Disability Theology
Disability Theology
Disability Theology
Medi Ann Volpe
https://www.saet.ac.uk/Christianity/DisabilityTheology
Citation
Volpe, Medi Ann. 2024. 'Disability Theology', St Andrews Encyclopaedia of Theology.
Edited by Brendan N. Wolfe et al. https://www.saet.ac.uk/Christianity/DisabilityTheology
Accessed: 11 November 2024
Copyright information
Copyright © Medi Ann Volpe CC BY-NC
Preprint: this text represents an accepted version of the article. A full published version is
forthcoming.
ISSN 2753-3492
Disability Theology
Medi Ann Volpe
1
Table of contents
1 Introduction
5 The current shape of the conversation: growing edges and knotty problems
2
5.2 Theology and intellectual disability: a growing edge
6 Conclusion
3
1 Introduction
‘Disability theology’ names a meeting-place of multiple discourses. Academic work on
disability happens in conversation with a variety of disciplines and at a broad range of
interdisciplinary intersections: law, sociology, political science, medicine, education,
bioethics. In addition to paying attention to the interdisciplinary nature of the study of
disability, theology engages disability in different registers. For example, disability theology
addresses questions about providence and theological anthropology that have puzzled
theologians since late antiquity, practical and pastoral questions regarding ministry to
people with disabilities that have been discussed in theological journals since the early
twentieth century, and relates disability to Christian doctrines, including the image of
God (as the core of the Christian doctrine of the human person), Christology, soteriology,
ecclesiology, eschatology, and theological ethics. The theological assumptions scholars
bring to their work differ by social and ecclesial location – so a Nigerian Catholic priest in a
religious order enters the conversation with a radically different set of epistemological and
theological commitments from a lay scholar in a Methodist seminary in the United States.
There are certain themes that run through the various strands of the discourse, however,
which give it structure and boundaries. Does disability alter our theological anthropology?
What is the relationship between healing and salvation?
4
disability theology without attending to the relative novelty of ‘disability’ as a concept.
In the nineteenth century the emergence of a norm for healthy human development
led to the conceptualization of its opposite. In the intervening years, the idea of what
constitutes ‘disability’ has been continually shifting, and today ‘disability is never simply
a medically or culturally determined identity but is always a pliable negotiating of desires,
anxieties, and needs in specific contexts’ (Swinton 2016: 21). The section concludes with
a consideration of four scholars whose work has been foundational for disability theology:
Stanley Hauerwas, Nancy Eiesland, William Gaventa, and John Swinton. Each of these
thinkers has a distinct approach that shaped the development of the conversation in its
nascent stage, 1970–2000.
The history of the US-based Society for Disability Studies and its journal, Disability Studies
Quarterly, illustrates the unfolding of disability studies more generally. The journal started
in 1980 as The Disability and Chronic Disease Newsletter, predating the Society itself. It
began as a publication of a few dozen pages, offering not only or even primarily scholarly
articles; rather, it served as an information exchange, including journalistic reporting and
job advertisements. It became DSQ in 1986, though it retained its newsletter format until
Fall 1996 (volume 16, number 4).
Disability Studies Quarterly offers a window onto the interdisciplinary nature of disability
studies as well as its attention to the lived experience of people with disabilities, especially
5
their quality of life. For example, Marcia Rioux’s 1996 article, ‘Services and Supports in a
Human Rights Framework’ (16.1, pp. 4–9), highlights the link between disability studies
and disability politics, whereas the special issue the previous year, devoted to ‘Disability
Culture’ includes articles from scholars in the fields of sociology, history, psychology, and
anthropology – as well as an annotated bibliography of monographs, edited volumes,
articles, works of fiction and film, and a report from university administrators about a
disability-related protest and the changes it precipitated at their university. Irving Zola,
longtime editor of Disability Studies Quarterly, transformed the newsletter into the journal
of the Society for the Study of Disability and increased its academic standing. Since the
late 1980s universities have been offering degree programmes in disability studies, from
undergraduate to PhD. While many of these universities are in the UK or the US, there are
a number of programmes in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Beyond the English-
speaking academic community, disability studies has found a place in universities and
academic societies across Europe and is growing in other parts of the world. (See, for
example, Cushing 2009; https://www.disability-europe.net/about-us; and https://ajod.org/
index.php/ajod.)
