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  • Contributors

Zaid AlBhrawi is a landscape photographer who lives in Jordan. photography is imagining what could the eye sees of the beauty in God's creation. Zaidalbhrawio@gmail.com.

Tori Anderson-Lloyd (Moo Px) Since getting my first camera at the age of 11; my photography has always been about capturing positive images, ranging from skydiving, wild flowers, Icelandic landscapes and contemporary architecture to name but a few subjects. Check out my visual journey at www.moo-px.com. tanderzell@gmail.com.

Douglas E. Christie is Professor and Chair in the Department of Theological Studies at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. He is the author of The Word in The Desert: Scripture and the Quest for Holiness in Early Christian Monasticism (Oxford), The Blue Sapphire of the Mind: Note for a Contemplative Ecology (Oxford), and is the founding editor of Spiritus. He is currently writing a book on the idea of mystical darkness and the contemporary sense of exile, loss and emptiness.

Louis Dachsel is a Photographer specialized in Architecture, Street, Portrait and Landscape. Instagram: @LouisDachsel.

Lisa E. Dahill is Associate Professor of Religion at California Lutheran University, Thousand Oaks, CA, and a past President of the Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality.

Miriam Díaz-Gilbert is ABD in Christian Spirituality from LaSalle University, where she earned her MA in Theology & Ministry and was inducted into Theta Alpha Kappa. She has been running ultramarathons fourteen years. She recently completed her 23rd ultra and 9th 50-mile ultra endurance run. She currently teaches Spirituality & Healing at Rowan University. As an adjunct professor at Neumann University and Manor College, she taught theology and religious studies. She is also working on her memoir—Come What May; I Want to Run. The title comes from 2 Samuel 18:23.miriam.diazgilbert@gmail.com.

John G. Flett is associate professor of missiology and intercultural theology at Pilgrim Theological College, Melbourne, Privatedozent at the Kirchliche Hochschule Wuppertal/Bethal, and Stellvertretender Institutsleiter am Institut für Interkulturelle Theologie und Interreligiöse Studien, Wuppertal. John, [End Page 288] originally from New Zealand, has lived and taught in the USA, the United Kingdom, South Korea, Romania, Germany, the DRC, and Australia. His PhD from Princeton Theological Seminary examined the history and theology of missio Dei and was published as The Witness of God (Eerdmans, 2010). His Habilitationschrift, undertaken at the Kirchliche Hochschule Wuppertal/ Bethel, developed a critical account the church's apostolicity and its continuity across cultures and was published as Apostolicity: The Ecumenical Question in World Christian Perspective (IVP Academic, 2016). He is currently developing a text on how the German church understood the relationship between the Christian gospel and culture during the twentieth century and is a minister of the Word in the Uniting Church in Australia. He is on twitter: @Flettjohn

Jane Foulcher is an Anglican priest and Deputy Director of St. Mark's National Theological Centre, Canberra, Australia. She teaches in the School of Theology, Charles Sturt University and is a member of its Public and Contextual Theology Research Centre. She is the author of Reclaiming Humility: Four Studies in the Monastic Tradition (2015). jfoulcher@csu.edu.au.

Nathan Garcia is a PhD student in Christian Spirituality at the Oblate School of Theology. His areas of study are psychospirituality and theological anthropology.

Rebecca Giselbrecht, is Director of the Center for the Academic Study of Christian Spirituality at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, Senior Research Associate and Member of the Teaching Staff at the Institute for Old Catholic Theology at the University of Bern, Switzerland, and Affiliate Assistant Professor of the History of Christianity and Spirituality at Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, California.

Amy Greer is a pianist and teacher living in New Mexico. Her essays on pedagogy and practicing have appeared in American Music Teacher, Clavier Companion, and other journals. She writes a blog about practicing (and teaching others to practice) at www.tenthousandstars.net.

Malcolm Guite, poetpriest, is Chaplain and Supernumerary Fellow of Girton College, Cambridge, and teaches at the Faculty of Divinity at the University of Cambridge. His recent books include Love, Remember, Mariner (a spiritual biography of S. T. Coleridge), Parable and Paradox, The Singing Bowl, and Sounding the Seasons...

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