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Neuroplasticity, Performativity, and Clergy Wellness

Neighbor Love as Self-Care

William D. Roozeboom

This book invites readers, particularly clergy members, to rethink their understandings of the human person in light of recent developments in neuroscience. In addition to bringing together religion and neuroscience, it engages narrative theory, exercise physiology, and constructions of wellness to raise crucial questions about human identity and relationality and argue for a model of care that connects self-care and care for/with others. Furthermore, it claims that human beings are whole, intra/inter-relational, dynamic, plastic, and performative agents who have the capacity to story themselves neurophysiologically (in both “top-down” and “bottom-up” ways) through their regular practices of wellness.
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Lexington Books
Pages: 176 • Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-1-4985-2127-7 • Hardback • December 2016 • $103.00 • (£79.00)
978-1-4985-2128-4 • eBook • December 2016 • $97.50 • (£75.00)
Series: Emerging Perspectives in Pastoral Theology and Care
Subjects: Religion / Christian Ministry / Pastoral Resources, Health & Fitness / Healthy Living, Religion / Clergy, Religion / Counseling
William D. Roozeboom is adjunct professor of practical theology and spiritual care and counseling at Fuller Theological Seminary and Claremont School of Theology. He is also a certified pastoral counselor with the American Association of Pastoral Counselors (AAPC), a staff counselor and congregational and community liaison at Christian Counseling Service, and supervisory and interim pastor at Bethany Reformed Church.
1. Neuroscience: The Organizing System For Experience And Meaning-Making
2. Deconstructing and Reconstructing Understandings of Self
3. A Working Theory of Wellness
4. Performativity And Plasticity: Storying Self Bi-Directionally In The Embodied Brain Ecosystem
5. Theoretical and Therapeutic Implications
6. A Theraputic Framework: A Case for Short-Term Clincial Skills in Spiritual Care and Counseling Contexts
Roozeboom provides clergy, chaplains, and others engaged in pastoral care a window into the dramatic implications of neuroscience to help us better understand the embodied ecosystem within which the brain is highly responsive and intricately interrelated to spiritual, personal, and relational wellbeing. Roozeboom demonstrates the pivotal role for practices of self-care in this embodied ecosystem including not only renewing and supporting physical and spiritual well-being but also enhancing our capacities for the practice of neighbor love.
— Nancy J. Ramsay, Brite Divinity School


Roozeboom offers a vibrant reminder to all of us concerned with the spiritual well-being of persons (and to those of us working at the intersection of pastoral theology and the neurosciences): what we do is as important to who we are as what we think and feel. Moving beyond the "top-down" models of contemplative practice, this text convincingly draws on neuroscience research to demonstrate that our physical and religious practices also "flow upward," reshaping our brains/minds/souls and relationships in profound ways.
— David A. Hogue, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary


In an age when we are being invited to revisit human identity and relationality and the contributions, especially of the sciences, to concepts of embodiment, Roozeboom’s book offers fresh hope for pastoral care by helping to derail the unsurmountable tendency left in the wake of dualistic anthropological models that have plagued Christian theology and its caring practices.

His thorough and easily accessible analysis of the science of how the inherent capacity of the “embodied brain ecosystem” constructs and continually works towards wholeness as humans engage in practices of wellness by which they induce the neuroplasticity of the brain allows for caring for others while caring for the self and doing both with integrity. This is no small feat as recent accounts of clergy burnout demonstrate.

However, Roozeboom has offered a candid appraisal of the terrain and shone light on the fault lines, largely in our anthropology, and helps us navigate this fascinating yet difficult arena in human health and wholeness, by returning us to the primitive body and how daily practices of wellness as we love and care for the body, without the oft essentializing and objectifying that accompanies self-care rhetoric, facilitate pastoral care encounters. This is pastoral care as self-care simplified and doable.
— Esther E. Acolatse, Duke University Divinity School


William D. Roozeboom’s text, Neuroplasticity, Performativity, and Clergy Wellness: Neighbor Love as Self Care, creatively expands not only the fields of pastoral and practical theology but also the ever-unfolding field of neuroscience. Roozeboom approaches neuroscience through the lens of a critically-trained practical theologian. . . .
— Journal of Pastoral Theology


