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Rev. Dr. Sidney D. Fowler is editor for Out In
Scripture. He has worked for the national settings of both the United Church of Christ
in worship and spiritual formation and the United Methodist Church in educational curriculum.
He has extensive experience in developing lectionary-based resources including Imaging
the Word, Worship Ways and the international ecumenical resources Seasons of the
Spirit. Fowler has represented the United Church of Christ on the Consultation Common
Texts, the ecumenical body that developed the Revised Common Lectionary. An ordained United
Church of Christ pastor, he lives in Washington, D.C.
Rev. Dr. Charles W. Allen is an out gay
Episcopal priest who serves as chaplain for Grace Unlimited, a Lutheran-Episcopal university
ministry. He also teaches theology at Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis. He is a
frequent preacher and author of several articles in academic journals, most of which can be
found online at www.therevdrcharleswallen.com.
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Rev. Dr. Deborah A. Appler is associate professor of
Hebrew Bible at Moravian Theological Seminary. She is also a team member of the Megiddo
archaeological expedition in northern Israel, and each season takes students, interested
clergy and laity on the dig. Her academic interests center on the intersection of religion,
gender and sexuality in the Hebrew Bible and how these texts and their interpretations impact
the church. She is also an ordained elder of the United Methodist Church.
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Rev. Dr. Randall Bailey is the Andrew W.
Mellon professor of Hebrew Bible at the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta. He
teaches courses in the Pentateuch, historical books and new methodologies of interpretation
of the Hebrew Bible. He concentrates on the relationship of Ancient Africa and the Hebrew
Bible and he specializes in ideological criticism, especially as regards the points of
intersection of race/ethnicity, gender, class, sex, sexual orientation and power in the
biblical text.
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Dr. Angela Bauer-Levesque is
professor of biblical studies at Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, MA. In her teaching
and writing she has emphasized various aspects of social location (gender, race, sexual
identity) and their impact on biblical hermeneutics. Her publications include Gender in
the Book of Jeremiah: A Feminist-Literary Reading, Seeing God in Diversity: Exodus and
Acts, and various essays in anthologies, including “The Book of Jeremiah” in
The Queer Bible Commentary. She is currently working on a book titled Reading
While White: Race, Racism, and the Bible. Legally married, she and her partner Irma live
in Ogunquit, ME.
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Rev. Jacki
Belile is the founder of Living Well Ministries (LWM). LWM supports lives of faith,
intention and service through spiritual life coaching, weekly classes, and regular retreats.
In 1999, Jacki was the first out member of the LGBT community approved for ordination in the
American Baptist Churches-USA. Since then, she served as pastor of two welcoming and
affirming congregations: Phoenix Community Church (Kalamazoo, MI) and Grace Baptist Church
(Chicago). Since 2000, she has led retreats and seminars with LWM. Jacki holds a Bachelor of
Science Degree in Social Work from Taylor University and a Master of Divinity degree from
Chicago Theological Seminary.
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Rev. Dr. Michael Joseph Brown is associate
professor of New Testament and Christian origins at the Candler School of Theology and the
Graduate Division of Religion at Emory University. He has published widely on the development
of religious practices, particularly prayer, in the early church.
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Dr. Greg Carey is associate professor of New Testament at
Lancaster Theological Seminary in Lancaster, Pa., and an active layperson in the United
Church of Christ. He is the author of Ultimate Things: An Introduction to Jewish and
Christian Apocalyptic Literature, among other works, and has appeared in documentaries
for the BBC, the Discovery Channel and the National Geographic Channel.
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Rev. Dr. Warren
Carter is Lindsey P. Pherigo professor of New Testament at Saint Paul School of
Theology in Kansas City, Mo., and an ordained elder in the United Methodist Church. His
recent studies examine the role that the experience of the Roman imperial world plays in
interpreting the gospel.
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Rev. Sarah Carpenter-Vascik was raised in a
pre Vatican II Catholic household, but left the Roman Catholic Church in 1966. She was
ordained in the United Church of Christ in 1996, but is not affiliated with any denomination
at the current time. She is a Biomedical Engineering Technician at the University of Vermont,
where she transitioned male to female in 2005. Reverend Carpenter is also a transgender
activist, providing training on transgender issues in education and the workplace, both on
and off campus and is working on a GLBT guide to the Bible.
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Dr. Valerie Bridgeman is
associate professor of Hebrew Bible and Homiletics at Memphis Theological Seminary. She also
is founding director of the seminary's Return Beat Theology and Arts Institute. She is
general editor of Africana worship resources for The United Methodist Church. Her research
and writing interests are in theprophets, with particular interest in Womanist
hermeneutics and cultural criticism.
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Rev. Dr. Miguel A. De La Torre
is associate professor of Social Ethics at Iliff School of Theology
and director of Iliff's Justice and Peace Institute in Denver. He has published more than 12
books, including the award-winning Reading the Bible from the Margins (2002),
Doing Christian Ethics from the Margins (2004) and Santería: The Beliefs
and Rituals of a Growing Religion in America (2003). He has also published several
articles, chapters in books and encyclopedia/dictionary entries. He has recently published
A Lily Among the Thorns: Imagining a New Christian Sexuality.
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Rev. Dr. Marvin Ellison is professor
of Christian ethics at Bangor Theological Seminary and an ordained Presbyterian minister. His
publications include Same-Sex Marriage?: A Christian Ethical Analysis (2004);
Body and Soul: Rethinking Sexuality as Justice-Love, edited with Sylvia
Thorson-Smith (2003); and Erotic Justice: A Liberating Ethic of Sexuality (1996). He
has published numerous essays on same-sex marriage, gender justice in Protestant Christianity
and changing patterns of family life. Ellison is an out gay man and co-chair of Maine’s
Religious Coalition Against Discrimination, a network of interfaith leaders engaged in
education and advocacy for the full rights of LBGT persons.
