Rebecca F. Spurrier is Associate Dean for Worship Life and Assistant Professor of Worship at Columbia Theological Seminary.
"In our current cultural moment that feels rife with division, it is refreshing to read a thoughtful and hopeful book about a community navigating and embracing difference.-- ""Homiletic"" Spurrier's work will be of great benefit to pastors or educators due both to its content and, especially, her approach... [she] makes an original contribution to scholarship by drawing liturgical theology and aesthetics into conversation with critical disability studies, demonstrating the practice of ""dis-abling"" by challenging value-laden, ableist assumptions about the abilities that are necessary for faithful participation in the liturgical life of a community.-- ""Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology"" An in-depth engagement with a unique community where mental illness is not pathologized. Spurrier does not provide a romantic view where love overcomes and unites. Rather, she takes the time to explore the messiness of community building where fissures and distance are negotiated for the overall well-being of the community. Through a negotiation of difference, Holy Family tries to welcome all to the table of worship and the table of sustenance. The Disabled Church is a detailed and thoughtful ethnographic study.---Michael Gill, Syracuse University An original and stimulating contribution for the field of theology. With careful attention to the modes of communication that occur in worship--attending to sensory participation, the role of art and beauty--Spurrier creates interesting and important challenges to the longstanding limitation of the field of theology to doctrine and creeds.---Mary McClintock Fulkerson, Duke Divinity School The beauty is there, all over the church, on the inside, right there on the inside of the church . . . That's us, that's the beauty, the attitude and the love and respect, and showing respect and love and happiness.---Rose Williams, congregant By engaging theological aesthetics, disability studies, and the relationships Rebecca Spurrier formed over the course of her fieldwork, The Disabled Church offers vital lessons for not only liturgists, but anyone interested in the intersection of ethnography and theology.-- ""Ecclessial Practices"""