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Wondrously wounded : theology, disability, and the body of Christ / Brian Brock. [print]

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Studies in religion, theology, and disabilityPublication details: Waco, Texas : Baylor University Press, [(c)2019.Description: xix, 371 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781481310123
  • 1481310127
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • BL65.W663 2019
  • BL65.B63.B864.W663 2019
Available additional physical forms:
  • COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Contents:
DISABILITY Indiana THE CHRISTIAN TRADITION Wonders from Jesus to Augustine Wonders from Christendom to modernity.
WELCOME AND South CarolinaREENING- DOXOLOGY AND ANTI-DOXOLOGY Practicing welcome in the new world of genetic testing Prenatal testing as anti-doxology.
SYSTEMS, NORMS, AND MissouriDERN MaineDICINE- ATTENDING TO CREATURES Two critiques of Orthodox medical ethics Quality of life in an industrialized age.
THE EVERYDAYNESS OF MaineRCY AND WONDER Health in a fallen world Autism and Christian hope.
BODY-LIFE American Samoa THE ColoradoMMUNICATIVE LIFE OF THE WORSHIPING ColoradoMMUNITY The peculiar togetherness of the body of Christ A remarkable stroke in a strange and remarkable war.
Summary: The church has long proven itself a safe refuge despite the sad reality that it can be, and has been, unwelcoming toward those perceived as different. This is especially true of the contemporary church's response to those with disabilities-a response often at surprising variance with its historic practices of care. The church once helped shape western morality to cherish these individuals with love and acceptance. It is thus ironic when today's church neglects this care, or practices care with no awareness of the rich theological history out of which such moral sensibilities originally emerged. In Wondrously Wounded, Brian Brock reclaims the church's historic theology of disability and extends it to demonstrate that people with disabilities, like all created in God's image, are servants of God's redemptive work. Brock divides his volume into five parts. Part one chronicles how early Christianity valued and cared for those with disabilities, putting into practice Jesus' teachings about divine mercy in decidedly countercultural ways. Part two details how a rise in the fear of disability tempted the church away from these merciful practices as well as its confession of the infinite worth of all God has created. Part three traces how the fear of difference continues to negatively shape contemporary practices in today's schools, churches, and politics. Part four lays the foundations of a vision of Christian life that is resistant to this pervasive fear. Finally, Part five shows how the recognition of all people as part of the body of Christ not only demonstrates the love of Christ but displaces the fear of disability in a manner that invites the church beyond even the most ambitious contemporary hopes for full inclusion. Brock interweaves his historical and theological analysis with the narrative of his own disabled son, Adam. These stories vividly bring into view the vulnerability, as well as the power, of the disabled in contemporary society. Ultimately, Brock argues, those with disabilities are conduits of spiritual gifts that the church desperately needs. Wondrously Wounded is an appeal to the church to find itself broken and remade by the presence of Christ on offer in the lives of those society has labeled "disabled." https://www.amazon.com/Wondrously-Wounded-Theology-Disability-Religion/dp/1481310127/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=9781481310123&qid=1574138430&sr=8-1
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Circulating Book (checkout times vary with patron status) G. Allen Fleece Library Circulating Collection - First Floor Non-fiction BT741.3.B763.W663 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31923001898028

DISABILITY Indiana THE CHRISTIAN TRADITION Wonders from Jesus to Augustine Wonders from Christendom to modernity.

WELCOME AND South CarolinaREENING- DOXOLOGY AND ANTI-DOXOLOGY Practicing welcome in the new world of genetic testing Prenatal testing as anti-doxology.

SYSTEMS, NORMS, AND MissouriDERN MaineDICINE- ATTENDING TO CREATURES Two critiques of Orthodox medical ethics Quality of life in an industrialized age.

THE EVERYDAYNESS OF MaineRCY AND WONDER Health in a fallen world Autism and Christian hope.

BODY-LIFE American Samoa THE ColoradoMMUNICATIVE LIFE OF THE WORSHIPING ColoradoMMUNITY The peculiar togetherness of the body of Christ A remarkable stroke in a strange and remarkable war.

The church has long proven itself a safe refuge despite the sad reality that it can be, and has been, unwelcoming toward those perceived as different. This is especially true of the contemporary church's response to those with disabilities-a response often at surprising variance with its historic practices of care. The church once helped shape western morality to cherish these individuals with love and acceptance. It is thus ironic when today's church neglects this care, or practices care with no awareness of the rich theological history out of which such moral sensibilities originally emerged. In Wondrously Wounded, Brian Brock reclaims the church's historic theology of disability and extends it to demonstrate that people with disabilities, like all created in God's image, are servants of God's redemptive work. Brock divides his volume into five parts. Part one chronicles how early Christianity valued and cared for those with disabilities, putting into practice Jesus' teachings about divine mercy in decidedly countercultural ways. Part two details how a rise in the fear of disability tempted the church away from these merciful practices as well as its confession of the infinite worth of all God has created. Part three traces how the fear of difference continues to negatively shape contemporary practices in today's schools, churches, and politics. Part four lays the foundations of a vision of Christian life that is resistant to this pervasive fear. Finally, Part five shows how the recognition of all people as part of the body of Christ not only demonstrates the love of Christ but displaces the fear of disability in a manner that invites the church beyond even the most ambitious contemporary hopes for full inclusion. Brock interweaves his historical and theological analysis with the narrative of his own disabled son, Adam. These stories vividly bring into view the vulnerability, as well as the power, of the disabled in contemporary society. Ultimately, Brock argues, those with disabilities are conduits of spiritual gifts that the church desperately needs. Wondrously Wounded is an appeal to the church to find itself broken and remade by the presence of Christ on offer in the lives of those society has labeled "disabled."

https://www.amazon.com/Wondrously-Wounded-Theology-Disability-Religion/dp/1481310127/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=9781481310123&qid=1574138430&sr=8-1

COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:

Brian Brock is Professor of Moral and Practical Theology, Department of Divinity and Religious Studies, University of Aberdeen.

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