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James Woodward

Bio: James Woodward is an academic researcher from Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pluralism (political theory) & Pastoral care. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 6 publications receiving 151 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 1997-Theology
TL;DR: In this paper, a new chapter has been added on inner city issues, which covers a wide range of more recent issues: post-modernism, pluralism, the new spirituality, emergence of congregational studies, stress on mission, Black theology and charismatic theology.
Abstract: This widely-used student text has been extremely successful in the past 8 years. It offers a basic introduction to all those who need to apply Christian thinking to the service of Church and society. The alterations in the new edition are minor, but academically significant - a new chapter has been added on inner city issues, which covers a wide range of more recent issues: post-modernism, pluralism, the new spirituality, emergence of congregational studies, stress on mission, Black theology and charismatic theology.

111 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a case study of a cycle of theological action research within a Christian youth work agency in London, the benefits of action research are interpreted through the influence that participation has on theological capital.
Abstract: This article explores the use of theological action research as a mode of professional development in Christian mission or ministry. Drawing on a case study of a cycle of theological action research within a Christian youth work agency in London, the benefits of action research are interpreted through the influence that participation has on theological capital. Theological capital is developed as a construct to indicate the relative agency Christian youth workers experience in fulfilling the intentional Christian ministry they aspire to perform. The case study explores the theological capital required in the challenging contexts and inter-disciplinary settings in which Christian youth work occurs. From this, action research is posited as a method of professional development for those engaged in such roles.

143 citations

DissertationDOI
09 Apr 2016
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the role of the Holy Texts in the Australian curriculum and argue for the inclusion of these texts in the curriculum. But, they do not consider the use of the Scriptures in the history curriculum.
Abstract: This thesis concerns the purpose of education, and the role of Scriptures therein, centred on the Australian Curriculum. Through ACARA’s (Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority) commitment to “equity and excellence”, the telos of this curriculum is the formation of students who are “successful learners, confident and creative individuals, and active and informed citizens”. The Shaping of the Australian Curriculum documents offer a vision of youth who can “make sense of the world” and “work together toward the common good”. Working from a practical theology paradigm, the question animating this thesis is, What should be the place of Sacred Texts within Australian public education? Set within the broader issue of religion in education, I seek a mutually critical correlation between the vision in the Australian Curriculum and a Christian theology of education, in arguing for the incorporation of Sacred Texts within Australian “secular” schools for Year 7 to 10 students in the subjects of History and Civics and Citizenship. In Part I, I describe and interpret the place religions and their revelations occupy in overarching curriculum aims, and specific content for two subjects. At the Shaping level of curriculum philosophy, the civic goals and rhetoric of religious inclusivity suggest a meaningful role for Sacred Texts: capturing diverse visions of the common good in Civics and Citizenship; and making sense of motivations that propelled significant events in the past and shape contested interpretations in the present as studied in History. As the Shaping documents translate into the Australian Curriculum content, however, Scriptures disappear, moved into the null curriculum. This disparity calls for explanation. Employing a sociological perspective, I contend that ACARA’s treatment of religious revelation is consistent with the perspective of the classic secularisation thesis. According to this narrative, Scriptures are dangerous in Civics and Citizenship and irrelevant in History. While these assertions are deconstructed in light of the post-secular turn, I crystallise the concerns of secularists and multiculturalists alike into a “plural principle”. Across any unit of study, the incorporation of Sacred Texts must meet the criteria of relevance to curricular aims, accountability to professional educators, diversity in perspective, veracity in re-presenting the Other and critically analysing truth claims, and respect for students to determine their own beliefs and practices; it must ultimately foster the integration of a student’s life toward holistic flourishing, and help form a robust, just, inclusive and peaceful democracy. In Part II, I seek to understand what should be going on, discerning the common ground between theological and philosophical accounts of education’s end. A narrative theology of education is constructed to consider what function Scriptures may perform toward the telos of education for shalom. “God’s Curriculum” represents the core teaching and learning under divine tutelage for humanity to come of age. Across a six leg journey of Creation, the Fall, Israel, Jesus, Church, and the New Creation, we learn about work, knowledge, wisdom, reciprocity, holiness and hope. We are formed as active citizens under the liberating reign of God in the way we cultivate, repent, bless, love, reconcile, and worship. In turn, this vision suggests a meaningful role for the study of diverse Sacred Texts in restoring humanity to right relationship with the Transcendent, others, self and the planet. Through a dialectical hermeneutic, and in dialogue with Dwayne Huebner among other educational theorists, the Australian Curriculum and God’s Curriculum fuse in a vision of education for holistic flourishing. That is, education may be reimagined as aiming at responsibility, knowledge, understanding, care, inclusion and integration. Sacred Texts can be appropriately incorporated to serve the common good: preserving difference and fostering harmony in Civics and Citizenship; and discerning the wisest path to follow together in the present given our contested past in History. In Part III, I seek to change the situation, pragmatically exemplifying how this curriculum vision may be implemented as part of a school-based syllabi for the Year 8 study of freedom of speech in Civics and Citizenship, and the Year 10 study of modern conflict and migration within a globalising world in History. I develop a narrative pedagogy comprising a five-movement hermeneutic of encounter, questions, stories, synthesis and response. Adapting this model of engagement to accord with ACARA’s stipulations, I reshape practice to demonstrate how such an approach can augment the curriculum. In short, while Sacred Texts are largely silenced in secular education, they have a meaningful role to play. By engaging students in explaining, understanding and changing the world through established subjects, the selective incorporation of Scriptures can sensitise adolescents to the many sacred stories at play. In so doing, potentially transcendent revelation may illuminate and enrich our immanent frame as the one thing we must all share.

