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DescriptionThe Gospel of Johns account of doubting Thomas is often told as a lesson about the veracity and triumph of Christian faith. And yet it is a story about wounds. Interpretations of this Gospel narrative, by focusing on Christs victory in the resurrection, reflect Christianitys unease with the wounds that remain on the body of the risen Jesus. By returning readers to this familiar passage, Resurrecting Wounds expands the scope of the Upper Room to the present world where wounds mark all of humanity.Shelly Rambo rereads the Thomas story and the history of its interpretation through the lens of trauma studies to reflect on the ways that the wounds of race, gender, and war persist. Wounds do not simply go away, even though a close reading of John Calvin reveals his theological investments in removing wounds. This erasure reflects a dominant mode of Christian thinking, but it is not the only Christian reading. By contrast, Macrinas scar, in Gregory of Nyssas account of her life and death, displays how resurrection can be inscribed in wounds, particularly in the illumination of her body after her death. The scar, produced in and through a mothers touch, recalls a healing, linking resurrection to the work of tending wounds. Much like Christs wounds and Macrinas scar, racial wounds can be found on the skin of Americas collective life. The wounds of racial histories, unhealed, resurface again and again. The wounds of war persist as well, despite a cultural calculus that links the suffering of a soldier with that of Christ. Again, the visceral display of Jesus wounds, when placed at the center of Thomas encounter in the Upper Room, enacts a vision of resurrecting that addresses the real harm of the real wounds of war.The powerful Upper Room images of resurrection--encounters with wounds, the invitation to touch, and the formation of a community--present visions of truth-telling and of healing that grapple with the pressing questions of wounds surfacing in the midst of human encounters with violence, suffering, and trauma. While traditional accounts of resurrection in Christian theology have focused on the afterlife, this book forges a theology of resurrection wounds in the afterliving. By returning again and again to Christs woundedness, we discover ways to live with our own.About the authorShelly Rambo is Associate Professor of Theology at Boston University.
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Vânzător: Elefant.ro
Brand: Baylor University Press