BY NANCY EIESLAND. Encountering the. Disabled God

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The church has all too often been complicit in stigmatizing and oppressing persons with disabilities. Jesus invites us to a new way of healing, justice, and liberation. BY NANCY EIESLAND Encountering the Disabled God HAVE BEEN PART OF SEVERAL congregations whose practice of receiving Eucharist includes filing to the front of the sanctuary and kneeling at the communion rail. Often, because I am either in a wheelchair or using crutches, an usher alerts me that I need not go forward for the Eucharist. Instead, I am offered the sacrament at my seat after everyone else has been served. The congregation is trying to acco~nmodate my presence in the service. They are undoubtedly trying to be conscientious and inclusive in their own way. But in effect, they are transforming Eucharist from a corporate experience to a solitary one for me, from a sacralization of Christ's broken body to a stignlatization of my disabled body. I am hardly alone. For many people with disabilities, the Eucharist-which should be the ultimate sacrament of unity of believers-is a ritual of exclusion and degradation. Access to this celebration of the body is restricted because of architectural barriers, ritual practices, demeaning body aesthetics, unreflective speech, and bodily reactions. The Eucharist becomes a dreaded and humiliating remembrance that in the church we are trespassers in an able-bodied dominion. For many disabled persons, the church has been a "city on a hilln-physically inaccessible and socially inhospitable. This Eucharistic exclusion is symbolic of a larger crisis. Sadly, rather than offering ernpowerrnent, the church has more often supported societal structures and attitudes that have treated people with disabilities as objects of pity and paternalism. The primary problem for the church is not how to 'caccommodate"disabled persons. The problem is a disabling theology that functionally denies inclusion and justice for many of God's children. Much of church theology and practice-including the Bible itself-has often been dangerous for persons with disabilities. The prejudice, hostility, and suspicion toward people with disabilities cannot be dismissed simply as relics of an unenlightened past. Christians today continue to interpret Scripture and spin theologies that reinforce negative stereotypes, support social and environmental segregation, and mask the lived realities of people with disabilities. On those occasions when denomina- tions and congregations make progress ill asserting and implementing accessibility, it usually happens through a subtle but powerful paternalism of the able-bodictl church, liberally "welcoming" those of us with disabilities. Even some of the best denominational statements articulating a theology of access still speak in the voice of the able-bodied community, advocating for persons with disabilities but not allowing our own voices, stories, and embodied experiences to be central. The growing and dynamic disability rights movement in this country and around the world is raising crucial cultural and moral questions not simply about the meaning of disability, but the very meaning of embodied experience,humar~ dignity, social justice, and community. It is a ripe moment for the Christian church to reflect on its own core values and traditions and allow the emergence of a theology of disability, with liberating meaning and power for all of us. THE FIRST TASK IN DEVELOPING a liberating theology of disability is to identify and confront the key aspects of the church's disabling theology, THE OTHER SIDE September b October2002

A Musing (1997, oil on wood, 48" x 48") by Daniel Nevins The eternal God is your dwellingplace, and underneath are the everlasting arms. DEUTERONOMY 33:27 Perhaps in the end it is best for all people, disabled and nondisabled alike, to acknowledge that our solidarity is found in the sharing of the human condition from which no one is excluded. Our unity can be found in our common, but diferent experiences of joy, pain, peace, loss, hope, limitation, and sufering, and in our shared dependency on God3 love and mercy. JENNIE WEISS BLOCK in COPIOUS HOSTING If we refuse to engage our pain, struggle, and uncertainty, we cut ourselves of both from the presence of God within those dificult times and from the possibility of new life emerging from them. By acknowledging our struggles, we embrace all of life and open ourselves to God in every moment. JEAN M. BLOMQUIST in WRESTLING TILL DAWN