6
‘explains disability disadvantage in terms of pathological states of the body and mind
themselves’ (SEP 2022). Disability studies emerged from a conversation about helping
people with disabilities to adapt to their environment, a conversation that framed disability
as a medical condition. This approach to disability was first criticised as an ‘individual’
model of disability, a framework that assumed that the individual’s medical condition
was what needed to be fixed or mitigated to enable access (Oliver, Sapey and Thomas
1983). More recently, questions have been raised about the implications of the diagnosis
of disability. Diagnosis is typically the first step in a process that tends toward cure.
With many disabilities, cure is not an option; the only way to eliminate the disability is to
eliminate the person (see Hauerwas 1977).
The dialogue between medical science and theology in disability theology addresses
scientific accounts of disabilities, whether due to chronic illness (such as ME or clinical
depression) or impairments (physical or cognitive, congenital or acquired). Swinton offers
an excellent example of the way disability theology can engage with medicine in particular.
Swinton (a) attends to the spiritual needs of people with cognitive or psychological
impairments/struggles and (b) challenges the culture of diagnosis. A medical diagnosis,
Swinton argues, does not give the full picture of a person’s situation. Depression, for
example, can be diagnosed according to the DSM-V by an assortment of symptoms, and
there are medical treatments for depression, including drugs and counselling. Swinton
suggests, however, that, for Christians, the experience of depression cannot be divorced
from Christian faith; while depression may challenge faith, faith can also be a consolation
in the midst of depression.
7
is socially constructed; that is, although an individual’s condition may have a medical
diagnosis, it is labelled as a ‘disability’ within a social and cultural framework.
Considering disability as a social phenomenon also creates a group identity. The label
‘disabled’ names a political identity. This approach to disability is often referred to as a
‘minority group’ model. Like other marginalized groups, people with disabilities call for
measures to facilitate their full participation in society, such as accessible spaces, and
legal protections.
those who are no longer children recognize in children what they once were…those are not
yet disabled by age recognize in the old what they are moving towards becoming, and…
those who are not ill or injured recognize in the ill and the injured what they often have
been and will be and always may be…[and]…these recognitions are not a source of fear.
(MacIntyre 2009: 146)
Theologians working on disability have adapted a variety of models from disability studies
or advanced their own. Deborah Creamer’s influential book, Disability and Christian
Theology in 2009, offered a ‘limits’ model of disability developed in conversation with
8
themes in Christian theology. Thinking about disability in terms of limits emphasizes
human variation and vulnerability, an approach that sits well with a variety of themes
in Christian theology. The ‘limits’ model and theological approaches to disability are
discussed further below.
John Swinton and Bill Gaventa represent the practical and pastoral dimension of disability
theology. Gaventa founded the Summer Institute on Disability and Theology, which has
provided a space for conversation and collaboration since 2010. Swinton’s work covers
a broad range of themes and topics in disability theology, from theological reflections on
personhood and theodicy to issues in disability, mental health, and dementia. Gaventa’s
work highlights the practical side of work in disability theology.
9
At this junction, it is appropriate to mention a landmark text that sits, like Gaventa and
Swinton’s work, at the intersection of theology and practice. The same year that The
Disabled God was published, a volume of essays appeared: Developmental Disabilities
and Sacramental Access: New Paradigms for Sacramental Encounters. The essays,
written by men and women in Catholic religious orders, describe the inclusion of people
with developmental disabilities in preparation for and celebration of the sacraments. In
addition to the narrative dimension, several of the essays offer theological reasons for
making a path to communion and confirmation for people with developmental disabilities.
The volume also reprints two Church documents setting out episcopal guidance that
calls for parishes to facilitate such access to the sacraments. Those two documents, both
published in the 1980s, point to an ongoing conversation at the intersection of theology
and disability that responds to liturgical rather than philosophical questions. Catholic
thinking about disability thus first emerged as liturgical theology, and aimed not at shaping
academic discourse but at the full inclusion of people with disabilities in the celebration
of the sacraments and the human community more broadly. (See, for example, https://
ncpd.org.)
