse River, as I went on a deep dive into the Bible and Bible scholarship, night after night, pondering this treatise in — sacred androgyny?

And God created man in his image,
in the image of God created he him;
male and female created he them.

In this three-line poem, here in the recent Bray & Hobbins translation, the most obvious fact is an indirect…

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