References
- Begel, D., & Burton, R. W. ( Eds.). (2000). Sport psychiatry: Theory and practice. New York, NY: W. W. Norton.
- Brock, B. (2012). Discipline, sport and the religion of winners: Paul on running to win the prize. Studies in Christian Ethics, 25, 4–19.
- Brock, B., & Swinton, J. ( Eds.). (2012). Disability in the Christian tradition: A reader. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans.
- Chambers, O. (1935). My utmost for His highest (September 2, The sacrament of sacrifice). Uhrichsville, OH: Barbour.
- Close, P., Askew, D., & Xin, X. (2007). The Beijing Olympiad: the political economy of a sporting mega-event. London, UK: Routledge.
- Comensoli, P. A. (2011). Descending the ladder: the theological anthropology of Jean Vanier's key metaphor. Journal of Religion, Disability and Health, 15, 115–129.
- Dailey, E. W. (2016). Sport and transcendence through the body. International Journal of Public Theology, 10, 486–506.
- Eiesland, N. L. (1994). The disabled God: towards a liberation theology of disability. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press.
- Farrell, R. J., Crocker. P. R. E., McDonough, M. H., & Sedgwick, W. A. (2004). The driving force: motivation in Special Olympics. Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly, 21, 153–166.
- Hauerwas, S. (2004). Community and diversity: the tyranny of normality. In J. Swinton (Ed.), Critical reflections on Stanley Hauerwas' theology of disability: Disabling society, enabling theology (pp. 37–43). New York, NY: Haworth Press.
- Hochstetler, D. R., Hopsicker, P., & Kretchmar, S. R. (2008). The ambiguity of embodiment and sport: overcoming theological dichotomies. In D. Deardorff & J. White (Eds.), A Christian theology of sport (pp. 61–77). Lampeter, UK: Edwin Mellen Press.
- Hong, F. (2006). Innocence lost: Child athletes in China. In R. Giulianotti & D. McArdle (Eds.), Sport, civil liberties and human rights (pp. 46–62). London, UK: Routledge.
- Human Rights Watch. (2008). China: As Paralympics launch, disabled face discrimination. Retrieved from http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2008/09/03/china-paralympics-launch-disabled-face-discrimination
- John Paul II. (2010a). Address of Pope John Paul II to the participants in the European blind championship, Castel Gandolfo, September 14, 1985. In N. Müller & C. Schäfer (Eds.). The pastoral messages (Homilies, Angelus Messages, Speeches, Letters) of Pope John Paul II that refer to sport: 1978–2005. Vatican City: Vatican Office of Church and Sport/Pontifical Council of the Laity.
- John Paul II. (2010b). Address of the Holy Father to the Italian silent sports sederation, May 15, 2000. In N. Müller & C. Schäfer (Eds.), The pastoral messages (Homilies, Angelus Messages, Speeches, Letters) of Pope John Paul II that refer to sport: 1978–2005. Vatican City: Vatican Office of Church and Sport/Pontifical Council of the Laity.
- Kersh, J., & Siperstein, G. N. (2010). The positive contributions of Special Olympics to the family. Retrieved from http://www.specialolympics.org/uploadedFiles/LandingPage/WhatWeDo/Research_Studies_Desciption_Pages/Athlete%20in%20the%20familiy%20final%20report_10.14.08.pdf
- Kluck, T. (2009). Sports and humility: Why I love Muhammad Ali (but why he also may have ruined sports). In The reason for sports: A Christian manifesto (pp. 129–138). Chicago, IL: Moody.
- Koosed, J. L., & Schumm, D. (2009). From Superman to Jesus: constructions of masculinity and disability on the silver screen. Disability Studies Quarterly, 29, 2. Retrieved from http://www.dsq-sds.org/article/view/917/1092
- Lamb, J. (1999). Discovering 2 Corinthians. Leicester, UK: Crossway Books.
- McCasland, D. (1998). Oswald Chambers: Abandoned to God. Grand Rapids, MI: Discovery House.
- McNamee, M. (2008). Sports, virtues and vices: Morality plays. London, UK: Routledge.
- Moltmann, J. (1998). Liberate yourselves by accepting one another. In N. L. Eiesland & D. E. Saliers (Eds.), Human disability and the service of God: Reassessing religious practice (pp. 105–110). Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press.
- Null, A. (2008). Finding the right place: Professional sport as a Christian vocation. In D. II Deardorff & J. White (Eds.), The image of God in the human body: Essays on Christianity and sports (pp. 313–366). Lampeter, UK: Edwin Mellen Press.
- Parker, A., & Watson, N. J. (2015). Sport, celebrity and religion: Christianity, morality and the Tebow phenomenon. Studies in World Christianity, 21, 223–238.