Although she describes her work as aiming ‘Toward a Liberatory Theology of Disability’,
Eiesland does not explicitly engage with liberation theology. Rather, along the lines of
disability politics and identity politics more generally, Eiesland assumes that disability
theology is produced by people who are themselves disabled, in much the same way
that feminist theology emerged first as theological reflection by women on the meaning of
their womanhood in relation to God, Christian faith, and the church. Thus her ‘liberatory
theology of disability’ is not a liberation theology of disability. Liberation theology, in
the work of Gustavo Gutiérrez and others, is on the side of the poor, while not being
necessarily the work of the poor themselves. The location of the theologian with respect to
disability continues to be a significant theme in disability theology.
10
Eiesland’s illness and early death prevented her from mentoring students who might have
developed her work and continued to shape disability theology. Yet Eiesland’s study was,
and remains, a touchstone for theological reflection on disability. For example, Deborah
Creamer’s seminal work (to be considered in detail below) is built on a plot of academic
ground cleared by Nancy Eisland. Eiesland created a space in which disability came
to be discussed theologically from an increasing range of angles. In Disability in the
Christian Tradition: A Reader (Swinton 2012), her work is drawn into conversation with
Calvin and Barth. She is also a key source for the chapter on women, which includes
lengthy passages from her work. The Disabled God has been widely read in the academic
theological world, reaching into subfields in theology that Eiesland would probably not
have imagined. For example, philosopher Richard Cross drew Eiesland’s work into
conversation with medieval accounts of the Incarnation in his gesture ‘toward a theology of
personhood’ (Cross 2011).
11
Hauerwas’ influence may be seen in two streams within disability theology. One stream
consists of theologians working specifically on intellectual disability. The publication
of Critical Reflections on Stanley Hauerwas’ Theology of Disability explored his work,
considered criticisms of it, and drew him work into conversation with a range of voices in
disability theology. Hauerwas’ inclusion in the symposium that eventually produced The
Paradox of Disability (Reinders 2010) is further evidence of his role in the field. The other
stream is represented by moral theologians who draw on Thomas Aquinas in their work
on intellectual disability. Such theologians offer a distinctly Roman Catholic theological
response to disability, and tend to work on the themes of personhood so prominent in
Hauerwas’ work. This second stream is the subject of further discussion below.
Hauerwas has had his critics as well. (See Swinton 2005.) He has been perceived as
instrumentalizing disability; that is, he used people with disabilities to make theological
points, rather than allowing the experience of disability to shape his theological thinking.
In the same vein (as mentioned above) Hauerwas has tended to focus on intellectual
disabilities and those who live with such disabilities in the abstract rather than engaging
with their lived experience (even in the case of his ‘Uncle Charlie’; see Hauerwas, in
Swinton 2005: 113–126).
In connection with Hauerwas’ work (as well as that of John Swinton and others yet to
be discussed) Jean Vanier must be mentioned, though his legacy has been spoiled by
his misconduct. Vanier’s practical work with L’Arche and his writing about the spirituality
of L’Arche has influenced theologians. His presence in the field of disability theology is
ineradicable, but no longer individual. While theologians reflecting on disability no longer
engage Vanier explicitly, insights originally developed in conversation with him continue to
enrich their theology.
12
(VanOmmen and Brock 2022). His work aims at understanding and supporting the spiritual
needs of people with intellectual disabilities.
Swinton’s work pushes back against a clinical culture focused on cure. His attention to
the person has not only generated new ways of thinking about dementia (Swinton 2012),
disability (Swinton 2016), and mental health challenges (Swinton 2020), but responds to
individualistic, competency-oriented accounts of the human person with an account of
being human that centres on the fellowship of human creatures made in the image of God.
A central theme of this account of human being is friendship. His first book took friendship
as the point of departure for theological reflection on ‘the care of people with mental health
problems’ (Swinton 2000). Good Christian practice centres on friendship as the truest
imitation of Christ. His work on dementia and disability is characterized by the practice of
friendship. Rather than being represented as research subjects whom he has interviewed,
Swinton writes about people as one who has come alongside and walked with them on a
part of their journey.
13
advent of the limits model and explosion of work on intellectual disability have yielded a
number of distinctly theological approaches to disability.
The foundation of Creamer’s proposal is the idea that ‘insights that come from disability
are something with which we all have experience’ (2009: 96): that is, human beings are
inherently limited. Some limiting conditions are labelled ‘disability’; yet, Creamer points out,
noboby is disabled before God. Moreover, the most important liberation is one all people
require: a liberation from the tendency ‘to hold inaccurate self-representations, especially
insofar as we deny or depreciate our own limits’ (2009: 71). Her ‘limits’ model focuses on
physical disability. Her brief discussion of the challenges presented by what she terms
‘cognitive disabilities’ concludes with uncertainty about how a narrative of the experience
of cognitive disability might find ‘an entry point’ to ‘a discourse dominated by intellectual
and academic rigor’ (2009: 108).
