Like Any Prince
Ironically, the Babylon Bee published this lovely piece yesterday, “Man Capitalizes On Death Of Prince To Clarify He Wasn’t Prince Of Peace:”
Tyler is a pastor in Olympia, WA and works in State government.
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2016/april-web-only/remembering-pri…
He once sang, “I’m not a woman / I’m not a man / I’m something you will never understand.” Like Bowie, he wanted to defy our cultural categories and transcend them—to be something more than human.
Interestingly, that lyric comes from “I Would Die 4 U,” with its sexual-Messianic overtones. In a secularized world drained of spirituality, Prince appeared to be an outlier, a magical person, a visitor from either a past or future where spirituality remained vibrant and mystery abounds. His public persona was a curated effort at sustaining that sense of possibility. It’s no wonder his work featured sexuality so prominently: Sex is one of the few places that a secularized imagination maintains space for the possibility of transcendence.
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