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God's ways, not our ways

A dissident Quaker response to disability

Jackie Leach Scully

$27.95   $25.19

Paperback

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English
Interactive Publications
26 July 2024
"The 2024 Backhouse Lecture God's ways, not our ways: A dissident Quaker response to disability was delivered by Jackie Leach Scully on Monday July 8th 2024 in Adelaide. Jackie has been involved with Quakers for over 40 years, and has been variously an Attender, Member, Meeting Clerk and Yearly Meeting Clerk in England, Switzerland, Germany and now Australia. In 2002, she gave the annual Swarthmore Lecture to Britain Yearly Meeting, Playing in the presence: Genetics, ethics and spirituality. Jackie first trained as a molecular biologist, later moving her focus to bioethics and medical ethics. Disability has shaped her family, career, personal and professional life, and her engagement with faith and spirituality. Drawing on her personal and professional experience, she looks at traditional and contemporary theological engagement with disability. She uses Quaker testimony to explore how Friends are called to respond to disability and impairment and shares some ""dissident thinking"" about disability with Australian Friends, and others, to help build a world more inclusive of all kinds of difference and diversity."
By:  
Imprint:   Interactive Publications
Country of Publication:   Australia
Volume:   2024
Dimensions:   Height: 210mm,  Width: 148mm,  Spine: 4mm
Weight:   95g
ISBN:   9781922830760
ISBN 10:   1922830763
Series:   James Backhouse Lectures
Pages:   72
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

"Jackie Leach Scully has been involved with Quakers for over 40 years, and has been variously an Attender, Member, Meeting Clerk and Yearly Meeting Clerk in England, Switzerland, Germany and now Australia. In 2002, she gave the annual Swarthmore Lecture to Britain Yearly Meeting, Playing in the presence: Genetics, ethics and spirituality. Jackie first trained as a molecular biologist, later moving her focus to bioethics and medical ethics. Disability has shaped her family, career, personal and professional life, and her engagement with faith and spirituality. Drawing on her personal and professional experience, she looks at traditional and contemporary theological engagement with disability. She uses Quaker testimony to explore how Friends are called to respond to disability and impairment and shares some ""dissident thinking"" about disability with Australian Friends, and others, to help build a world more inclusive of all kinds of difference and diversity."

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