Creamer instead looks forward to further academic work in disability that might ‘add
complexity and theoretical rigor to these already powerful images of inclusion and justice
[proposed by Nancy Eiesland, Jennie Weiss Block, and Kathy Black]’ (2009: 91). Yet the
conversation has moved in other directions. Although a new disability liberation theology
has not emerged, theological work on intellectual disability has grown into a broad and
lively conversation since the publication of Disability and Christian Theology.
14
people living together as friends. Also in 2007, Amos Yong published Theology and Down
Syndrome: Reimagining Disability in Late Modernity. Yong’s study reflected on theological
anthropology, sotieriology, and eschatology from the perspective not just of disability,
but of intellectual disability. It was followed in 2008 by Hans Reinders’ Receiving the Gift
of Friendship: Profound Disability, Theological Anthropology, and Ethics and Thomas
Reynolds’ Vulnerable Communion: A Theology of Disability and Hospitality, both of which
reconsidered areas of Christian faith and practice in the light of intellectual disability. (See
Volpe 2009.)
Attention to intellectual disabilities raises questions about what the goals of disability
theology are because such disabilities are by nature not easily accommodated. While
Eiesland and Creamer both oriented their theologies toward liberation, it is not at all clear
from what people with intellectual disabilities need to be liberated. Typical adjustments do
not help: a person with autism who does not communicate with spoken language needs
a different kind of adjustment in order to be included in neurotypical spaces. Theological
reflection on intellectual disability increasingly points away from individuals. The values
of the contemporary culture, including independence, efficiency, and freedom of choice,
disable those people who cannot ‘keep up’ (Swinton 2016) or speak for themselves (Brock
2019). This approach to disability is typified by many of the essays in The Paradox of
Disability.
Theological reflection on intellectual disability thus also addresses the whole setting of
worship and the concept of discipleship, with a view to facilitating the full participation of
people with intellectual disabilities in the whole life of the church. Christian communities
confronted with the challenge of including persons with intellectual disabilities have faced
different issues according to their liturgical and doctrinal norms. In this vein, theologians
15
have considered the role of understanding Scripture and doctrine in Christian discipleship
(Yong 2007; Volpe 2017). Churches that require sacramental preparation before the
reception of Holy Communion face questions around what constitutes readiness. (See, for
example, Foley 1994).
Amos Yong (2011) takes Eiesland and Saliers’ edited volume, Human Disabiility and the
Service of God (1998) to mark the beginning of a disability hermeneutic in Biblical studies.
The four essays on biblical interpretation in that volume challenge what came to be called
‘normate’ readings of Biblical themes and texts. One of these analyzes terms associated
with disability and their usage in Leviticus; a second examines liturgical practice in the
16
ancient world from a disability perspective; a third re-reads the healing narratives in the
Gospels; and the fourth challenges the assumed link between salvation and healing,
particularly in relation to blindness. While these are not perhaps the first attempts to read
the Bible with an eye to disability, they indicate the trajectory of the conversation as it has
unfolded in the twenty-five years since the volume was first published.
Disability theology’s engagement with the Bible began from the observation that Biblical
interpretation operated according to assumptions about the human person that diverted
attention away from the portrayal of disability in the Bible. For example, whatever it may
signify, commentators did not identify Jacob’s limp as a disability. The central issues in
disability-aware Biblical interpretation centre on the relationship between salvation and
cure. First, disability theologians ask about the relationship between wholeness and
holiness, attending both to the restriction of the priesthood (as well as animals to be
sacrified) to the ‘unblemished’ and to the exclusion of lepers and menstruating women
from worshipping in the synagogue. For example, the laws in Leviticus prohibit anyone
‘who has a blemish’, is blind or lame, ‘who has a mutilated face or a limb too long, or […]
an injured foot or an injured hand’, is ‘a hunchback, or a dwarf, or [has] a defect in his sight
or an itching disease or scabs or crushed testicles’ from approaching the altar (Lev 21.18–
20). Likewise, the in Gospels the leper and the woman with an issue of blood must be
healed of their infirmities in order to be restored to the community. How should we read
such texts today? Should we expect infirmities to be healed? Second, questions have
been raised around the diagnosis of demon possession in the Gospels. From a modern
perspective, some of the incidents described present in the same way as conditions
familiar to us as epilepsy or schizophrenia (and the deaf-mute). Despite the impossibility
of diagnosing such conditions (Lawrence 2018), the re-examination of the narratives has
played a central role in the development of a disability hermeneutic. The narrative of the
man born blind in John 9 has been the subject of sustained discussion within disability
theology. (See, for example, Horne 1998; Yong 2011; Clark-Soles 2017.)
Finally, disability readings of the biblical text ask how we ought to understand and apply
Jesus’ common pronouncement, ‘your faith has made you well’ (or, in the case of the
paralytic in Luke 2, your friends’ faith)? Eiesland (1994) and Yong (2011) both attest to
the psychological pain caused by a literal application of such texts. Eiesland reported her
own experience of ‘the negative effects of healing rituals’ that have ‘normalization’ as their
aim. ‘Failure to be “healed” is often assessed as a personal flaw in the individual, such as
unrepentant sin or a selfish desire to remain disabled’ (1994: 117). Yong (2007) reported
his parents’ similar experience in their church. While there is no consensus on the way
these texts ought to be read, there is broad agreement about the compatibility of faithful
Christian discipleship and ongoing disability and/or illness. This principle has changed the
shape of Christian ministry as well, opening up the ministry to those with disabilities.
17
4.1 Disability and Christian tradition
While the concept of disability is a relative newcomer to theology, theologians from the
earliest period of church history have discussed various kinds of illness and impairment,
both in commentaries on scripture and in relation to the people around them. In the
early Christian period, leprosy was a common, disabling illness that occasioned
discussion both in the scripture and from early Christian theologians. Those theologians
approached the issues of disease and impairment with a distinct set of assumptions
and presuppositions that have long since ceased to serve as intellectual furniture for
theologians. In addition, early Christian theologians did not share contemporary cultural
values such as independence and self-sufficiency. As a result, their interpretations of
scripture, doctrine, and human experience can appear skewed to modern eyes. Care must
be taken when engaging these sources. Anachronistic readings obscure the insights that
theologians from the Christian past have to offer disability theologians today. For historical
theologians reflecting on disability, disability functions as a new lens through which aspects
of early Christian thought may be analyzed in order to probe more deeply ideas about
embodiment and personhood in the early Church.
The broader canvas the volume envisions also functions as a space for engagement
with pre-modern sources, which has emerged as a persistent and fruitful enterprise in its
own right. The volume amplifies the voices of those already working at the intersection of
disability and historical theology and encourages the development of historical-theological
reflection on disability. While such engagements have not always recognized the distinct
intellectual context of early Christian theological reflection on disability, theologians with
a deep appreciation of that context are beginning to challenge misrepresentations of pre-
modern theologians’ writing around disability.
18
4.1.1 Disability in early Christianity
Several themes from early Christian commentary on disability intersect with current work in
disability theology. Yet our early Christian interlocutors examined issues around disability
against a distinct theological and conceptual backdrop. For example, many contemporary
disability theologians engage with philosophical theodicy and liberation theology, but such
disciplines have no ancient or medieval equivalents. Pre-Englightenment theological
thinking about disability employs scientific knowledge and traditions of reason and
assumes corresponding Christian teaching on God, creation, human nature, salvation,
and eschatology. For example, early Christian theologians asked questions about the
meaning and purpose of disability in connection with their accounts of providence and
creation. So, when a theologian like Augustine asks why some babies are born with
disfigurements or impairments, he is not calling God’s goodness or omnipotence into
question. For Augustine and his contemporaries, the quest for meaning is paramount. That
is, the question is not ‘why did God allow this to happen?’ but ‘What does this mean for our
understanding of human nature and divine providence?’
In the last decade and a half, however, a handful of students of his thought have re-read
Aquinas’ contribution to theological anthropology, highlighting his nuanced treatment
19
of rationality and cognitive impairment. Although the rational soul is, for Aquinas, what
distinguishes human beings from other creatures, the exercise of rationality is not required:
infants possess a rational soul as surely as adults do. Whether or not a person comes
to exercise the capacity for rational thought, she is and remains fully human. Far from
excluding people with profound cognitive impairments from reflecting the image of God,
this strand of scholarship suggests that Aquinas offers new ways of thinking about the
participation of the profoundly intellectually disabled in the divine life.
