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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: John SwintonPublisher: Baylor University Press Imprint: Baylor University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.80cm Weight: 0.544kg ISBN: 9781481309356ISBN 10: 1481309358 Pages: 255 Publication Date: 30 January 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: Time, Disability, and the Fragile Brain Part I. Time and Disability Chapter 1. Thinking about Time: The Tyranny of the Clock Chapter 2. Time and Progress: Disability and the Wrong Kind of Time Part II. Learning to Live in God's Time Chapter 3. Time and Christ: A Brief Theology of Time Chapter 4. Becoming Friends of Time: Love Has a Speed Part III. From Inclusion to Discipleship Chapter 5. Time and Discipleship: Inclusion, Discipleship, and Profound Intellectual Disability Chapter 6. Time and Vocation: Slow and Gentle Disciples Part IV. Reclaiming the Heart Chapter 7. Time and Memory: Dementia and the Advancement of Time Chapter 8. Time and the Heart: Affective Remembering Part V. The Horror of Time Chapter 9. The Horror of Time: Acquired Brain Injury and Personality Change Chapter 10. The Time Before and the Time After: Brain Injury, Human Identity, and the Hiddenness of Our Lives in Christ Chapter 11. Time and Ritual: Funerals for Friends Conclusion: Being in Christ, Being in Time: Every Body Has a Place Appendix: Redeeming Time: A Lived Funeral Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsThere is much to appreciate and enjoy in reading this rich book, particularly in the way the author goes back and forth between stories of disability experience, biblical narrative, and theological reflection. --Hans Reinders Studies in Christian Ethics Theologically rich and pastorally astute. --Aaron Klink Religious Studies Review Swinton's book encourages all of us to be attentive, subversive, and faithful in our engagement with time. --Debbie Creamer Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology Creative, thoughtful, and convicting. --Bruce M. Hartung Concordia Journal [Swinton's] theological and experiential reflections offer real ways to reimagine discipleship alongside those within life's range of varying differing abilities. Swinton acts as an important and necessary conversation partner for academics and pastors who rely heavily on 'normal' cognitive and neurological development, freeing those with rigid conceptions of practical theology to active, contextual care. --Adam Tobey Reading Religion This wonderfully thought-provoking book by John Swinton takes its cue from such profoundly disabled people to argue that many of the challenges they face would be overcome if time were on their side. --Penny Seabrook Church Times With his usual insight and wisdom Swinton has written a timely book on time and disability. Swinton's work is profoundly human and humane because it is so determinatively christological. Becoming Friends of Time is a gift for all of us who struggle to survive in a world of speed. --Stanley Hauerwas, Gilbert T. Rowe Professor Emeritus of Divinity and Law, Duke Divinity School How Swinton brings together God, time, and disability transforms the understanding not only of disability but also of church, society and ordinary life. This is a profound and moving book, both pastoral and prophetic. It takes further the insights of Jean Vanier, and above all invites us into the truth that time is for God, God is love, time is for love. --David F. Ford, Emeritus Regius Professor of Divinity, Selwyn College, University of Cambridge John Swinton reckons with how people who deal with medicine (meaning most of us) reckon with time. Swinton writes as a scholar, a nurse, a father, a husband, and a Christian. Previous books on 'Time' and 'Faith' have been unhelpfully detached from people who actually navigate an earth recognizable by humans who still read books. Becoming Friends of Time is written for people who use their own incarnate bodies to care for others while also thinking critically about how our bodies are being used and evaluated as machines. --Amy Laura Hall, Associate Professor of Christian Ethics, Duke Divinity School With characteristic wisdom and grace, Swinton's book invites us to reimagine time through rediscovering the gospel and the life of Christian discipleship in all its fullness in relation to the human experience of disability. His writing is elegant and embodies the gentle, time-full cadence it speaks about, offering a host of compelling insights along the way. --Thomas E. Reynolds, Associate Professor of Theology, Emmanuel College, University of Toronto [Swinton's] theological and experiential reflections offer real ways to reimagine discipleship alongside those within life's range of varying differing abilities. Swinton acts as an important and necessary conversation partner for academics and pastors who rely heavily on 'normal' cognitive and neurological development, freeing those with rigid conceptions of practical theology to active, contextual care. --Adam Tobey, Reading Religion This wonderfully thought-provoking book by John Swinton takes its cue from such profoundly disabled people to argue that many of the challenges they face would be overcome if time were on their side. --Penny Seabrook, Church Times Creative, thoughtful, and convicting. --Bruce M. Hartung, Concordia Journal Swinton's book encourages all of us to be attentive, subversive, and faithful in our engagement with time. --Debbie Creamer, Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology Swinton's book encourages all of us to be attentive, subversive, and faithful in our engagement with time. --Debbie Creamer Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology Creative, thoughtful, and convicting. --Bruce M. Hartung Concordia Journal This wonderfully thought-provoking book by John Swinton takes its cue from such profoundly disabled people to argue that many of the challenges they face would be overcome if time were on their side. --Penny Seabrook Church Times [Swinton's] theological and experiential reflections offer real ways to reimagine discipleship alongside those within life's range of varying differing abilities. Swinton acts as an important and necessary conversation partner for academics and pastors who rely heavily on 'normal' cognitive and neurological development, freeing those with rigid conceptions of practical theology to active, contextual care. --Adam Tobey Reading Religion This wonderfully thought-provoking book by John Swinton takes its cue from such profoundly disabled people to argue that many of the challenges they face would be overcome if time were on their side.--Penny Seabrook Church Times [Swinton's] theological and experiential reflections offer real ways to reimagine discipleship alongside those within life's range of varying differing abilities. Swinton acts as an important and necessary conversation partner for academics and pastors who rely heavily on 'normal' cognitive and neurological development, freeing those with rigid conceptions of practical theology to active, contextual care.--Adam Tobey Reading Religion Author InformationJohn Swinton is Professor in Practical Theology and Pastoral Care at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland. He was given the Oskar Pfister Award by the American Psychiatric Association for making an outstanding contribution to religion and psychiatry in 2018. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |