Rosen Dimov has a PhD in legal pluralism, inspired by his involvement in interfaith dialogue. Since 2011 he has served as a United Religions Initiative Youth Ambassador and has led a series of training sessions and projects in Bulgaria and abroad involving people from various religions. His other passions in life include youth work, the arts, social entrepeneurship, and sustainable development. He has worked for European Union institutions as one of the youngest staff members and now is the managing director of European Alternatives and president of the Australia-based International Young Professionals Foundation. The latter role enabled him to coordinate the Global Youth Service Days in 2013 for Middle Eastern and Latin America URI cooperation circles.
Jan Diehm
Jan Diehm is the Infographics editor of The Huffington Post. She previously worked as a designer for the Center for American Progress, the Hartford Courant and the Baltimore Sun. She studied journalism at Western Kentucky University.
Mark Diamond
Rabbi Mark S. Diamond is executive vice president of the Board of Rabbis of Southern California, a multi-denominational organization of 330 rabbis. Rabbi Diamond is a senior rabbinic fellow of the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem and serves on the Ethics Resource Committee of Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles. The rabbi is president of the Los Angeles Council of Religious Leaders and led the Council's February 2005 interfaith trip to Israel. In April 2006, he brought forty African Methodist Episcopal pastors, rabbis, synagogue and church members on a relief mission to rebuild homes and lives devastated by Hurricane Katrina. Rabbi Diamond headed an interreligious delegation of Christian, Jewish and Muslim leaders on a January 2008 mission to the Vatican and Israel, highlighted by an audience with Pope Benedict XVI.
Benjamin DeVan
Benjamin B. DeVan has taught religion, philosophy, and African American literature at North Carolina Central University, Peace College, and a January term mini-course at MIT titled, “Religion: Bringing the World Together, or Tearing the World Apart?” He completed his MA in Counseling at Asbury Theological Seminary, his MDiv at Duke University, a ThM at Harvard in World Religions with a thesis on evangelical Christians and Islam, and is now a doctoral candidate at Durham University, UK, writing a dissertation on the New Atheism. Ben writes for State of Formation and the Journal of Comparative Theology.
Gaea Denker
Gaea Denker is the Communications Manager for the United Religions Initiative, a global grassroots interfaith network that cultivates peace and justice by engaging people to bridge religious and cultural differences and work together for the good of their communities and the world. In her daily work, Gaea encounters incredibly inspiring stories of people working for peace, in over a hundred different countries, despite terrible conditions of violence, hatred, and fear. She loves being able to tell these peacebuilders’ stories to a global audience so that all people in the world can know not to give up hope, and that peace is possible.
Rev. Doris Davis
Rev. Doris Davis is a 77-year-old Interfaith minister and sacred activist who, in the spirit of Peace Pilgrim, completed a 6 ½ month mother-daughter cross-country walkabout in 2011. Doris and her actor/filmmaker daughter Viveka, made their way across America from Oceanside, California to Washington D.C. They were disseminating the peace pledge developed by the Culver City Interfaith Alliance as they focused the attention of people they met and walked with along the way by “imagining a world where women are equally valued decision-makers in partnership with men worldwide.” A magna cum laude graduate of UC Berkeley in Dramatic Literature with a Masters Degree in Dance from UCLA, she is the mother of four and grandmother of two. She is co-chair of the Culver City Area Interfaith Alliance, and chaplain emeritus of the Southern California Committee for A Parliament of the World’s Religions. She is a longtime student of A Course In Miracles and the teachings of the Ascended Masters. She calls herself a “freelance mystic” with Christian roots.
Claire Davis
Claire Davis has been engaged in the non-profit sector in South and Central America and the United States for the past 20 years, working in the fields of communication, grant writing and public relations for non-profits. She is currentlya graduate student in intercultural and international communication in Canada. Her thesis will focus on the reconfigurations and transformations occurring in religious movements due to the integration of digital technology.
Greg Damhorst
Greg Damhorst studied physics as an undergraduate and now is an MD/PhD student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he pursues a doctorate in bioengineering developing a portable, low-cost, point-of-care device for HIV/AIDS diagnosis in resource-limited settings.
Greg has been a leader with Interfaith in Action, the University of Illinois’ premier student interfaith organization, since early 2007. Motivated by Jesus’ compassion and ministry of healing, Greg is pursuing a career at the intersection of medicine, technology and service, and he is interested in the role interfaith cooperation will play in the effort to bring health to the people who need it most.
Greg is also a co-founder of Faith Line Protestants, a blog that explores Christian participation in the interfaith movement, especially at the intersection of evangelism and common action for the common good.
David Crumm
David Crumm is known nationwide as a top journalist covering religion, spirituality and cross-cultural issues. In nearly 40 years of journalism, Crumm has reported from the U.S., the Middle East, Rome, Canterbury and Asia, compiling a body of work that has been honored with a long list of awards and fellowships. Among the most important, Crumm has won six of the annual Wilbur awards for the best column on religion in a major newspaper. Among his fellowships, he has traveled and worked with the Washington D.C.-based East-West Center, focusing on coverage of Asia, as well as the University of Michigan Knight-Wallace Fellowship for mid-career research.
John Crossin
John W. Crossin, OSFS, is a Roman Catholic moral theologian and ethicist. He was named executive director of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB’s) Secretariat for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs in 2011. Father Crossin served most recently as executive director of the Washington Theological Consortium, 1998-2011. He holds a Ph.D. in Moral Theology and master’s degrees in Psychology andTheology from The Catholic University of America. He is past president of the North American Academy of Ecumenists and the Thomas More Society of Washington. He is widely published in theological journals and is author of the following books: Everyday Virtues (2014); Walking in Virtue: Moral Decisions and Spiritual Growth in Daily Life (1997); Friendship: The Key to Spiritual Growth; and What Are They Saying About Virtue? (2014).
David Cramer
David C. Cramer is a doctoral student and teaching assistant in the Department of Religion at Baylor University. Having grown up in an evangelical context, his first serious encounter with religious pluralism was through reading and subsequently writing his master’s thesis on the religious epistemology of John Hick while at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, where he received his M.Div. and M.A. in philosophy of religion. For three years David taught in the Religion and Philosophy Department at Bethel College, Indiana, before beginning his studies at Baylor. He has published articles on religious pluralism, nonviolence, gender equality, and the theological ethics of John Howard Yoder in various academic journals and is co-editor of the recent volume, The Activist Impulse: Essays on the Intersection of Evangelicalism and Anabaptism (Pickwick, 2012). David, his wife Andrea, and their two young children are actively involved in Hope Fellowship, a Mennonite faith community in Waco, Texas.
Harriet Crabtree
Harriet Crabtree is the director of the Inter Faith Network for the UK. Before coming to work for IFN in 1990, Dr. Crabtree studied and worked in the United States, starting in 1981, living at the Center for the Study of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School, where she received her masters and doctorate in theology.
T. Thorn Coyle
T. Thorn Coyle is a San Francisco-based author and teacher who began in the Feri Tradition and the Reclaiming Tradition, but now works and teaches within her own “Morningstar” practice and “mystery school.”
Coyle is author of Evolutionary Witchcraft (2004), which offers exercises and meditations from the Feri Tradition as tools for personal growth and empowerment. She has also recorded two Pagan rock CDs, Face of a New Day and Give us a Kiss!, as well as an instructional DVD, Devotional Dance. With Sharon Knight, she wrote and recorded two albums of pagan devotional music, Songs for the Waning Year: A Collection of Chants to Celebrate the Dark Time of the Year and Songs for the Strengthening Sun: A Collection of Chants to Celebrate the Return of the Sun. She also contributed to the Pandemonaeon album Dangerous Beauty.
In 2008, Coyle began producing a series of podcasts called “Elemental Castings“ wherein she interviews practitioners of a variety of magical and mystical traditions on their study and work with the classical elements of Air, Fire, Water, Earth, and Aether (or Spirit).
Coyle’s second book, Kissing the Limitless: Deep Magic and the Great Work of Transforming Yourself and the World, was released on February 10, 2009.
Benjamin Corey
Benjamin L. Corey is a writer, speaker, and avid tattoo collector, though even he forgets that fact since he lives in Maine and is bundled up for 11 months out of the year. He grew up in conservative evangelicalism, danced with fundamentalism, and found his home in Anabaptism. He holds a M.A. in Theology and a M.A. in World Missions from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary and is completing his doctorate at Fuller Seminary in the field of missiology, which combines theology and anthropology. Essentially, a missiologist studies the relationship between the message of Jesus and particular cultures.
In addition to writing for Patheos Progressive Christian, Ben is a contributor to Jim Wallis’ blog, God’s Politics on Sojourners, as well as Red Letter Christians, Evangelicals for Social Action, Mennonite World Review, and The Good Men Project. His first book, Undiluted: Rediscovering the Radical Message of Jesus, hit the stores on August 19, 2014.
Anya Cordell
Anya Cordell is a speaker, writer, and activist. She is the recipient of the 2010 Spirit of Anne Frank Award, bestowed by The Anne Frank Center USA, and author of RACE: An OPEN & SHUT Case, which unravels presumptions of what we call “race,” named among the “books to change your life” by N’Digo Magazine. Anya, who is Jewish, founded The Campaign for Collateral Compassion, and has passionately countered post-9/11 hate-backlash against Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, and others. Her programs for children through adults tackle “appearance-ism”, xenophobia, Islamophobia, and all stereotyping. See www.Appearance-ism.com.
