聋人天主教物质文化的传教特性

Audrey Seah
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摘要

聋人教友往往被认为是 "被动的仁慈接受者",而不是传教的积极参与者。这与聋人天主教徒在基督身体中所扮演的角色大相径庭。这篇关于聋哑天主教徒物质文化的介绍旨在强调一个经常被忽视的来源,它展示了聋哑天主教徒是如何通过创造、整理和传播物品来积极参与教会使命的。首先,文章将聋人天主教物质文化置于残疾的社会文化模式中,否则就无法充分理解这些物品所蕴含的意义和价值。然后,文章解释了这些物品如何创造出文化上的聋人空间,以及这些空间对聋人群体的意义。其次,分析了聋人天主教社区公共和个人空间中的各种物品,从礼仪艺术品和礼仪家具到日常用品,如笔和杯子。文章讨论了聋人天主教物质文化的特点,并解释了如何以及以何种方式通过这些物品在各种空间中实施传教神学。文章最后对天主教聋人物质文化及其带来的传教机会进行了分类。作者认为,关注聋人天主教的物质文化可以反驳认为聋人天主教徒没有能力传教的错误观念,并挑战将聋人天主教徒的经历描绘成有缺陷、精神上低人一等和依赖于健听人的能力主义聋人神学思想。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The missiological character of deaf Catholic material culture
Too often, deaf Catholics are assumed and expected to be “passive recipients of mercy” rather than active participants in mission. This is far from the role that deaf Catholics have played in the body of Christ. This introduction to deaf Catholic material culture serves to highlight one often overlooked source that demonstrates how deaf Catholics are active participants in the church’s mission—through the creation, curation, and dissemination of objects. First, the essay contextualizes deaf Catholic material culture within the sociocultural model of disability, without which the meaning and value that the objects hold cannot be fully appreciated. Then it explains how these objects create culturally-deaf spaces and the significance these spaces hold for the deaf community. Second, an analysis of various objects in public and personal spaces, which range from liturgical art and liturgical furnishings to everyday items such as pens and mugs in deaf Catholic communities is presented. Characteristics of deaf Catholic material culture and an explanation of how and what theologies of mission are operationalized through these objects in various spaces are discussed. The essay concludes with a typology of deaf Catholic material culture and the missiological opportunities they present. In so doing, the author argues that attention to material culture in deaf Catholicism counters the misconception that deaf Catholics are incapable of mission and challenges ableist theological ideas of deafness which portray deaf Catholic experiences as deficient, spiritually inferior, and dependent on hearing people.
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