Beyond Accessibility
99 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Beyond Accessibility , livre ebook

99 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Description

A church has built an accessibility ramp and perhaps refitted its restrooms to accommodate a wheelchair. Now what? This new resource by a noted author of several books on people with disabilities offers a theological and practical approach for congregations, with clear, targeted strategies for full inclusion of all members, recognizing and using the gifts that each member brings to the congregations life together.

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Publié par
Date de parution 01 avril 2010
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780898698428
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,1150€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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BEYOND
ACCESSIBILITY
BEYOND
ACCESSIBILITY
Toward Full Inclusion of People with Disabilities in Faith Communities

Brett Webb-Mitchell
2010 by Brett Webb-Mitchell All rights reserved.
Unless otherwise noted, the Scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Cover design by Christina Moore/Laurie Klein Westhafer Typeset by Beth Oberholtzer
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Webb-Mitchell, Brett.
Beyond accessibility : toward full inclusion of people with disabilities in faith communities / Brett Webb-Mitchell.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 978-0-89869-641-7 (pbk.)
1. Church work with people with disabilities. I. Title.
BV4460.W4275 2010
261.8 321-dc22
2010000023
Church Publishing, Incorporated. 445 Fifth Avenue New York, New York 10016
www.churchpublishing.org
5 4 3 2 1
To the people in all faith communities who share a vision of the Church as the fully inclusive body of Christ, a place and people for and of all God s people.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
PART ONE
Images for an Inclusiveness Community
Chapter One Introduction: Beyond Accessibility
Chapter Two The Church: The Body of Christ
Chapter Three Gifts, Talents, and Services
Chapter Four Moving toward Community
PART TWO
From Acceptance to Full Inclusion: The Practices
Chapter Five Hospitality and the Stranger
Chapter Six Accessibility and Acceptance
Chapter Seven Inclusion and Gestures
Chapter Eight Practicing Love
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This book came about many years after I wrote Dancing with Disabilities. I thought I had written my last book or paper on people with disabilities with that book. Then a few years ago, the Rev. Peter Sulyok, then the director of the Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy (ACSWP) of the Presbyterian Church (USA) asked me to be the writer of, and a consultant on, a project to formulate a new policy for the denomination on issues facing people with disabilities in the Church and world. Sitting with my friend the Rev. Dr. Trace Haythorn over breakfast at one of the Committee meetings, Peter challenged the members of the Committee to write a policy that would be the last one that needed to be written because full inclusion of people with disabilities would be the goal, and after full inclusion, what else would there be to do? Not only that, this paper was to be a social witness policy not only to the Church, but to the world. Believing that life is a process, a journey, a pilgrimage, I understand now that while the paper I worked on for and with the Presbyterian Church (USA) was a next step toward advocating accessibility and acceptance of people with disabilities in the Church, the paper fell short of mapping a way forward toward full inclusion.
This book hopefully challenges the reader and the Church toward considering the next step, the next move, in the Church s pilgrimage toward being and becoming fully inclusive of all people who are called and desire to be part of a faith community. Beyond Accessibility is a book that challenges and celebrates the many ways that faith communities are or are becoming more totally inclusive of all God s people.
I want to thank all the individual people and faith communities whose stories are in this book, making it almost a book of narratives rather than a theological text. Many thanks to Rich Dethmers of Henderson, North Carolina, whose story opens this book poignantly and honestly. I met Rich when I was interim pastor of First Presbyterian Church, Henderson, NC when Elder Phil Hanny and I went to visit a shut-in. What blossomed was a friendship that eclipsed a pastor to shut-in relationship. I am also honored by all of the people who shared their stories and lives unaware that I was listening and watching at the time, from my time in the L Arche Lambeth community in the West Norwood section of London, England, to the people who attend the various churches where I have been an interim pastor during the last few years.
Thanks to those who gave me a running start at this book who were part of the ACSWP Committee called to write the new policy paper on people with disabilities in the Church. I especially want to thank Peter Sulyok and Trace Haythorn for their trust in me as writer and a consultant in that noble project. I hope this book more or less captures what we talked about on the fringes of our Committee s meetings over three years.
To those who helped bring my scattered thoughts and ideas into cogent theological and biblical propositions, especially Sr. Stef Weisgram of St. Benedict s Monastery in St. Joseph, Minnesota, Dennis Ford who read this book line by line, and Ryan Masteller who carefully managed me and this book into production.
I want to thank senior editor Frank Tedeschi for his ongoing belief in my work, studies, and ideas. In a world of publish or perish from which I came from as an academician, Frank has kept me alive in many ways. His constant support has given me the encouragement I needed in writing the next book after each book I ve published with Church Publishing.
Finally, to my family, I owe a great debt of gratitude as I spent countless hours writing and thinking of the ideas that are somewhere in this text. To Dean my partner and to Parker and Adrianne my children: many thanks for pushing and prodding me to not only write but practice inclusion in my daily pilgrimage of life.
PART ONE
Images for an Inclusiveness Community
So we, who are many, are one body in Christ, and individually we are members one of another, -ROM. 12:5


