RT Article T1 Lonely Joy: How Families with Nonverbal Children with Disabilities Communicate, Collaborate, and Resist in a World that Values Words JF Journal of pastoral theology VO 29 IS 2 SP 101 OP 115 A1 Raffety, Erin A1 Foote, Laura S. A1 Harris, Emily A1 Vollrath, Kevin A2 Foote, Laura S. A2 Harris, Emily A2 Vollrath, Kevin LA English YR 2019 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1687237484 AB Drawing on ethnographic research with four families with children with profound cognitive disabilities who are nonverbal, this article argues that communication and joy among such families are undermined by common perceptions of disability as tragedy and lack of language as absence of communication. Because the Church often perpetuates understandings of disability as tragedy, joy in such families must stand in resistance to not just ableist society, but also to the Church. Therefore, we argue that both such families and the Church remain ‘lonely' in their joy. Accordingly, we charge the Church to receive and accept a broad variety of communication in order to embrace, come alongside, and magnify the joy of families with persons with disabilities who are nonverbal, enlarging the context of joy in Christian community. K1 Joy K1 Communication K1 Disability K1 Families K1 nonverbal K1 Resistance DO 10.1080/10649867.2019.1621024