Katie Hays is the founder and lead evangelist of Galileo
Church, a church that "seeks and shelters spiritual refugees,"
especially young adults and LGBTQ+ people, on the outskirts of Fort
Worth, Texas. She is also the author of We Were Spiritual Refugees:
A Story to Help You Believe in Church.
Susan A. Chiasson is a qualitative researcher who tries to understand, rather than predict, people's beliefs and attitudes. Her work involves a lot of talking to people as she observes them at work or play, in interviews, and in focus groups.
"These stories are of people who paid the price. They sought
reconciliation when it would have been easier to walk away. They
did the hard work of showing up to love each other well. And they
found a church willing to do the hard work with them. If you are
moved by a good, redemptive story, you are going to like this
book."
-- Paula Stone Williams
from the foreword "These narratives speak boldly and carefully
about the courage queer folks and their families embody as they
discern their way through disclosures and invitations to enter
closets and as they invite others to get to know them anew. These
relationships are ever-changing and significant as families of
origin and choice recognize their beloveds, wrestle with the
meaning of their lives together, and become open to transformation.
The writers beautifully speak to the pains and the celebrations of
queer people whose resilient spirits have much to offer to
communities and the world."
-- Joretta L. Marshall
professor of pastoral theology and care at Brite Divinity School
"Hays and Chiasson have assembled a fascinating and forceful
collection of stories from LGBTQ+ Christians about their
experiences with kinship and condemnation, love and loss,
reconciliation and resilience, and coming out--and coming to terms
with one's queer self. An engaging, well-theorized and
well-researched text that calls cis-het Christians to lean in,
listen, and believe; a text that will make a marked contribution
toward repairing the harms that Christian families, faiths, and
fellowships have inflicted (and still inflict) on LGBTQ+
persons."
-- Tony E. Adams
chair and professor of communication at Bradley University and
author of Narrating the Closet
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