Gail Collins-Ranadive
Rev. Gail Collins-Ranadive, MA (Peace Studies), MFA (Creative Writing), MDiv, is the author of five books plus workshops, poems, essays, and pieces of literary non-fiction. An ordained Unitarian Universalist minister, she has retired from a career in Interim Ministry and has returned to her primary passion of writing. Her interfaith interest began when she was 19 and, as a student nurse, she met an intern from India. Upon marrying him, she began studying world religions as presented by Huston Smith in The Religions of Man (1958), in particular the Hinduism of her in-laws in India. Her own religious path has been deeply informed by the insights of Joseph Campbell in Myths to Live By (1972), especially with his references to the psychology of Carl Jung. Her spirituality is grounded in the natural world, as reflected in the writings of the Unitarian transcendentalists, especially Emerson. In 1995, she heard Father Thomas Berry say “Put the Bible on the shelf and study Nature.” Since then, her life/work has been a conscious response to that challenge. She and her partner spend summers in Denver and winters in Las Vegas, where she connects with the Interfaith Council of Southern Nevada.
John B. Cobb, Jr.
Dr. John B. Cobb, Jr. was born in 1925 to Methodist missionary parents in Kobe, Japan. Impending war brought the family back to the United States in 1940, where John completed high-school. The army assigned him to Japanese language study. He translated Japanese documents and served in the occupation of Japan. On discharge, he studied at the University of Chicago, where he first discovered the profundity of Buddhism. After receiving the PhD from the Divinity School, he taught for three years at Young Harris College in north Georgia. During the first year he was assigned as part-time pastor to a six-church circuit and established a seventh congregation. He taught for five years at Emory University before going to the Claremont School of Theology, where he taught from 1958 to 1990. He was visiting professor at universities in Germany and Japan as well as Chicago, Harvard, and elsewhere in the United States.
A lifelong student of Alfred North Whitehead, Professor Cobb pioneered in bringing ‘process thinking’ to Christian theology. Process theology, among other things, offers clarity and cogency about affirming one’s own faith without making others ‘wrong.’ Professor Cobb co-founded the journal Process Studies and the Center for Process Studies at Claremont. More than 40 books that he has written, edited or co-edited include Christian Faith and Religious Diversity (2002), The Emptying God: A Buddhist-Jewish-Christian Conversation (2005), 9/11 & American Empire: Christians, Jews, and Muslims Speak Out (2006), and, most recently, The Dialogue Comes of Age: Christian Encounters with Other Traditions (2011), reviewed in TIO’s inaugural September 15, 2011 issue.
Philip Clayton
Philip Clayton is the Ingraham Professor at Claremont School of Theology in Claremont, California. Clayton has taught or held research professorships at Williams College, California State University, Harvard University, Cambridge University, and the University of Munich. His research focuses on biological emergence, religion and science, process studies, and contemporary issues in ecology, religion, and ethics. He is the recipient of multiple research grants and international lectureships, as well as the author of numerous books, including The Predicament of Belief: Science, Philosophy, Faith (2011); Religion and Science: The Basics (2011); Transforming Christian Theology: For Church and Society (2009); and In Quest of Freedom: The Emergence of Spirit in the Natural World (2009). He also edited The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Science (2006).
In books and lectures, Clayton works to formulate constructive theological responses to developments in contemporary science and philosophy. He has also been a leading advocate for comparative theology and the internationalization of the science-religion dialogue. As P.I. of the “Science and the Spiritual Quest” program and as Provost of a multi-faith university, he worked to expand these fields to include Muslim and Jewish scholars, the Dharma traditions of India, and the religious traditions of Southeast Asia.
Rev. Dr. Peter Yuichi Clark
Rev. Dr. Peter Yuichi Clark has been a leader in Bay Area hospital chaplaincy for more than fifteen years. After completing his doctorate, he went to Alta Bates Summit Medical Center in Berkeley, California, eventually overseeing two dozen chaplains. Recently he moved to the UCSF Medical Center, one of the world’s great teaching hospitals. Chaplain Clark has been honored within and outside the medical community for his “extraordinary ability to relate to people of all ages, and how quickly he establishes rapport and trust.” He also has an unusual ability to relate to people across racial, cultural and other barriers and enjoys ecumenical and interfaith dialogue. Chaplain Clark teaches pastoral care at the San Francisco Theological Seminary and the American Baptist Seminary of the West. He writes a religious calendar for chaplains called to minister to people of all faiths, published by The Interfaith Observer each month.
Richard Cizik
Richard Cizik formed the New Evangelical Partnership for the Common Good in January 2010 with David Gushee and Steve Martin. For ten years he had served as vice president for governmental affairs of the National Association of Evangelicals, a post he left in 2008. He has been a leader in bringing evangelicals and scientists together in the search for common ground on climate change.
In 2002 Cizik participated in Climate Forum 2002, at Oxford, England, which produced the “Oxford Declaration” on global warming. He was instrumental in creating the Evangelical Climate Initiative, introduced in 2006. In 2005, the New York Times dubbed him the “Earthy Evangelist” for his advocacy on climate change, and in 2008 he was named to Time Magazine’s list of the “Time 100” most influential people. In 2006, Fast Company placed him on its list of “Most Creative Minds.”
Cizik has written more than 100 articles and editorials and is the author and editor of The High Cost of Indifference. He contributed to the landmark document “For the Health of the Nation: An Evangelical Call to Civic Engagement.”