118 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the conceptual boundaries between the living and the dead - once assumed to be as stark and solid as the walls around the asylums and prisons - are becoming blurred and are breaking down.
Abstract: This paper explores some of the ways in which the conceptual boundaries between the living and the dead - once assumed to be as stark and solid as the walls around the asylums and prisons - are becoming blurred and are breaking down. It argues that the continuing relationships between bereaved people and their deceased relatives and friends are not new but have been marginalised by the discourses and practices of modernity. There are, however, new ways of remembering and the discussion will explore some of the mechanisms used by survivors who seeks to maintain bonds with their dead. The paper will then show that dead or, rather, dying individuals, actively encourage this continuing relationship by finding ways of reconstituting themselves after death. The conclusion will critically examine the concept of the 'new model' of grief, arguing that models inevitably become prescriptive.

115 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the mid-nineteenth century, managing the rapidly expanding number of corpses had to be controlled and rationalized, but this control could be exercised by business, the municipality or the church, leading to three pure types of funeral organization (commercial, municipal, religious) and a number of mixed types.
Abstract: Why do funeral practices vary between modern Western countries? In the mid-nineteenth century, managing the rapidly expanding number of corpses had to be controlled and rationalized, but this control could be exercised by business, the municipality, or the church, leading to three pure types of funeral organization (commercial, municipal, religious) and a number of mixed types. These institutional types interacted with wider cultural factors to create in each country an identifiable national solution to the problem of disposing of the dead in a mobile, urban, modern society. By the late twentieth century, a global demand for more freedom and individuality spawned reform movements, targeting a different bastion of institutional power in each country.

115 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a literature review is presented to trace and evaluate the different and changing theoretical, methodological, and disciplinary perspectives through which Western, mainly UK social scientists have sought to understand and address the experience of bereavement during the twentieth century.
Abstract: This paper takes the form of a literature review to trace and evaluate the different and changing theoretical, methodological, and disciplinary perspectives through which Western, mainly UK social scientists (i.e., psychologists, anthropologists, sociologists), have sought to understand and address the experience of bereavement during the twentieth century. Such an overview is timely in relation to the rapidly changing nature of Western society around the turn of the century. It examines how the science-based discourse of modernity has shaped such perspectives and the extent to which this has obscured, as well as revealed, important aspects of the bereavement experience. It considers the potential of recent “postmodernist” approaches, which prioritize qualitative methods, and the subjective experiences of bereaved individuals to allow a fuller engagement with this complex and challenging dimension of social life. In so doing it aims to demonstrate how the inadequacy of modernist perspectives in a...

94 citations