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Prophetic Disability - Divine Sovereignty and Human Bodies in the Hebrew Bible (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,194
Discovery Miles 11 940
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Prophetic Disability - Divine Sovereignty and Human Bodies in the Hebrew Bible (Hardcover)
Series: Studies in Religion, Theology, and Disability
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Total price: R1,204
Discovery Miles: 12 040
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At first glance it may seem that the Hebrew prophets offer little
resolution on contemporary concerns of inclusivity and defense for
persons deemed "other." Bound by their time and culture, the
prophets' message seems obscure and irrelevant. However, on closer
look, we see that the prophets offer a call to justice for those
who are wrongly oppressed and marginalized, those on the fringes of
society-the downcast and the disabled. In Prophetic Disability,
Sarah Melcher opens our eyes to the prophetic corpus' ongoing
theological relevance in the first book-length treatment of
disability in the Bible's prophetic literature. Melcher takes a
deep exegetical dive into Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the
Twelve, analyzing passages that mention disability explicitly and
those that offer complementary relevance. With careful and detailed
exegetical work, she shows us the profound relationship between
disability and the sovereignty of God, the latter being the
dominant theme shaping all other motifs in the prophets. Influenced
by the prominent work in disability studies by Tom Shakespeare's
critical realism, she sets forth her own method in conversation
with rhetorical and literary criticism. Melcher's engagement with
these ancient texts is informed throughout by a respect for the
context and circumstances that generated the texts relevant to
disability, as well as a sensitivity to the lived experiences of
people with disabilities. To that end, Prophetic Disability
maintains the central theme from Shakespeare: that labels describe,
but do not "constitute," disease. Who we are is a reality beyond
our distinct experience with disability and impairment. What
emerges from Melcher's analysis are ways in which the theological
implications arising from the prophetic corpus might guide us
toward more ethical practice in our encounters with disabilities.
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