Accessible Atonement

BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781481313674

Disability, Theology, and the Cross of Christ

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By David McLachlan
Imprint:
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
233 x 195 mm
Weight:
460 g
Pages:
208

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Description

David McLachlan is Associate Tutor at Spurgeon's College at the University of Manchester.

Preface Introduction Part 1. Current interactions 1 Disability Theology and the Cross 2 Making Sense of the Atonement: Models, Theories, and Metaphor 3 Seeking Connections: First Steps in a Response Part 2. Proposed Interactions 4 Atonement-as-Participation: An Inherently Inclusive Account 5 The Cross as the Foundation for Disability Theology 6 Continuity of the Traditional Models Conclusion

...this offering is a very well-written, accessible, clearly organized and cogently argued book. --Benjamin T. Conner "Studies in Christian Ethics" ...I heartily recommend Accessible Atonement both to those who want to read theology with disabled people in mind and those seeking a more rounded atonement theology in general. McLachlan succeeds in showing how atonement theology gets impoverished when it focuses on moral sin alone, but needs to focus on all that Christ achieved on the cross. He also succeeds in demonstrating that the lens of disability can sharpen our understanding even in the most well examined areas of theology. --Immanuel Koks "Stimulus" McLachlan breathes new life into both dogmatic theological discourse on the atonement and disability theology by providing a praiseworthy portrait of what can happen when disability is central to the formulation of Christian theology. --Cody Bivins-Starr "Reading Religion" Accessible Atonement is a welcome contribution to the field of disability theology, attempting to engage one of the most important Christian doctrines from a disability perspective. The claims that McLachlan makes herein are preliminary, providing ample possibility for further engagement. Yet, if we take these preliminary claims seriously, we will be forced not only to wrestle with our understandings of disabled experiences, but also our understanding of the atonement and all that it encompasses. --Daniel Rempel "Scottish Journal of Theology" ...theologically sophisticated and pastorally sensitive. --Aaron Klink "Christian Century"

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