- Parker, A., & Watson, N. J. (2017a). Religion, sport and English national udentity. In D. Malcolm & T. Gibbons ( Eds.). Sport and English national identity in a ‘Disunited Kingdom' (pp. 150–152). London, UK: Routledge.
- Parker, A., & Watson, N. J. (2017). Spiritualized and religious bodies. In D. Andrews, M. Silk, & H. Thorpe (Eds.), Routledge handbook of physical cultural studies (pp. 209–217). London, UK: Routledge.
- Rohr, R. (1995). Those at the edge hold the secret. In Radical grace: daily meditations (p. 28). Cincinnati, OH: St Anthony Messenger Press.
- Rubin, H. A., & Shapiro, D. A. (2005). Murderball [ film]. MTV Films/ThinkFilm.
- Savage, T. B. (2004). Power through weakness: Paul's understanding of the Christian ministry in 2 Corinthians (Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series 86). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
- Shriver, T. (2010, June 7). Opening address. Special Olympics Global Congress, Marrakech, Morocco. Retrieved from http://www.specialolympics.org/slideshow-global-congress-photos.aspx
- Shriver, T. (2014). Triumph from anguish: the inspiration of the Special Olympics. Journal of Disability and Religion, 18, 117–124.
- Shriver, T. (2015). Fully alive: Discovering what matters most. New York, NY: Farrar, Straus & Giroux.
- Slot, O. (2008, December 19). Dean Macey: ‘Fourth in the Olympics hurt, but retirement is like a death in the family’. The Times. Retrieved from http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/dean-macey-fourth-in-the-olympics-hurt-but-retirement-is-like-a-death-in-the-familypgm6dmfgv88
- Stallings, G., & Cook, S. (1997). Another season: a coach's story of raising an exceptional son. New York, NY: Broadway.
- Stott, J. (1980). God's new society: the message of Ephesians. Leicester, UK: Inter-Varsity Press.
- Swinton, J. (2011). Who is the God we Worship? Theologies of disability; challenges and new possibilities. International Journal of Practical Theology, 14, 273–307.
- Swinton, J. (2012, July 2). Spirit in motion: Disability, theology and the soul of the Olympics. Keynote address: Everybody Has a Place: Paralympic / Disability Sport Theology. London, UK: Methodist Central Hall, Westminster.
- Swinton, J. (2016, August). Running for Jesus! The virtues and the vices of disability and sport. Keynote address, presented at the Inaugural Global Congress on Sports and Christianity, York St John University, York, UK.
- Thomas, N., & Smith, A. (2009). Disability sport and society: an introduction. London, UK: Routledge.
- Transparency International. (2016). Global corruption report – Sport. London, UK: Routledge.
- Watson, N. J. (2011). Identity in sport: a psychological and theological analysis. In J. Parry, N. J.Watson, & M. Nesti ( Eds.). Theology, ethics and transcendence in sports (pp. 107–148). London, UK: Routledge.
- Watson, N. J. (2013). Special Olympians as a “prophetic sign” to the modern sporting Babel. In N. J. Watson, & A. Parker (Eds.). Sports and Christianity: Historical and contemporary perspectives (pp. 167–206). New York, NY: Routledge.
- Watson, N. J., & Bolt, B. (2017). From Team Hoyt to I'll Push You: An embodied prophetic message. Journal of Disability and Religion, 21(2), 164–170.
- Watson, N. J., & Parker, A. (2012). Christianity, disability and sport: A case study of the role of long-distance running in the life of a Father and a son who is congenitally blind and has profound intellectual disabilities. Practical Theology, 5, 189–207.
- Watson, N. J., & Parker, A. (2013). A Christian theological analysis of the institutions and governance of sport: a case study of the modern Olympic Games. Journal of Religion and Society, 15, 1–21.
- Watson, N. J., & Parker, A. (2014). Theological ethics in sport (with psychological considerations). In N. J. Watson & A. Parker (Eds.), Sport and the Christian Religion: A systematic review of literature (pp. 63–85), Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars.
- Watson, N. J., & Parker, A. ( Eds.). (2015). Sports, religion and disability. London, UK: Routledge.
- Watson, N. J., & White, J. (2012). C.S. Lewis at the 2012 London Olympics: Reflections on pride and humility. Practical Theology, 5, 151–168.
- Whitney-Brown, C. (2008). Jean Vanier: Essential writings. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books.
- Wolfensberger, W. (2001). The prophetic voice and the presence of mentally retarded people in the world today. In W. Gaventa & C. Coulter (Eds.) The theological voice of Wolf Wolfensberger (pp. 11–48). Binghamton, NY: Haworth Pastoral Press.
- Yong, A. (2014). Running the (special) race: New (Pauline) perspectives on disability and theology of sport. Journal Disability and Religion, 18, 209–225.