
Seen and Unseen: Learning from Invisible Disabilities
This article grows out of a note I received from a Niagara Anglican reader who wondered whether, in our diocesan work on disability and belonging, we might overlook those

This article grows out of a note I received from a Niagara Anglican reader who wondered whether, in our diocesan work on disability and belonging, we might overlook those

As we come to the end of the Easter season, I keep returning to one of Jesus’ resurrection appearances — the moment when he stands

When many Christians hear the word healing, they imagine Jesus restoring sight, mobility, or speech. These stories are powerful, but they have often been interpreted in ways

Disability theology begins with a simple but transformative conviction: every body bears the image of God. Not just the bodies that move easily, communicate typically,