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Disrupting Stories and Images of Church
Honoring Voices with Lived Experience of Disability
Disrupting Stories and Images of Church
Honoring Voices with Lived Experience of Disability
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Description
This book provides theological reflection on the image of the church as informed by the lived experiences of people who provide care for children with disabilities. These voices from the margin provide insight into what the church can do and has failed to do. A generative image of the church emerges as theologians engaged in disability studies work with the theme and images emerging from this data.
Table of Contents
Introduction –
Section One: Themes in Healing the Church with Disabilities
Chapter One: Beyond Saints and Superheroes: A Phenomenological Study of the Spiritual Care Needs of Parents Raising Children with Disabilities
Chapter Two: A Place to Belong –
Chapter Three: Cripping Space in the Sacraments –
Chapter Four:Beyond Transactional Ministry: Praying and Advocating with Jesus toward Justice–
Chapter Five:A Lens of Unproductivity: A Theological Hermeneutic for Disability Justice –
Chapter Six:Three Mothers, Three Stories: Spiritual Abuse, Theodicies, Disability, and Parenting: –
Chapter Seven: The Disabled and Eschatological Church –
Section Two: Disabling Images of the Church
Chapter Eight: The Church as Kin (Cruise) Ship–
Chapter Nine:Radical Re-Visioning Through Mad Studies: Advancing Mad-Justice in Faith Communities –
Chapter Ten: Negotiating Disclosure: To Mask or Not to Mask? –
Chapter Eleven:The Exclusionary Circle: Analysis and Response –
Chapter Twelve: The Church as a Rooted Tree, Or: Stayed on Jesus! A Partially-Preached Sermon –
Chapter Thirteen:Days of Fullness: Warm Bread as a Metaphor for Churches that Include People with Developmental Disabilities –
Section Three: Interreligious Insights for Disability Theology
Chapter Fourteen: The Intersections of Faith, Culture and Disability: A Muslim-Canadian Perspective –
Chapter Fifteen: Moments of Spirit: Access and Inclusion in Jewish Living –
Chapter Sixteen: Navigating the Two Buddhist Perspectives on Disability –
Chapter Seventeen: A Sacred Bond: Indigenous Reflections on Disability, Love, and the Church –
Chapter Eighteen: The Sacred Body: Exploring the Theologies of Difference in Islam –
Product details
Published | 11 Dec 2025 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 304 |
ISBN | 9781978771802 |
Imprint | T&T Clark |
Series | Emerging Perspectives in Pastoral Theology and Care |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Disrupting Stories and Images of the Church is a wonderful collection of essays written by people with disabilities and/or family members and close colleagues who are totally honest about the highs and lows of their faith journeys and experiences in congregations. It is, essentially, an “invocation:” a plea and prayer to the people of God to see, accept, and include people with both their differences and similarities. They engross, illuminate, and compel both understanding and imagination, embodying the mantra of the current disability movement: “Nothing about me without me,” pointing paths toward a new us.
Bill Gaventa, M.Div., Founder and Director Emeritus: Institute on Theology and Disability, Author, consultant, speaker, and organizer
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The personal stories shared in this book are prophetic voices that challenge us, as followers of Jesus, to repent from ableist practices in the church. The authors offer profound theological insights gained from lived experiences, guiding us to reimagine our life together as God's family-one in which everyone can find belonging and experience love and respect. The book also includes practical suggestions from Christian and other faith communities, showcasing what genuine belonging means.
Cynthia Tam, McMaster Divinity College
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Disrupting Stories and Images of Church is a courageous and deeply compassionate work that challenges faith communities to confront failures and to reimagine church through the lens of faith-based disability justice. Grounded in lived experience and diverse voices, including reflections from various religious traditions, this volume is both a theological reckoning and a pastoral gift. It doesn't just analyze experiences of exclusion-it offers real, human pathways toward belonging. A vital resource for anyone seeking to make faith communities more just, inclusive, and loving.
Pamela McCarroll, Jane and Geoffrey Martin Chair in Practical Theology, Emmanuel College of Victoria University in the University of Toronto
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This volume is a powerful witness to the transformative potential of disability theology. Jorgenson, MacGregor, Reynolds, and their contributing colleagues weave together qualitative research, lived experience, and interreligious perspectives to confront painful theological legacies. Centering cross-disability perspectives, they offer instead a constructive theological vision of ecclesial community, inviting readers into both theological and practical transformation. For anyone working in academic or religious contexts, this collection exemplifies the promise and necessity of engaging disabled wisdom in theological discourse.
Sarah Jean Barton, Duke University