Brad E. Kelle’s research while affiliated with Point Loma Nazarene University and other places

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Publications (171)


Moral Injury and Biblical Studies: An Early Sampling of Research and Emerging Trends
  • Article

February 2021

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1 Citation

Currents in Biblical Research

Brad E. Kelle

Moral injury emerged within clinical psychology and related fields to refer to a non-physical wound (psychological and emotional pain and its effects) that results from the violation (by oneself or others) of a person’s deepest moral beliefs (about oneself, others, or the world). Originally conceived in the context of warfare, the notion has now expanded to include the morally damaging impact of various non-war-related experiences and circumstances. Since its inception, moral injury has been an intersectional and cross-disciplinary term and significant work has appeared in psychology, philosophy, medicine, spiritual/pastoral care, chaplaincy, and theology. Since 2015, biblical scholarship has engaged moral injury along two primary trajectories: 1) creative re-readings of biblical stories and characters informed by insights from moral injury; and 2) explorations of the postwar rituals and symbolic practices found in biblical texts and how they might connect to the felt needs of morally injured persons. These trajectories suggest that the engagement between the Bible and moral injury generates a two-way conversation in which moral injury can serve as a heuristic that brings new meanings out of biblical texts, and the critical study of biblical texts can contribute to the attempts to understand, identify, and heal moral injury.











Citations (1)


... Com a derrocada do paradigma dominante, duas visões disputam seu lugar (KELLE, 2014). De um lado, um modelo sincrônico que privilegia o texto como construção literária e, de outro lado, um modelo diacrônico de cunho sócioantropológico. ...

Reference:

Demagogos políticos: Max Weber e os profetas de Israel
The Phenomenon of Israelite Prophecy in Contemporary Scholarship
  • Citing Article
  • June 2014

Currents in Biblical Research