In reading and rereading the Apostle Paul s letters, covering primarily the very complex, mystical, just-beyond-reach feeling of being the body of Christ, one of the grammatical points made by Paul about the body is that he is not explaining the Church as the body of Christ by using a metaphor or analogy. Paul isn t talking about the Church being like a body or as a body. For Paul, the Church is the body of Christ.
Saying that the Church is the body of Christ makes a difference in how we perceive or comprehend who and whose we are as members of the Church, regardless of whether modern society labels us disabled or able-bodied. What does Paul s charge and blessing for us to be the body of Christ mean in our individual parishes and congregations generally? For our family? For our neighborhood? For the world around us? More specifically, what does it mean for a church today in terms of moving beyond accessibility for people with disabilities when we reflect the peculiarities of this body, in which God arranged the members in the body, each one of them, as he chose ... where there may be no dissension within the body, but the members may have the same care for one another (1 Cor. 12:18,25)? For if we asked or surveyed most Christian communities, Does this reflect your congregation or parish in regards to people with disabilities? my hunch is that the answer would be (honestly) No.
In part one of this book, we explore the nature of the body of Christ as it pertains to the act of welcoming, accepting, and including the fullest participation of people with disabilities, recognizing that all of us-able-bodied and disabled alike-have gifts, talents, and services. Again, as I read, reread, hear, preach, and teach on this subject, I am convinced that Paul is saying something dramatically different about the communal nature of the body of Christ than what many churches understand being church with one another means. I have come to this conviction in large part because of my experience worshipping with so many communities of faith with people with disabilities.
Part one is divided into four chapters. The first chapter is a State of the Church address, outlining where we ve been, are, and are going. The second chapter surveys the nature of what is the body of Christ. In particular, I am interested in the kind of membership there is in the body-women and men, Jew and Greek-and discovering what we can learn about the head of the body itself, which is Christ.
The third chapter focuses on the gifts, talents, and services that are integral to the body. The key to this chapter is Paul s conviction that membership in the body of Christ does not require a certain social adaptation score, an intellectual quotient, a particular social class, or any of the other artificial criteria that may be prized highly in today s Church. I will return to this point frequently in the pages that follow. The fourth chapter focuses on the dynamics of the relationships that we have with each other within the body. In particular, I want to focus on those passages where Paul distinguishes the less honorable and more respectable members of the body of Christ. I ve been with many groups of people with disabilities, including their advocates and guardians, who are quick to point out that these distinctions include or pertain particularly to people with disabilities, especially when they are judged as being inferior with a disability in today s world.
Collectively, the four chapters of part one provide an argument for the full inclusion and participation of all members of the body of Christ, the Church. After all, the only thing that matters in being a member of the body of Christ is that we are activated by one and the same Spirit, who allots to each one individually just as the Spirit chooses (1 Cor. 12:11).
CHAPTER ONE

Introduction: Beyond Accessibility
People react weird to people with disabilities like me, said Rich, sitting comfortably in his modern electric wheelchair. They act like a disability is something they can catch, like it is infectious. At church, most people are unable to get past my disability. They stare not at me but at my disability. I sit in the taupe Lazy Boy recliner dire

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