Contributors to Guidelines September to December 2010 issue

Contributors in this issue:

Volker Rabens teaches New Testament at Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany. He is the author of The Holy Spirit and Ethics in Paul: Transformation and Empowering for Religious-Ethical Life.

Andrew Wingate was involved in theological education for 25 years in India and the UK. He moved to Leicester in 2000, and developed the St Philip's Centre for Study and Engagement in a Multi Faith Society. He is also Bishop's Inter Faith Adviser, and a Chaplain to The Queen.

Jane Williams read Theology at Cambridge University before going on to work in theological publishing and education. She now works as a Visiting Lecturer at King's College London, as a Lecturer at the St Paul's Theological Centre, and for Redemptorist Publications.

Jeremy Duff is a vicar in Widnes with a teaching and writing ministry, which has included posts at Liverpool Cathedral and within Oxford University. His writings include Meeting Jesus: Human Responses to a Yearning God (SPCK, 2006) and The Elements of New Testament Greek (CUP, 2005).

Henry Wansbrough OSB is a monk at Ampleforth Abbey in Yorkshire. He is Executive Secretary of the International Commission for Producing an English-Language Lectionary (ICPEL) for the Roman Catholic Church, and lectures frequently across the globe.

Justin Welby is Dean of Liverpool. Previously, as Canon of Coventry Cathedral, he was responsible for Coventry's international ministry of reconciliation. Justin is also the Personal and Ethical Adviser to the UK Association of Corporate Treasurers, and lectures extensively on ethics and finance.

Melissa Jackson recently completed her doctoral work at the University of Oxford. Her thesis was an examination of the intersection of comedy and feminist interpretation in several Old Testament stories. She is a lecturer in Old Testament and Hebrew at Baptist Theological Seminary, Richmond, Virginia, USA.

Chris Tilling is the New Testament Tutor at St Mellitus College and St Paul's Theological Centre, London. His present area of research concerns the apostle Paul's understanding of the identity of Christ.

Robert Mackley read history and theology at Cambridge University before ordination. Fr Robert is currently Assistant Chaplain and Research Student at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. He is a published church historian and a regular columnist and reviewer for the Church Times.

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