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  • Contributor Notes

Joshua R. Brotherton recently completed his PhD in systematic theology with a minor in historical theology from The Catholic University of America, defending a dissertation concerning the theodramatic eschatology of Hans Urs von Balthasar. He has published numerous articles in academic journals of philosophy and theology. He earned an MA in theology from the Franciscan University of Steubenville and an MA in philosophy from the University of Dallas. He currently teaches Christian Ethics at Loyola University Maryland as well as an undergraduate eschatology course at The Catholic University of America.

Vladimir de Beer is a South African currently living in the United Kingdom. His master’s dissertation focussed on the ontology of John Scottus Eriugena, while his doctoral thesis, “From Logos to Bios,” dealt with Hellenic philosophy and its implications for evolutionary biology. All his degrees were obtained through correspondence studies at the University of South Africa, while working in a variety of occupations. A number of his articles on the interaction between Hellenic philosophy and Patristic theology have been published in peer-reviewed journals. As a member of the Russian Orthodox Church in the British Isles, he has also written articles on Orthodox theology and history for various publications and websites. [End Page 172]

H. Wendell Howard is professor emeritus of English at St. John Fisher College in Rochester, New York. He is also retired as a choral conductor, a forty-year career that he began after receiving a diploma in voice from the Juilliard School of Music. He earned his PhD in English and music from the University of Minnesota. He has published over 150 articles, poems, and chapters in books, and his work has appeared a dozen times in the pages of Logos.

Nathan Kilpatrick is associate professor of English in the Department of Language and Literature at the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota. He completed his doctoral work at Baylor University, and his research focuses on post-Vatican II American Catholic literature.

Brandon L. Morgan is a doctoral student in theology and ethics at Baylor University. He has published several articles on both ancient and modern theology concerning such thinkers as St. Augustine, Karl Barth, and Reinhold Niebuhr. His research interests include theological anthropology, ordinary language philosophy, ecological theology, political theology, and Christian social ethics.

Lance Byron Richey is dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences and professor of theology at the University of Saint Francis in Fort Wayne, Indiana. He received his doctorate in philosophy from Marquette University in 1995 and a second in biblical theology from Marquette in 2004. In addition to multiple peer-reviewed articles and a monograph on the Gospel of John, he recently edited and annotated the 75th anniversary edition of Dorothy Day’s House of Hospitality (Huntington, IN: Our Sunday Visitor, 2015).

Christine Schintgen is assistant professor of literature at Our Lady Seat of Wisdom Academy in Barry’s Bay, Ontario, Canada. [End Page 173] She received her doctorate from the University of Oxford. Her research interests include crime and prisons in Victorian literature, and the relationship between faith and literature.

Michele M. Schumacher is a mother of four, a doctor in sacred theology, and a private docent in the moral theology and ethics department at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. She has written extensively on feminism and the new feminism, sexual ethics, marital spirituality, and redemption. She is the author of A Theological Anthropology: Adrienne von Speyr, Hans Urs von Balthasar, and St. Thomas Aquinas in Dialogue (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2014), and she is the editor and contributing author of Women in Christ: Towards a New Feminism (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2004). [End Page 174]

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