TY - JOUR
T1 - A Disabled Lord? Continuity and Legibility in the Resurrection
AU - Clark-Howard, Andrew
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Within the diverse field of Christian disability theology, a particular reading of the resurrected body of Jesus Christ as a disabled body—one which continues to bear the ongoing wounds of the crucifixion even in its glorified state—can be observed. Such a position, often supported by both exegetical interpretations of witnesses to the resurrected Jesus, is undergirded by assumptions about both the continuity and legibility of resurrected, eschatological life. Such readings of a “disabled Lord” are thus employed to promote a fuller understanding of the dignity and personhood of people with disabilities. This paper draws on the queer theology of Linn Tonstad to argue that such assumptions are misplaced. The danger with such approaches to disability and the resurrection is that they repeat logics of continuity and legibility which entrench rather than disrupt continuums of dis/ability and personhood. Drawing off antisocial and nonnormative forms of queer theologizing employed by Tonstad and others, this article instead seeks to attend to the inherent instability and fragility of Christian hopes for the future. I therefore argue that disability theology can be better served by nonlinear, noncontinuous accounts of Christian resurrection.
AB - Within the diverse field of Christian disability theology, a particular reading of the resurrected body of Jesus Christ as a disabled body—one which continues to bear the ongoing wounds of the crucifixion even in its glorified state—can be observed. Such a position, often supported by both exegetical interpretations of witnesses to the resurrected Jesus, is undergirded by assumptions about both the continuity and legibility of resurrected, eschatological life. Such readings of a “disabled Lord” are thus employed to promote a fuller understanding of the dignity and personhood of people with disabilities. This paper draws on the queer theology of Linn Tonstad to argue that such assumptions are misplaced. The danger with such approaches to disability and the resurrection is that they repeat logics of continuity and legibility which entrench rather than disrupt continuums of dis/ability and personhood. Drawing off antisocial and nonnormative forms of queer theologizing employed by Tonstad and others, this article instead seeks to attend to the inherent instability and fragility of Christian hopes for the future. I therefore argue that disability theology can be better served by nonlinear, noncontinuous accounts of Christian resurrection.
KW - Disability theology
KW - eschatology
KW - hope
KW - Linn Tonstad
KW - queer theology
KW - resurrection
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U2 - 10.1080/23312521.2025.2495004
DO - 10.1080/23312521.2025.2495004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105003281332
SN - 2331-2521
JO - Journal of Disability and Religion
JF - Journal of Disability and Religion
ER -