Neuroplasticity, Performativity, and Clergy Wellness

Neighbor Love as Self-Care

Cover Image
Hardback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • This book invites readers, particularly clergy members, to rethink their understandings of the human person in light of recent developments in neuroscience. In addition to bringing together religion and neuroscience, it engages narrative theory, exercise physiology, and constructions of wellness to raise crucial questions about human identity and relationality and argue for a model of care that connects self-care and care for/with others. Furthermore, it claims that human beings are whole, intra/inter-relational, dynamic, plastic, and performative agents who have the capacity to story themselves neurophysiologically (in both “top-down” and “bottom-up” ways) through their regular practices of wellness.
Details
Details
  • Lexington Books
    Pages: 176 • Trim: 6½ x 9½
    978-1-4985-2127-7 • Hardback • December 2016 • $103.00 • (£79.00)
    978-1-4985-2128-4 • eBook • December 2016 • $97.50 • (£75.00)
    Series: Emerging Perspectives in Pastoral Theology and Care
    Subjects: Religion / Christian Ministry / Pastoral Resources, Health & Fitness / Healthy Living, Religion / Clergy, Religion / Counseling
Author
Author
  • William D. Roozeboom is adjunct professor of practical theology and spiritual care and counseling at Fuller Theological Seminary and Claremont School of Theology. He is also a certified pastoral counselor with the American Association of Pastoral Counselors (AAPC), a staff counselor and congregational and community liaison at Christian Counseling Service, and supervisory and interim pastor at Bethany Reformed Church.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • 1. Neuroscience: The Organizing System For Experience And Meaning-Making
    2. Deconstructing and Reconstructing Understandings of Self
    3. A Working Theory of Wellness
    4. Performativity And Plasticity: Storying Self Bi-Directionally In The Embodied Brain Ecosystem
    5. Theoretical and Therapeutic Implications
    6. A Theraputic Framework: A Case for Short-Term Clincial Skills in Spiritual Care and Counseling Contexts
Reviews
Reviews
  • Roozeboom provides clergy, chaplains, and others engaged in pastoral care a window into the dramatic implications of neuroscience to help us better understand the embodied ecosystem within which the brain is highly responsive and intricately interrelated to spiritual, personal, and relational wellbeing. Roozeboom demonstrates the pivotal role for practices of self-care in this embodied ecosystem including not only renewing and supporting physical and spiritual well-being but also enhancing our capacities for the practice of neighbor love.
    — Nancy J. Ramsay, Brite Divinity School


    Roozeboom offers a vibrant reminder to all of us concerned with the spiritual well-being of persons (and to those of us working at the intersection of pastoral theology and the neurosciences): what we do is as important to who we are as what we think and feel. Moving beyond the "top-down" models of contemplative practice, this text convincingly draws on neuroscience research to demonstrate that our physical and religious practices also "flow upward," reshaping our brains/minds/souls and relationships in profound ways.
    — David A. Hogue, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary


    In an age when we are being invited to revisit human identity and relationality and the contributions, especially of the sciences, to concepts of embodiment, Roozeboom’s book offers fresh hope for pastoral care by helping to derail the unsurmountable tendency left in the wake of dualistic anthropological models that have plagued Christian theology and its caring practices.

    His thorough and easily accessible analysis of the science of how the inherent capacity of the “embodied brain ecosystem” constructs and continually works towards wholeness as humans engage in practices of wellness by which they induce the neuroplasticity of the brain allows for caring for others while caring for the self and doing both with integrity. This is no small feat as recent accounts of clergy burnout demonstrate.

    However, Roozeboom has offered a candid appraisal of the terrain and shone light on the fault lines, largely in our anthropology, and helps us navigate this fascinating yet difficult arena in human health and wholeness, by returning us to the primitive body and how daily practices of wellness as we love and care for the body, without the oft essentializing and objectifying that accompanies self-care rhetoric, facilitate pastoral care encounters. This is pastoral care as self-care simplified and doable.
    — Esther E. Acolatse, Duke University Divinity School


    William D. Roozeboom’s text, Neuroplasticity, Performativity, and Clergy Wellness: Neighbor Love as Self Care, creatively expands not only the fields of pastoral and practical theology but also the ever-unfolding field of neuroscience. Roozeboom approaches neuroscience through the lens of a critically-trained practical theologian. . . .
    — Journal of Pastoral Theology


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