四虎影院 Magazine Welcoming People with Disabilities
By Christine Milner
Associate Professor of Kinesiology
鈥淚鈥檓 thinking,鈥 Barbara muses. 鈥淚鈥檓 thinking.鈥
鈥淲hat are you thinking about, Barbara?鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 thinking that I want to live with Stacy forever!鈥
This scene played out between friends during dinner at L鈥橝rche, Portland, one of a worldwide community of homes for people with disabilities. Like the other core members who live there, Barbara and Stacy have intellectual disabilities, the population L鈥橝rche most often serves. I became acquainted with L鈥橝rche through Henri Nouwen鈥檚 book, 鈥淚n the Name of Jesus,鈥 and spent some time this fall with four core members and their assistants in Portland, Ore., as part of my sabbatical project. I left L鈥橝rche humbled by the lessons I learned and eager to share my experience, especially with churches.
L鈥橝rche taught me powerful insights about becoming a welcoming presence in the lives of others, particularly those with disabilities. Most churches have removed physical barriers that prevent full participation and acceptance for all. We have ramps leading into our sanctuaries, access to the altar for wheelchairs, help during Communion and devices available for those with hearing loss. But we sometimes fail to consider the attitudinal barriers that can cause more pain and exclusion than physical ones.
How do we do create these barriers? One way is the words we choose. Scholars in the area of disability studies encourage the use of person-first language. When we refer to 鈥渢hat blind person鈥 or 鈥渢hat intellectually disabled鈥 person, we focus on their disability and not who they are as people. Just as we don鈥檛 want to be labeled by the many things we can鈥檛 do, people with disabilities deserve to have their identity rooted in their individuality, not in generalizations. 鈥淧eople with disabilities,鈥 not 鈥渄isabled people,鈥 will feel more welcomed in our churches.
My first week at L鈥橝rche I felt restless and awkward. What should I say or do? How do I interact with people with intellectual disabilities? The assistants serving there became my mentors. Watching them in action is like witnessing the hand of God care for the most vulnerable of His creation. They demonstrated for me how to be present with the core members.
These assistants, often young college graduates, learn a great deal about caring for people with intellectual disabilities. By their own admission, they discover even more about themselves. L鈥橝rche models selfless, vulnerable love and challenges us to imitate this servant model in our own church communities.
In interview after interview, assistants shared how the vulnerability and mutuality they experience with the core members change them forever. In describing his own transformation, one assistant said, 鈥淏ut ultimately, somehow mysteriously and in new and profound ways, I have discovered my own acceptance. That is, I am fully loved and fully accepted and fully worthy.鈥
Sitting beside a resident, I learned that sharing a quiet moment has great value. In doing so, I鈥檓 communicating, 鈥淚 like being with you.鈥 I put aside my own pretenses about accomplishment that have no meaning in this encounter. People with disabilities can offer us the gift of patience and steadfastness in this fast-paced world. Simply being and not doing can benefit us all.
Despite important public strides in recent years, people with disabilities often struggle with isolation and loneliness. In our church communities, each of us can provide the gift of friendship, especially to those we perceive to be different from us. Invite someone with a disability out to the park, a meal or for a walk.
We often feel uncomfortable interacting with people with disabilities because we鈥檙e afraid we鈥檒l make mistakes, say something wrong or embarrass ourselves or others. Let鈥檚 love one another enough to be willing to be vulnerable, knowing and accepting that we鈥檒l make mistakes. In seeking to engage someone, ask how we can best be a friend. Ask permission before helping. At L鈥橝rche, I learned to do this before sitting down with someone or assisting them with their meal. Honor their personal space and right to make decisions just as we want others to recognize ours.
It鈥檚 important to teach our children to respect and embrace difference. We struggle with this because we鈥檝e grown up in a world that鈥檚 failed to model a seamless integration of people with disabilities in our lives. Invite a person from Young Life Capernaum to your home for a visit. Show your children how to be comfortable around disability by encouraging interaction, whether in the neighborhood or in a restaurant when an opportunity arises to engage in natural conversation.
In Luke 14:13, Jesus tells us who to invite to our banquet: people with disabilities and the poor. L鈥橝rche Portland sets a beautiful table and welcomes all to join in.
(Photo courtesy of L鈥橝rche Portland)