20
5.1 The constellations: theodicy, salvation, and Christian
perfection
Despite theologians’ resistance to the modern philosophical enterprise of theodicy in
recent years, the question why God allows disability and the suffering it often entails is
still asked. To that question, there are no straightforward answers. Disabled theologians
and those reflecting on intellectual disability have tended to make sense of disability in
ways that avoid the question whether the suffering is justified. In so doing, they are in
company with late ancient theologians and theologians reflecting on human life in the
midst of poverty and oppression: the question is not whether the suffering is justifiable but
on how to think well about God in the midst of it.
Like theodicy questions, questions about the meaning of human perfection persist in
disability theology. The call to be perfect still guides Christian discipleship, because
it was issued by Jesus in the context of the Sermon on the Mount, regarded in early
Christianity as a compendium of Christian faith and practice. Yet ‘perfection’ has overtones
of normativity and exclusivity and is too easily interpreted through culturally-conditioned
ideas of beauty and achievement. Thus the question as to whether or how Christians can
be both ‘perfect’ and ‘disabled’ provokes disputes within disability theology. For too long,
these two dimensions of the human condition have been taken as mutually exclusive.
Disability theology aims to produce an understanding of Christian perfection that holds for
people who are disabled, either physically or cognitively. (See, for example, Eiesland 1994
and Yong 2007.)
The closely related theme of salvation generates an equally broad and diverging set of
conversations. One area in which this knotty problem has been addressed is in thinking
about the resurrection of the body. If human beings are raised to eternal life with Christ,
as the creed teaches Christians to hope, what will happen to disabilities in heavenly life?
Because disability theology has arisen in part as a discourse about what it means for
human beings marked as ‘disabled’ to be considered Christians, attention to the question
about how intrinsic disabilities are to individual identity has always been part of the mix. If
a person sees herself as ‘disabled’, some disability theologians suggest, the eradication of
her disability in the resurrection would alter her self-knowledge and her self-identity.
Yet if human nature involves dependency at different stages of life, then disability poses
no threat to humanity. It is possible to imagine personal identity as persisting through the
changes inherent in earthly life, including disability. Disability theologians who take human
finitude as the starting place for theological reflection on disability suggest that human
identity subsists not in the personality but in the person, body and soul, in relation to God.
Finitude might provide a starting place for thinking about what is foundational to human
nature.
21
5.2 Theology and intellectual disability: a growing edge
In 1994, Nancy Eiesland began a conversation that focused on physical disabilities and
argued in a liberationist key for the recognition of the rights and dignity of people with
disabilities. Within a decade and a half, the conversation had begun to shift. Intellectual
disability has brought some of the questions that have driven the development of disability
theology to a head. In particular, because typical accommodations do not enable a person
with intellectual or developmental disabilities to participate fully in a social, cultural, and
political context that assumes a certain level of intellectual capacity. Education, economic
productivity, even participation in democratic processes depends upon an ability to acquire
information, deliberate, and make independent judgements. In this context, disability
theologians endeavour to account for the valuable contribution that people with intellectual
disabilities have to make to the human family.
The challenge of intellectual disability has thus pressed theologians to rethink questions
in theological anthropology, including what it means to be in the image of God, or to live a
fully human life. In what does our humanity before God consist? There is opportunity for
further development in theological anthropology from the perspective of disability, which
might produce an account of human nature that replaced rationality and beauty with the
fruits of the Spirit in describing ideal humanity, or what it means for human beings to live as
the image of God.
22
The foregoing suggests that the discourse that has emerged since 1994 is primarily a
conversation between scholars and professionals in the academy in Europe and North
America. Yet the majority world has hosted conferences and published literature on
disability and theology for many years. The Ecumenical Disability Advocates Network
(EDAN), founded by the World Council of Churches in 1998, is coordinated from an
office in the All Africa Council of Churches building in Nairobi. Former EDAN coordinator
and member of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
(UNCRDP), Samuel Kabue, is not only a prominent figure in global disability advocacy
but has also contributed to disability theology as the co-editor of Disability, Theology,
and Society: Voices from Africa and a contributor to Doing Theology from Disability
Perspective.
