“…Building upon Freeman’s thought to read against the grain of Pauline literature, Joseph A. Marchal has argued that Paul’s address to the prophetic women of 1 Corinthians represents an alternative temporality that challenges Paul. The orientation to time of the Corinthian women represents ways of ‘gathering, mixing, and moving in time that were also apocalyptically conditioned, as Paul’s thought was’ (Marchal 2018: 46). Commenting on the implications of his work, Marchal sees queer historical desire as ‘an impulse toward making connections across time between, on the one hand, lives, texts, and other cultural phenomenon left out of sexual categories back then, and, on the other, those left out of current sexual categories now’ (2018: 47).…”