Living Elderhood: A Practical Theology of Old Age According to W. Andrew Achenbaum
Stephen Fogle

TL;DR
This paper introduces Living Elderhood, a practical theology of old age inspired by W. Andrew Achenbaum, to foster collaboration between gerontology and the humanities.
Contribution
It presents a novel framework integrating religion, spirituality, and aging through interdisciplinary collaboration.
Findings
Living Elderhood emphasizes recognition of old age, responsibility to love, and relationship with Divinity.
Achenbaum's work is positioned as a bridge between gerontological and humanities perspectives.
The framework is demonstrated through the lived experiences of older Jesuit priests.
Abstract
Collaboration between Humanities & Gerontology is poised for a breakthrough. After decades of research operating through Successful and Positive Aging paradigms, gerontologists dedicated to understanding the ‘good stuff’ of old age are charting a complementary course for, “Innovative Horizons in Gerontology.” Inspired by the religion, spirituality, and aging writing of W. Andrew Achenbaum, this paper forwards collaborative exchange between Humanities & Gerontology through presentation of a practical theology of old age called Living Elderhood. Composed in three parts, the Living Elderhood framework focuses attention to 1) recognition of old age; 2) responsibility to love; 3) relationship with Divinity. The paper opens with a brief historical review of Elderhood as a concept of interest across interdisciplinary perspectives from humanities, social sciences, and medicine in gerontological…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAging and Gerontology Research · Medieval Philosophy and Theology · Theological Perspectives and Practices
