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Forgetting Whose we Are: Alzheimer's Disease and the Love of God (Paperback)
$23.64 - Save $2.36 (9%) - RRP $26.00 Free shipping worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 72 hours | |Short Description for Forgetting Whose we AreDesigned primarily for academic audiences, this book offers a Christian understanding of and a response to the difficult theological, pastoral, and spiritual problems raised by Alzheimer's disease. The text examines the problems of Alzheimer's disease from the perspectives of the theologian, the patient, and the caregiver.
Full description- Publisher: Abingdon Press
- Published: 01 January 1994
- Format: Paperback 255 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Popular Medicine & Health | Coping With Illness | Christian Theology | Christian Life & Practice
- ISBN 13: 9780687020881 ISBN 10: 0687020883
- Sales rank: 760,347
Full description for Forgetting Whose we Are
Alzheimer's disease - a degenerative disease of the central nervous system characterized especially by premature mental deterioration - is the most publicly visible and widely discussed form of a range of disorders known as senile dementia. The nature of Alzheimer's disease, especially its progressive debilitation of the memory, raises key theological issues. What does it mean to be truly human? Does our ability to remember define who we are as persons? When the mind loses its ability to remember, what happens to the life of the soul? When we forget God, does God still remember us?Forgetting Whose We Are offers a Christian understanding of and response to the difficult theological, spiritual, and pastoral problems raised by Alzheimer's disease. Filling an important gap in existing literature by directly confronting the theological challenges of Alzheimer's disease to victims, caregivers, and their communities, the book affirms the classic Christian doctrines that witness to the reality of grace and the promises of salvation even for those who can no longer remember themselves, their families, or their relationship with God.

