Читать книгу Reflections on the Psalms - Steven Croft - Страница 5
About the authors
ОглавлениеIan Adams is a poet, writer, photographer and artist. He is the creator of the daily Morning Bell, author of Unfurling:poems, Running Over Rocks: spiritual practices to transform tough times and Cave Refectory Road: monastic rhythms for contemporary living. Ian is an Anglican priest, director of StillPoint, co-founder of Beloved Life and Spirituality Adviser for CMS. info: www.about.me/ianadams
Christopher Cocksworth is the Bishop of Coventry. He read Theology at the University of Manchester. After teaching in secondary education, he trained for ordination and pursued doctoral studies, serving in parochial and chaplaincy ministry and in theological education, latterly as Principal of Ridley Hall, Cambridge.
Joanna Collicutt is the Karl Jaspers Lecturer in Psychology and Spirituality at Ripon College Cuddesdon and Advisor on the Spiritual Care of Older People for Oxford Diocese. Her professional background is in clinical psychology, but her current area of academic interest is psychology of religion and, in particular, psychological approaches to reading the Bible. She also ministers in a West Oxfordshire parish.
Gillian Cooper is a writer, teacher, and Old Testament enthusiast. She has previously worked as a theological educator, a cathedral verger, and an administrator. She has recently moved to London, but still escapes whenever she can to the windswept beaches of Norfolk and Orkney.
Steven Croft is the Bishop of Sheffield. He is the author of a number of books including Jesus People: what next for the church? and The Advent Calendar, a novel for children and adults, and a co-author of Pilgrim: a course for the Christian journey.
Paula Gooder is Theologian in Residence for the Bible Society. She is a writer and lecturer in biblical studies, author of a number of books including Journey to the Empty Tomb, The Meaning is in the Waiting and Heaven, and a co-author of the Pilgrim course. She is also a Reader in the Church of England.
Peter Graystone works for Church Army, where he oversees pioneering projects that take the Good News way beyond the walls of a church to profoundly unchurched people. One of those locations is the internet, and he edits Christianity.org.uk, which gives free, confidential, reliable information about the Christian faith. He is a Church Times columnist and theatre reviewer.
Malcolm Guite, the Chaplain of Girton College, Cambridge, is a poet and singer–songwriter, and is the author of What do Christians Believe? (Granta 2006), Faith, Hope and Poetry (Ashgate 2010), Sounding the Seasons: Seventy Sonnets for the Christian Year (Canterbury 2012), The Singing Bowl (Canterbury 2013) and Word in the Wilderness (Canterbury 2014).
Helen-Ann Hartley is the 7th Bishop of Waikato in the Diocese of Waikato and Taranaki, New Zealand. Prior to her consecration, Helen-Ann was Dean at the College of St John the Evangelist in Auckland, New Zealand. She was ordained deacon and priest in the Diocese of Oxford and served as Director of Biblical Studies at Ripon College Cuddesdon prior to her move to New Zealand in 2012.
Barbara Mosse is a writer and retired Anglican priest. She was a lecturer on the MA in Christian Spirituality at Sarum College, Salisbury. Earlier ministerial posts included some parish work, alongside chaplaincy experience in prison, university, community mental health and hospital. She is the author of The Treasures of Darkness (Canterbury 2003), Encircling the Christian Year (BRF 2012) and Welcoming the Way of the Cross (BRF 2013).
Mark Oakley is Canon Chancellor of St Paul’s Cathedral. A former Chaplain to the Bishop of London and Rector of St Paul’s, Covent Garden, he is also the author of The Collage of God (2001) and various anthologies, including Readings for Funerals (2015), articles and reviews, usually in the areas of faith, poetry and literature. He is Visiting Lecturer in the department of Theology and Religious Studies at King’s College London.
Martyn Percy is the Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, one of the University of Oxford’s largest colleges, as well as the Cathedral Church of the diocese of Oxford. From 2004 to 2014 he was Principal of Ripon College, Cuddesdon. Prior to that he was Director of the Lincoln Theological Institute and has also been Chaplain and Director of Studies at Christ’s College, Cambridge.
John Pritchard has recently retired as Bishop of Oxford. Prior to that he has been Bishop of Jarrow, Archdeacon of Canterbury and Warden of Cranmer Hall, Durham. His only ambition was to be a vicar, which he was in Taunton for eight happy years. He enjoys armchair sport, walking, reading, music, theatre and recovering.
Ben Quash has been Professor of Christianity and the Arts at King’s College London since 2007, and is Director of the Centre for Arts and the Sacred at King’s (ASK). Prior to that he was Dean and Fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge. He runs a collaborative MA in Christianity and the Arts with the National Gallery in London, and is also Canon Theologian of both Coventry and Bradford Cathedrals.
John Sentamu practised Law both at the Bar and at the Bench in Uganda before he came to the UK in 1974. He was ordained priest in 1979, and was appointed Bishop for Stepney in 1996, Bishop for Birmingham in 2002 and Archbishop of York in 2005. He is Primate of England and Metropolitan, a member of the House of Lords and a Privy Councillor.
Angela Tilby is a Canon of Christ Church, Oxford and is Continuing Ministerial Development Adviser for the Diocese of Oxford. Prior to that she has been Vice-Principal of Westcott House, Cambridge and a senior producer at the BBC, where she made several acclaimed television programmes and series.
Lucy Winkett is Rector of St James’s Church, Piccadilly. She contributes regularly to Radio 4’s Thought for the Day and is the author of Our Sound is our Wound (Continuum 2010). She combines parish ministry with chairing an educational trust and running an all-through Church of England Academy, including a project for children on the autistic spectrum. Until 2010, she was Canon Precentor of St Paul’s Cathedral.
Jeremy Worthen is a priest in the Church of England and is currently the Secretary for Ecumenical Relations and Theology at the Council for Christian Unity. He previously worked in theological education and has written on a range of subjects, including Jewish–Christian relations. His most recent book is Responding to God’s Call (Canterbury Press 2012).