Category Archives: Sexuality

The Homoeroticism of Catholicism | Rice Professor Jeff Kripal

Johnathan Bi May 30, 2026 An interview with Jeff Kripal on mysticism, sexuality, and the homoerotic structure of orthodox religion. Subscribe to my newsletter if you want content updates, invitations to events, and to support my work: https://www.johnathanbi.com/ Transcript: https://www.johnathanbi.com/p/transcr… Companion interviews: He Studied Every Religion, This One Came Closest to Truth:    • He Studied Every Religion, This One Came C…   The Secret Religion of Nietzsche | On Mysticism:    • The Secret Religion of Nietzsche | On Myst…   Timestamps: 00:00 0. Introduction 11:38 1. Why Mysticism Selects for Same-Sex Desire 21:06 2. A Queer Reading of Jesus 32:47 3. Why a Sexless Jesus Won Out 41:27 4. Jeff’s Encounter with a Hindu Diety 53:30 5. Mysticism as Hedonism 1:04:07 6. Plato on Love, Sex, and Divinity 1:07:40 7. Sex Runs Through the Supernatural

ChatGPT on Teresa of Ávila’s sex life

ChatGPT:

There is no reliable historical evidence that Teresa of Ávila had a sexual life in the ordinary sense of the term. She was a Carmelite nun who took vows of chastity and spent most of her adult life in religious communities.

The question often arises because her writings describe intense mystical experiences that can sound erotic to modern readers. In her autobiography, she recounts a vision in which an angel pierced her heart with a fiery spear, producing both great pain and spiritual ecstasy. This experience inspired the famous sculpture The Ecstasy of Saint Teresa by Gian Lorenzo Bernini.

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Some modern scholars, psychologists, and literary critics have interpreted these descriptions through the lens of sexuality, suggesting that mystical ecstasy and bodily sensation may overlap in human experience. Others argue that imposing modern sexual categories on a 16th-century mystic can be misleading, because Teresa herself consistently described the experience as a union with God rather than a physical or sexual event.

What can be said with confidence is:

  • There is no documented evidence of sexual relationships or sexual activity in her life.
  • Her writings contain vivid descriptions of spiritual ecstasy that use imagery of love, longing, and union.
  • Those descriptions have generated centuries of debate about the relationship between mysticism, the body, and sexuality.

If you’re interested, I can also explain how Teresa’s mystical experiences have been interpreted by figures such as Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, and modern historians of religion.