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In this episode of The Community Garden, I’m joined by Connie Chen—an MDiv-educated theologian from Harvard, artist, and disability rights activist—for a conversation about what access, embodiment, and dignity reveal about the kind of communities we’re actually called to build. Follow Connie @Connie
Together, we explore how theology has too often been used to justify exclusion—and how disability justice helps us imagine something more honest, more spacious, and more humane. We talk about bodies, systems, creativity, belonging, and what it means to move from “accommodating people” to transforming the environments we share.
By Ciarra JonesIn this episode of The Community Garden, I’m joined by Connie Chen—an MDiv-educated theologian from Harvard, artist, and disability rights activist—for a conversation about what access, embodiment, and dignity reveal about the kind of communities we’re actually called to build. Follow Connie @Connie
Together, we explore how theology has too often been used to justify exclusion—and how disability justice helps us imagine something more honest, more spacious, and more humane. We talk about bodies, systems, creativity, belonging, and what it means to move from “accommodating people” to transforming the environments we share.