Sororidad y Cristología Sisterhood and Christology
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Abstract
From the beginning of his ministry, Jesus and his gospel were received as good news by women, who followed him as his disciples and friends. He considered them his sisters. Too often, dominant theologies have made this sororal dimension of Christology invisible, although it is essential to avoid Christology becoming a discourse distanced from the heart of the message of Jesus. The cases of Martha and Mary of Bethany (sisters in the flesh), Macrina (sister of Gregory of Nyssa), and Julian of Norwich and Margery Kempe (sisters in the faith) are taken into account paradigmatically in order to accede to the sororal dimension of christology in the light of a feminist conception of sisterhood.
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