Forgetting the Former Things: Brain Injury's Invitation to Vulnerability and Faith
English


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About The Book

In August 1996 Tamara Puffer was a young newly married violinist-turned-pastor serving a large suburban church. Her growing work with people living on Atlantas streets was beginning to reshape her theology and her calling but a serious car accident derailed her carefully planned career path. Forgetting the Former Things is a rare tapestry of first-person faith journey woven with gritty theological reflection and persistent hope. Puffer writes honestly poignantly and often humorously about her efforts to accept limitations and to reimagine her life under radically altered circumstances. She finds solace in the stories of biblical women as she also wrestles with negative images of disability in Scripture. She embraces her self-described role as a “minister of vulnerability” in this troubling national moment--as jobs healthcare and affordable housing are evaporating for so many as countless people feel terrorized by discrimination or the threat of deportation--boldly casting her lot with others whose marginalization cuts deeper. At a time when traumatic brain injury is in the national spotlight and many families churches and communities seek deeper understanding Tamara Puffer provides in these pages an insightful inspiring and much-needed gift.
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