RT Article T1 Bodies Bound for Circumcision and Baptism: An Intersex Critique and the Interpretation of Galatians JF Theology & sexuality VO 16 IS 2 SP 163 OP 182 A1 Marchal, Joseph A. 1974- LA English PB Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group YR 2010 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1779664974 AB Arguments about the meaning of specific forms of embodiment resonate across a range of contexts, both theological and supposedly non-theological, ancient and contemporary. These forms are potently reconsidered in light of the modern medicalized management of intersex populations and the intersex critique in response to such management. Such a critique entails a new kind of accountability for biblical literature and interpretation, particularly as they inhabit an especially contested domain for claims about "nature" and belonging. The aim of this project, then, is to reflect upon the utility of biblical argumentation for an intersex critique, but also to demonstrate how attention to this critique challenges biblical interpretation, as it offers a new approach to religious argumentation about bodies, like Paul's in his letter to the Galatians. The ancient author and community's approaches to practices like circumcision and baptism reveal different conceptualizations of ostensibly ambiguous bodies and their anatomies of belonging, or "member"-ship. K1 queer approaches K1 Pauline Letters K1 Intersex K1 Galatians K1 Circumcision K1 Baptism DO 10.1558/tse.v16i2.163