Tamice Namae Speaks
Tamice Namae Speaks
GROUNDING OUR FAITH IN OUR EXPERIENCES
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GROUNDING OUR FAITH IN OUR EXPERIENCES

Tamice Spencer-Helms joins Jared in this episode of Faith for Normal People for a conversation about the integration of faith and identity. Tamice shares their journey of navigating life as a queer and Black Christian, emphasizing the power of authenticity and agency in leaving toxic theologies behind. Join them as they explore the following questions:

  • What has Tamice’s faith journey been like?

  • When did the thread start to unravel for Tamice in terms of realizing that their theology couldn’t hold up the reality of racial injustice?

  • Whose voices inspired Tamice to integrate their faith and race?

  • Why does Tamice talk about whiteness as being like leaven?

  • How might we learn how to practice faith out of an experience of Blackness or queerness?

  • How did living at intersections change Tamice’s faith experience?

  • What is Tamice’s response to people who assert that you can’t be queer and Christian at the same time?

  • How can we gain confidence to acknowledge our own experiences, to be grounded and confident in those? 

  • What practical advice does Tamice have for those who have been told to abdicate their agency in order to be Christian?

Pithy, shareable, sometimes-less-than-280-character statements from the episode you can share.

  • What I’d been given in terms of a worldview and a way to cope was not working because it doesn’t speak to this reality of being Black in this society.  — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • I went on a journey of leaving white evangelicalism and hearing from voices that loved God and did God talk with their Blackness in tow. And I was given some beautiful pictures and ways to think about God after that. — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • A lot of my friends who started to wake up to this around the time of George Floyd started to realize that there was a corpus of work of people who were bringing their lived experience to the faith and really wrestling with God in that place. — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • It requires a relative amount of humility to say, I never knew about this theology. I never knew that you could think about or talk about God or relate to God this way. — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • There’s been a relative amount of figuring out how to be authentic in my queerness and in my love for the divine, and in the ways that I try to live out what I think that means and should look like. — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • If we don’t tell stories and hear about God and learn about God from the margins, then our ability to navigate and be resilient in the world is going to be really small. — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • No matter how arbitrary race is, I still experience the world as a Black person. And so there needs to be a perspective of God from that place for me.  — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • Where I see goodness and where I see light and where I see ethical spirituality, I grab a hold of it. I say yes to it. I celebrate it. — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • I’m very thankful for my tradition because it grounds me in these stories about Jesus that I’ve always loved, and where I came to really love God and develop a relationship with the divine through these stories about Jesus. — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • I think of it like a twin sheet on a king-sized mattress. The pursuit of God in this frame was not big enough to contain life in reality. I could pretend that the bed is not king-sized, or I could just try to figure something else out. — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • We cannot abdicate our agency. We cannot outsource intuition anymore. God gave it to us. God gave it to us for a reason. — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

  • At the end of the day, I get to do this faith. It needs to involve me, all of me, and who I actually truly am. Otherwise, what are we doing? — @TamiceNamae @theb4np

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