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Rev. Dr. Holly Hearon is assistant professor of New
Testament at Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis. She is a member of the Society
of Biblical Literature and Catholic Biblical Association and is currently serving as
president of the Midwest Society of Biblical Literature. Her research interests are Christian
origins within Formative Judaism, women in the early church and the study of oral narrative
and social memory in relation to the biblical text. She is also a minister in the
Presbyterian Church (USA). She is an out lesbian who teaches New Testament and Greek at
Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis, IN. She is the author of The Mary
Magdalene Tradition: Witness and Counter-Witness in Early Christian Communities, and a
contributor to the Queer Bible Commentary. |
Rev. Dr. Ronald E. Hopson holds a joint appointment in the
department of psychology and the school of divinity at Howard University, Washington, DC. He
is a clinical psychologist and ordained minister. He is currently working on advancing
psychologically-informed body-friendly theologies in the Black church.
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Rev. Dr. Norman J. Kansfield
is a conservative Calvinist theologian who lost his job as a seminary president after he
presided at the marriage of his daughter to another woman. He is convinced that the
Christian church needs to recover awareness that God changes God’s mind (as in the story of
Jonah). Such awareness makes our current task one of keeping up with God as God calls a
wondrous variety of persons into the fellowship of God’s people. Norm currently serves as
senior scholar in residence at Drew University. He and Mary Klein Kansfield have three
children: Ann and Jennifer, who serve as pastors in Brooklyn, NY, and John, who is doing
graduate study in architecture in Tempe, AZ.
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Dr. Tat-siong Benny Liew is associate professor of New
Testament at Pacific School of Religion. He is the author of Politics of Parousia:
Reading Mark Inter(con)textually (1999) and guest editor of the Semeia volume
on "The Bible in Asian America" (2002). He is interested and invested in the issue
of sexual justice and has written several articles on this particular issue in connection
with the practice of biblical interpretation.
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Rev. Phyllis V. Pennese is
the founding and senior pastor of Pillar of Love Fellowship Church, Chicago, which is a new
church start affiliated with Refuge Ministries and a member of The Fellowship. She also
serves as chaplain for Plymouth Place, a retirement community affiliated with the UCC. Her
distinctive achievements include the 2004 recipient of the G. Campbell Morgan Preaching Award
from Chicago Theological Seminary and selection in 1991 by Chicago Women in Philanthropy as
one of “Chicago’s Women Leaders.” She is the devoted partner of ten years to Vickie R. Sides.
Together they are the grateful parents to their son, Brandon K.T. Sides. |
Rev. Dr. Sandra H. Polaski is a New Testament scholar.
She has published numerous works, including A Feminist Introduction to Paul. She was
ordained by Glendale Baptist Church in Nashville, Tenn., and has been active in Baptist
life. |
Rev. Dr. Christine M. Smith is professor of Preaching at United
Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities. Her research and teaching interests include:
preaching and social justice from ethnic, cultural perspectives, celebrating and proclaiming
resurrection, and LGBT studies. She has published widely on preaching and social justice,
including Risking the Terror: Resurrection in this Life (2001).
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Dr. Ken Stone is professor of Bible, Culture and
Hermeneutics and director of the Ph.D. program at Chicago Theological Seminary. He is the
author of numerous books and articles, including Practicing Safer Texts: Food, Sex and
Bible in Queer Perspective (2005) and Sex, Honor and Power in the Deuteronomistic
History (1996). He is also the editor of Queer Commentary and the Hebrew Bible
(2001). The winner of a Lambda Literary Award, Stone focuses much of his research and writing
on the relationship between biblical interpretation and matters of gender and sexuality. His
other research and teaching interests include interdisciplinary approaches to biblical
interpretation, neglected areas of the canon and ways of rethinking biblical theology in the
contemporary world.
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Rev. Dr. Linda E. Thomas is professor of
theology and anthropology at Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago. Thomas’ research
into the cultural significance of theology and community has taken her to South Africa; Peru;
Cuba; and the former Soviet Union provinces of Russia, Kiev and Leningrad. She has published
numerous works including Under the Canopy: Ritual Process and Spiritual Resilience in
South Africa. In addition, she has contributed articles and book reviews to numerous
journals, including The Journal of Religious Thought, The Journal of Black
Theology in South Africa and The Journal of Supervision and Training in
Ministry. She has pastored congregations in White Plains and Brooklyn, N.Y.
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Rev. Dr. Mona West is the senior pastor of Church of the
Trinity, Metropolitan Community Church, in Sarasota, Fla. Originally ordained in the Southern
Baptist denomination in 1987, she transferred her credentials to MCC in 1992. She holds a M.
Div. and a Ph.D. in Old Testament/Hebrew Bible from Southern Seminary in Louisville, Ky. West
is the author of Take Back the Word: A Queer Reading of the Bible from the Pilgrim
Press. She is one of four editors for the recently published collection The Queer Bible
Commentary, by SCM Press.
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Rev. Dr. Judith Hoch Wray is an out lesbian biblical
scholar, teacher and preacher. An activist for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
people in the church for over 25 years, her diverse writings reflect her passion for
preaching, for the New Testament, for the church and for justice action informed by feminist
and queer theology. She is director of the Faith Empowerment Institute and pastoral associate
at Park Avenue Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in New York City.
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