God, Suffering, and Disability
A Trinitarian Theodicy of the Cross
Abstract
God, Suffering, and Disability: A Trinitarian Theodicy of the Cross utilizes both Christological and pneumatological perspectives of Luther’s theology of the cross to address the complexities of suffering and disability. Through the lens of the cross, the God who suffers enables humans to “call a thing what it is” by recognizing the suffering that often accompanies disability. Rather than asking “why” the Triune God allows people to suffer, this theodicy of disability focuses on “where” the Father, Son, and Spirit are in that very human experience. As a new theodic construct, “a Trinitarian theodicy of the cross” responds to both the theological concerns of the church and the theoretical apprehensions of society. It encourages Christians to live as theologians of the cross, empowers the faith community by informing both its theology and praxis, and provides a theoretical response to secular society that will enrich the field of disability studies.
Schlagworte
discipleship inclusive worship pathos of the Spirit disability suffering suffering and disability suffering as trauma theodicy of disability theologia crucis theology of the cross union with Christ- i–xii Preface i–xii
- 179–184 Conclusion 179–184
- 185–196 Bibliography 185–196
- 197–204 Index 197–204
- 205–205 About the Author 205–205