Stillbirth and neonatal death often trigger immense and long‐lasting grief in parents. These life‐altering losses both call upon and call into question parents’ religious beliefs and practices. This qualitative research examines the impact of stillbirth and neonatal death on parental religiosity, broadly conceived to include personal spirituality and any religious affiliation, including atheism. It examines religion online, a nontraditional but important social context for grief, especially regarding statistically rare tragedies such as stillbirth and neonatal death. Content analysis of postings on a hub website for “babyloss” parents yields four major themes: religious disorientation, religious reorientation, changed relationships with others, and a quest for meaning.
Jesus declared to his disciples, "In this world you will have trouble" (John 16:33, New International Version). Trouble is a theme throughout Scripture; God's people suffer trouble, cause trouble, and seek God (or don't) during times of trouble. In most regards, Christianity may not connect easily with Judith Butler's philosophy, but she also sees the world as a
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