By insisting on the radical multiplicity of human experience, this book suggests "voices" rather than "Word" as the metaphor for divine revelation. When the voices of diverse women are engaged, white Western masculinist Christian conceptions of authority, agency, and revelation are shown to be inadequate and repressive. Moreover the God is revealed as many-faceted and aticulate, speaking through and among those who struggle together to live authentically in the world.
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By insisting on the radical multiplicity of human experience, this book suggests "voices" rather than "Word" as the metaphor for divine revelation. When the voices of diverse women are engaged, white Western masculinist Christian conceptions of authority, agency, and revelation are shown to be inadequate and repressive. Moreover the God is revealed as many-faceted and aticulate, speaking through and among those who struggle together to live authentically in the world.
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