Statement of The problem: What does Polyamory have to Do With Bisexuality?
[This is a portion of my first chapter. I've removed the footnotes for formatting reasons. I've also got lots of extra bits and pieces floating around which will eventually fit in here.]
Theologian Richard McBrien wrote that our first theological question is “Who am I” or “Who are we?” It is in our attempt to understand our own lives, claimed McBrien, that we begin to explore what is typically thought of as “religious issues” – God, Jesus, church, and morality. ( cut for length )
[This is a portion of my first chapter. I've removed the footnotes for formatting reasons. I've also got lots of extra bits and pieces floating around which will eventually fit in here.]
Theologian Richard McBrien wrote that our first theological question is “Who am I” or “Who are we?” It is in our attempt to understand our own lives, claimed McBrien, that we begin to explore what is typically thought of as “religious issues” – God, Jesus, church, and morality. ( cut for length )
Leave a comment
