I am struck by the imagery of the Shekhinah, in particular as summarized in the Introduction. An exiled woman, a disabled refugee, a survivor... she is humiliated, traumatized, and she is with us and will be... "and from the depth of [her] mystery, [she] shares with all who live within [her] sovereignty. [She] yields and retreats, yet touches every living creature. [She] is the eternally effeminate, the displaced and active God in the world." "The Shekhinah represents the place of the psyche as well as God’s active presence everywhere."
Zoë Camille replied to Zoë Camille's status
I am struck by the imagery of the Shekhinah, in particular as summarized in the Introduction. An exiled woman, a disabled refugee, a survivor... she is humiliated, traumatized, and she is with us and will be... "and from the depth of [her] mystery, [she] shares with all who live within [her] sovereignty. [She] yields and retreats, yet touches every living creature. [She] is the eternally effeminate, the displaced and active God in the world." "The Shekhinah represents the place of the psyche as well as God’s active presence everywhere."
