RT Article T1 The body's availability: Ezekiel 37, Robert Jenson and disabled flesh JF Scottish journal of theology VO 75 IS 2 SP 117 OP 122 A1 Zerra, Luke LA English PB Cambridge Univ. Press YR 2022 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1806303604 AB This paper puts Ezekiel 37 in conversation with Robert W. Jenson's theological anthropology. It claims that a theological reading of scripture can clarify moral reflection on personhood in general, and the personhood of humans with disabilities in particular. Ezekiel 37:1-14, read through Jenson's exegesis and theology, offers a theological anthropology in which human personhood is given by God's address. To be a person is to be available to God's address. Such an understanding does not rely on capacities inherent to the person, but extrinsically in God's word and freedom to be available to human flesh. K1 Ezekiel K1 Robert W. Jenson K1 Disability K1 Theological Anthropology DO 10.1017/S0036930622000254