Voices from the majority world, which have not been incorporated disability theology
so far, must be included in the scholarly conversation. Although several volumes have
been published, books published in Africa and Asia tend not to find their way onto library
shelves or into the hands of book review editors in Europe and North America. As a
consequence, scholarship in the West has paid little attention to the literature being
produced in the majority world. (See Yong 2013.) Nomatter Sande, an African scholar
educated in Zimbabwe and South Africa, now a research associate at the University of
Glasgow, published African Churches Ministering to and with Persons with disabilities:
Perspectives from Zimbabwe with Routledge in 2023. Perhaps his work will open a
conversation between Africa and Europe around disability and theology.
The challenge for disability theology in its next phase of development is to promote sharing
knowledge across the equator and over the oceans. What might emerge from a robust
engagement between North American, European, African, and Asian disability theologians
remains to be seen. It seems likely, however, that work done by majority world theologians
at the intersection of disability, theology, and culture is likely to challenge concepts of
disability that assume independence and rationality are essential to living a human life as
well as the centrality of self-sufficiency, economic production, and achievement to human
life.
6 Conclusion
Disability theology has been driven by practical, liturgical, and spiritual concerns and
emerged in theological reflection on the diversity of human experience. The conversation
is ongoing and essential to the future of theology more generally. As Alasdair MacIntrye
has reminded us, in a healthy society the able-bodied are reminded of the frailty of
their beginning and their end, as well as the ever-present possibility of disability or
illness, but such recognitions do not imspire fear. Disability theology highlights the
contingency, finitude, and fragility of human being, which is an aspect of creaturehood.
23
Disability theology does its best work when, in the words of African theologian Joseph
Galgalo, theologians ‘transcend our views of human perfection and social constructions
that are narrowly tied to able-bodied or cognitive endowments’ (Galgalo 2011: 45),
beginning instead from the reality of universal human limitation and the diversity of human
experience. Reflecting on theology through the lens of disability is likely to make theology
more authentically human.
Attributions
Copyright Medi Ann Volpe (CC BY-NC)
Preprint: this text represents an accepted version of the article. A full published version is
forthcoming.
24
Bibliography
• Further reading
◦ Brock, Brian, and John Swinton (eds). 2012. Disability in the Christian Tradition: A
Reader. Grand Rapids, MI/Cambridge: Eerdmans.
◦ Creamer, Deborah. 2009. Disability and Christian Theology: Embodied Limits and
Constructive Possibilities. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
◦ Eiesland, Nancy L. 1994. The Disabled God: Toward a Liberatory Theology of
Disability. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press.
◦ Foley, Edward Capuchin (ed.). 1994. Developmental Disabilities and Sacramental
Access: New Paradigms for Sacramental Encounters. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical
Press.
◦ Kabue, S., E. Mambo, J. Galgala, and C. B. Peter (eds). 2011. Disability,
Theology, and Society: Voices from Africa. Limuru: Zapf Chancery.
◦ Longchar, Wati, and Gordon Cowans (eds). 2007. Doing Theology from Disability
Perspective. Mamla: The Association for Theological Education in Southeast
Asia.
◦ Morris, Wayne. 2008. Theology Without Words: Theology in the Deaf Community.
London: Ashgate.
◦ Nomatter, Sande. 2023. African Churches Ministering `to and with’ Persons with
Disabilities: Perspectives from Zimbabwe. Abingdon: Routledge.
◦ O’Connor, Flannery. 2012. ‘Introduction to A Memoir of Mary Ann: By the
Dominican Nuns Who Took Care of Her’, in On Moral Medicine. Edited by
M. Therese Lysaught and Jr Joseph J. Kotva. Grand Rapids, MI/Cambridge:
Eerdmans.
◦ Shakespeare, Tom. 2018. Disability: The Basics. London: Routledge.
• Works cited
◦ Brock, Brian. 2019. Wondrously Wounded: Theology, Disability and the Body of
Christ.
◦ Brock, Brian, and John Swinton (eds). 2012. Disability in the Christian Tradition: A
Reader. Grand Rapids, MI/Cambridge: Eerdmans.
◦ Clark-Soles, J. 2017. ‘John, First-Third John, and Revelation’, in The Bible and
Disability: A Commentary. Edited by S. J. Melcher, M. C. Parsons, and Y. Amos.
Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 333–378.
◦ Cross, Richard. 2011. ‘Disability, Impairment, and Some Medieval Accounts of the
Incarnation: Suggestions for a Theology of Personhood’, Modern Theology 27:
639–658.
◦ Cushing, Pamela. 2009. ‘Disability Attitudes, Cultural Conditions, and the Moral
Imagination’, in The Paradox of Disability: Responses to Jean Vanier and L’Arche
25
Communities from Theology and the Sciences. Edited by Hans S. Reinders.
Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 75–93.
◦ Eiesland, Nancy. 1994. The Disabled God: Toward a Liberatory Theology of
Disability. Nashville: Abingdon Press.
◦ Eiesland, Nancy, and Don E. Saliers. 1998. Human Disability and the Service of
God. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press.
◦ Foley, Edward Capuchin (ed.). 1994. Developmental Disabilities and Sacramental
Access: New Paradigms for Sacramental Encounters. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical
Press.
◦ Grant, Colleen C. 1998. ‘Reinterpreting the Healing Narratives’, in Human
Disablity and the Service of God: Reassessing Religious Practice. Edited by
Nancy Eiesland and Don Saliers. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 72–87.
◦ Horne, Simon. 1998. ‘"Those Who Are Blind, See": Some New Testament Uses
of Impairment, Inability, and Paradox’, in Human Disablity and the Service of
God: Reassessing Religious Practice. Edited by Nancy Eiesland and Don Saliers.
Nashville: Abingdon Press, 88–102.
◦ Hauerwas, Stanley. 1977. Truthfulness and Tragedy: Further Investigations into
Christian Ethics. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.
◦ Lawrence, Louise. 2018. Bible and Bedlam: Madness, Sanism, and New
Testament Interpretation. London: Bloomsbury Publishing.
◦ MacIntyre, Alasdair. 2009. Dependent Rational Animals: Why Human Beings
Need the Virtues. LaSalle, IL: Open Court.
◦ Morris, Wayne. 2008. Theology Without Words: Theology in the Deaf Community.
London: Ashgate.
◦ Oliver, Michael, Bob Sapey, and Pam Thomas. 1983. Social Work with Disabled
People. London: Palgrave.
◦ Reinders, Hans S. 2010. The Paradox of Disability: Responses to Jean Vanier
and L’Arche Communities from Theology and the Sciences. Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans.
◦ Retief, Marno, and Rantoa Letšosa. 2018. ‘Models of Disability: A Brief Overview’,
HTS 74, no. 1: 1–19.
◦ Rioux, Marcia. 1996. ‘Services and Supports in a Human Rights Framework’,
Disability Studies Quarterly 16, no. 1: 4–10.
◦ Sande, Nomatter. 2023. African Churches Ministering to and with Persons with
Disabilities: Perspectives from Zimbabwe. Abingdon: Routledge.
◦ Swinton, John. 2000. Resurrecting the Person. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press.
◦ Swinton, John (ed.). 2005. Critical Reflections on Stanley Hauerwas’ Theology of
Disability. London: Routledge.
◦ Swinton, John. 2012. Dementia: Living in the Memories of God. Norwich: SCM
Press.
26
◦ Swinton, John. 2016. Becoming Friends of Time. Norwich: SCM Press.
◦ Swinton, John. 2020. Finding Jesus in the Storm. Norwich: SCM Press.
◦ VanOmmen, Armand Leo, and Brian R. Brock (eds). 2022. Disciples and
Friends: Investigations in Disability, Dementia, and Mental Health. Baylor: Baylor
University Press.
◦ Volpe, Medi Ann. 2009. ‘Irresponsible Love: Rethinking Intellectual Disability,
Humanity and the Church’, Modern Theology 25, no. 3: 491–501.
◦ Volpe, Medi Ann. 2017. ‘Living the Mystery: Doctrine, Intellectual Disability, and
Christian Imagination’, Journal of Moral Theology 6, no. 2: 87–102.
◦ Yong, Amos. 2007. ‘Disability, the Human Condition, and the Spirit of the
Eschatological Long Run: Toward a Pneumatological Theology of Disability’,
Journal of Religion, Disability and Health 11, no. 1: 5–25.
◦ Yong, Amos. 2011. The Bible, Disability, and the Church: A New Vision of the
People of God. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans.
27