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Faith & Spirit Quote by Mary Daly

"Why indeed must 'God' be a noun? Why not a verb - the most active and dynamic of all?"

About this Quote

A noun pins things down; a verb makes them dangerous. Mary Daly’s provocation works because it treats grammar as theology’s hidden power tool: what you call God determines what you can do with God. “God” as a noun invites possession, definition, enclosure - the kind of conceptual real estate that institutions can fence off and patrol. A noun sits still long enough to be administered by clergy, translated into creeds, and used as a stamp of approval. Daly hears the authoritarian convenience in that stillness.

Turning God into a verb is less a cute linguistic trick than a revolt against the patriarchal habit of naming as control. Daly wrote from within feminist theology’s critique of a male-coded, sovereign “He” who rules from above. In that context, the noun “God” isn’t neutral; it’s a political technology, one that has historically justified hierarchy by presenting it as metaphysical fact. Her question “Why indeed” carries the impatience of someone who has watched language masquerade as destiny.

A verb, “the most active and dynamic of all,” implies process rather than object, becoming rather than being. It reframes divinity as something that happens - in struggle, creativity, liberation, relationship - instead of someone who grants or withholds access. That shift quietly disempowers gatekeepers: you can’t monopolize a verb the way you can a noun. The subtext is an ethic as much as a theology: if the divine is active, then faith is participation, not submission; if God “verbs,” then we’re implicated in the motion.

Quote Details

TopicGod
Source
Later attribution: God (Joseph A. Bracken, 2008) modern compilationISBN: 9780814659908 · ID: XwWjW2AG0fsC
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... Daly changed her focus and directly addressed doctrinal issues that prejudice the status of women in the ... Why indeed must ' God ' be a noun ? Why not a verb - the most active and dynamic of all ? Hasn't the naming of ' God ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Daly, Mary. (2026, March 28). Why indeed must 'God' be a noun? Why not a verb - the most active and dynamic of all? FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/why-indeed-must-god-be-a-noun-why-not-a-verb-77309/

Chicago Style
Daly, Mary. "Why indeed must 'God' be a noun? Why not a verb - the most active and dynamic of all?" FixQuotes. March 28, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/why-indeed-must-god-be-a-noun-why-not-a-verb-77309/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Why indeed must 'God' be a noun? Why not a verb - the most active and dynamic of all?" FixQuotes, 28 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/why-indeed-must-god-be-a-noun-why-not-a-verb-77309/. Accessed 6 Apr. 2026.

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About the Author

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Mary Daly (born October 16, 1928) is a Theologian from USA.

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