Guest Post: Pagan Ministry and Outreach with Rev. Fox
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Guest Post: Pagan Ministry and Outreach with Rev. Fox

I am very excited to share this guest post from Rev. Fox! The Rev and I came to know each other over Twitter, and a recent post I made about the module on ethics in the Community Ministry Certificate I am pursuing lead to a conversation about how he approaches ethics in his prison ministry. After having the chance to see some of the materials he created and discussing his approach to ministry I asked if he would do me the honor of writing a guest post for my blog. And here it is!

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Queer Ancestor Spotlight: Newport Sex Scandal
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Queer Ancestor Spotlight: Newport Sex Scandal

A forgotten bit of American queer history involves future president Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the YMCA, and a bunch of Navy men who liked to have sex with each other in the early 20th century. Often referred to as the Newport sex scandal, this episode in American queer and military history shone a light on the underground culture of men who had sex with men long before Stonewall. What began as one man’s moral crusade against homosexuality shortly after the end of World War I turned into a national moral panic that made it’s way all the way to the United States Senate.

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Personal: Writing A Personal Code Of Ethics
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Personal: Writing A Personal Code Of Ethics

A recent assignment, almost a sort of final for the module, was to synthesize all the readings we’d done around morality, values, and ethics and to write my own personal Code of Ethics. I was surprised by how challenging this assignment was for me! The purpose wasn’t to write a sprawling thesis on our own ethical code but to boil it down to the real heart of what we believe.

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Queer Ancestor Spotlight: Audre Lorde
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Queer Ancestor Spotlight: Audre Lorde

Audre Geraldine Lorde was an American writer, feminist, and civil rights activist. She used her creative spirit to address the injustices of racism, sexism, classism, and disability. Given her personal identities her poems and prose also dealt largely with the exploration of black female identity. Lorde became a powerful force in the academic world with her essay “The Master’s Tools Will Not Dismantle the Master’s House.” She is also remembered for her speech at the 1979 National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights.

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Personal: Reflections from the Red Dragon Feast
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Personal: Reflections from the Red Dragon Feast

Over the weekend I was able to attend my first DC Red Dragon Feast and it was such an incredible experience. This is a queer magical ritual which began on the West Coast in the 1980s. This ongoing spell was first brought into being as a way to bring hope during the early days of the HIV/AIDS pandemic with the goal of focusing this energy towards finding a cure. It has since been expanded to include all blood-borne diseases.

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Personal: Queer Druidry
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Personal: Queer Druidry

I’m a native Floridian. I will always consider myself a Florida Boy and will always love my swamps. I also grew up in the time before same-sex marriage equality, under the shadow of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”, when the only thing a closeted teen like myself knew about being gay was violence and disease and isolation - because those were the only stories being told. That’s why what is currently happening in Florida is so deeply personal and deeply troubling for me.

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Queer Ancestor Spotlight: Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz
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Queer Ancestor Spotlight: Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz

Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, also known as Doña Inés de Asbaje y Ramirez de Santillana, a Hieronymite nun who lived in colonial Mexico in the 17th century. She was a writer, philosopher, composer, and poet. She predominantly self-educated and would become on the acclaimed masters of the Spanish Golden Age, gaining the nicknames “The Tenth Muse” and “The Phoenix of America.” As a nun she focused on issues of love and feminism, which would lead to her condemnation by the Bishop of Puebla.

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