Charles Amarkwei is a Lecturer in Systematic Theology, Ethics and Philosophy at the Trinity Theological Seminary, Ghana. He has a BSc in Natural Resources Management (knust, Kumasi), a bd (Trinity, Legon), a ThM (Hanil, Jeonbuk, South Korea), and PhD (Hanil, Jeonbuk, South Korea). His research interests concern interpreting the Christian faith and ethics in the contemporary world in general and from his context in Africa. Dr Amarkwei is the author of Paul Tillich and His Method of Paradoxical Correlation: Forging a New Way for Science and Theology Relations (Wipf and Stock, 2020) and An Introduction to Christian Theology and the Kpelelogical Foundations of Christian Theology (Wipf and Stock, 2021). He is a minister of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana.
Robin Gill is Emeritus Professor of Applied Theology at the University of Kent, UK. He was the first holder of both the Michael Ramsey Chair of Theology at the University of Kent and the William Leech Research Chair at the University of Newcastle, UK. His many books include: Sociological Theology (Ashgate, 3 volumes, 2012–13); Moral Passion and Christian Ethics(Cambridge University Press, 2017); and Human Perfection, Transfiguration and Christian Ethics (Cambridge University Press, 2024). He is the Editor of Theology.
Edwin Chr. van Driel is Directors’ Bicentennial Professor of Theology at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, Pittsburgh, USA. He is the author of: Incarnation Anyway: Arguments for Supralapsarian Christology (2006); Rethinking Paul: Protestant Theology and Pauline Exegesis (2021); and the editor of What Is Jesus Doing? God’s Activity in the Life and Work of the Church (2020) and of The T&T Clark Handbook of Election (2023). He currently researches on ecclesiology for a post-Christian world. He is the Convener of the International Consultation on Ecclesial Futures.
Edda Wolff serves as a priest within the Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe and is presently engaged as a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute for Old Catholic Theology at the University of Bern, Switzerland. They studied philosophy and theology in Tübingen, Rome and Freiburg and received their doctoral degree from the University of Durham, UK, while training for ordained ministry at Westcott House, Cambridge, UK. Their current project focuses on ‘Negative Work as a Lens for Ecclesiology’. Their research interests include Negative Theology, Hermeneutics, Liturgy, and Political Theology.
Jeremy Worthen is the Team Rector of Ashford Town Parish in the Diocese of Canterbury and a Research Fellow at St Augustine’s College of Theology. He previously served as the Church of England’s Secretary for Ecumenical Relations and Theology, where his responsibilities included participation in national ecumenical dialogues and support for the work of the Faith and Order Commission. Before that, he was the Principal at the South East Institute for Theological Education. His publications include Responding to God’s Call: Christian Formation Today(Canterbury Press, 2012) and The Internal Foe: Judaism and Anti-Judaism in the Shaping of Christian Theology (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009).
