Liturgical Press
My Account
Catholic Social Teaching Faith and Justice Ecology Ethics Parish Ministries Liturgical Ministries Preaching and Presiding Parish Leadership Seasonal Resources Worship Resources Sacramental Preparation Ritual Books Music Liturgical Theology The Liturgy of the Church Liturgy and Sacraments Liturgy in History Biblical Spirituality Old Testament Scholarship New Testament Scholarship Wisdom Commentary Little Rock Scripture Study The Saint John's Bible Ecclesiology and Ecumenism Church and Culture Sacramental Theology Systematic Theology Theology in History Aesthetics and the Arts Prayer Liturgy of the Hours Spirituality Biography/Hagiography Daily Reflections Spiritual Direction/Counseling Give Us This Day Benedictine Spirituality Cistercian Rule of Saint Benedict and Other Rules Lectio Divina Monastic Studies Monastic Interreligious Dialogue Oblates Monasticism in History Thomas Merton Religious Life/Discipleship Give Us This Day Worship The Bible Today Cistercian Studies Quarterly Loose-Leaf Lectionary Celebrating the Eucharist Bulletins
Liturgical Press

Human Flourishing in a World of Trauma and Stress

How Understanding Our Brains Shapes Our Theological Anthropology

Heidi Ann Russell

Human Flourishing in a World of Trauma and Stress
Human Flourishing in a World of Trauma and Stress

ISBN: 9798400801358, 01358

Details: 288 pgs, 6 x 9
Publication Date: 04/15/2026
Paperback  
$34.95
eBook
$32.99
Quantity    
Add to Cart
Pre-Order
See chart below for bulk pricing for groups.
How do we create communities of healing and flourishing in a world of trauma and stress?

As research continues to reveal more about the impacts of trauma and stress on our brains and nervous systems, traditional theological concepts need to be reshaped to meet these new understandings. Current events and experiences of violence, war, and a global pandemic have showed us that do not only impact individuals but whole communities and societies, and the effects span generations. The pastoral implications of this are vast and must be explored.

In Human Flourishing in a World of Trauma and Stress, pastoral theologian Heidi Ann Russell answers advances in trauma study with a new theological anthropology that considers questions of freedom, sin, and grace in conversation with our understanding of the brain, trauma, and stress. Pastorally, the book uncovers the layers of trauma present in those we serve in our faith communities. Ministers and faith communities involved in spiritual care are called to be trauma-informed and to understand how relationships harm and heal, ultimately to participate in God’s creating, redeeming, and sustaining activity in the world. As informative as it is practical, this new volume explores the theological and pastoral implications of trauma informed ministry that leads to human flourishing.

Heidi Ann Russell, PhD, is an associate professor at the Institute of Pastoral Studies of Loyola University Chicago. She received her PhD in religious studies from Marquette University and her MDiv/MA from Washington Theological Union. She is the author of several other books, including The Source of All Love: Catholicity and the Trinity (Orbis Books, 2017) and Quantum Shift: Theological and Pastoral Implications of Contemporary Developments in Science (Liturgical Press, 2015).

ISBN: 9798400801358, 01358

Details: 288 pgs, 6 x 9
Publication Date: 04/15/2026

Reviews

“In the second century St. Irenaeus asserted against those who belittled our embodied existence that the glory of God is the human being fully alive. Masterfully weaving together neuroscience, epigenetics, and more traditional sources of theological inquiry, Heidi Ann Russell sheds new light on this ancient axiom with a data-driven approach to trauma-informed theological anthropology and pastoral ministry for the twenty-first century. As God-imaging social creatures, she claims, we bear the capacity and call to co-create, co-redeem, and co-sustain one another in a world of trauma and stress. The book’s scholarly rigor makes it suitable for research at any level; its pastoral approach makes it a valuable resource for ministers; and its approachable style makes it an accessible challenge for any reading group.”
Jason P. Roberts, Principal Lecturer, University of Georgia

“In Human Flourishing in a World of Trauma and Stress, Heidi Russell accomplishes something rare and necessary: she brings the insights of contemporary neuroscience into genuine dialogue with Christian theology, and both fields are enriched by the conversation. Drawing on polyvagal theory, attachment research, and epigenetics, Russell offers a compelling reframing of classical theological concepts—sin, grace, freedom, and redemption—through the lens of what we now know about how trauma shapes the brain and body. Her theology, grounded in scientific insight, helps us realize that we are not isolated individuals but are formed in community, wounded in community, and healed in community. This book is essential reading for anyone engaged in pastoral care, theological education, or ministry in a world marked by pervasive stress and trauma. Russell writes with both scholarly rigor and pastoral tenderness, never losing sight of the practical implications for those who sit in our pews, living in the liminal space between Good Friday and Easter. At its heart, this is a book about hope—not cheap hope that glosses over suffering, but the hard-won hope that emerges when we create communities of 'felt safety' where broken hearts can be seen and made whole.”
Ilia Delio, OSF, Josephine C. Connelly Endowed Chair in Theology, Villanova University