| Building Communities of Compassion The Contributors Wilma Ann Bailey received her Ph.D. in Hebrew Bible from Vanderbilt University. She is author of numerous publications dealing with biblical studies. Bailey is associate professor of Biblical Studies and Religion at Messiah College (Pa.). Cornelius A. Buller received his Ph.D. in theology from McMaster University. He has taught courses in religious studies at several universities and is author of The Unity of Nature and History in Pannenbergs Theology. E. Reginald Good is a consultant in historical research and writing and archival management. He received his Ph.D. in Canadian History from the University of Saskatchewan. Good has written many articles on Mennonite History and is president of the Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario. Keith Graber Miller received his Ph.D. in Ethics and Society from Emory University. He currently serves as associate professor of Bible Religion and Philosophy at Goshen (Ind.) College. He has authored numerous publications, including Wise as Serpents, Innocent as Doves: American Mennonites Engage Washington. Conrad L. Kanagy is assistant professor of sociology at Elizabethtown (Pa.) College. He received his Ph.D. in sociology from the Pennsylvania State University. His publications reflect his research interests in the sociology of religion. Albert N. Keim is professor of history at Eastern Mennonite University (Va.). He is author of numerous articles dealing with Amish and Mennonite history and several books, including The Politics of Conscience: The Historic Peace Churches and America at War, 1917-1955. Joseph J. Kotva, Jr. received his Ph.D. from Fordham University in theology and ethics. He has written The Christian Case for Virtue Ethics as well as numerous articles on ethics. He currently serves as the pastor of the First Mennonite Church in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Donald B. Kraybill serves as provost and professor of sociology and Anabaptist studies at Messiah College (Pa.). Trained in sociology, he has authored many books on Anabaptist groups, including The Riddle of Amish Culture and Mennonite Peacemaking. Steven M. Nolt has written A History of the Amish and co-authored other books as well as scholarly articles related to Mennonite history. His Ph.D. in history is from the University of Notre Dame. John D. Roth is editor of Mennonite Quarterly Review and professor of history, Goshen (Ind.) College, where he also directs the Mennonite Historical Library. Roth is author and editor of numerous publications, including The Letters of the Amish Division. Mary S. Sprunger received her Ph.D. in history from the University of Illinois. Her research and publications focus on the history of the Dutch Mennonites. She has co-authored, with Piet Visser, Menno Simons: Places, Portraits and Progeny and is associate professor of history at Eastern Mennonite University (Va.). Willard M. Swartley is dean and professor of New Testament at the Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary in Elkhart, Indiana, where he has also directed the Institute of Mennonite Studies. Swartley is author of many scholarly articles and books, including Slavery, Sabbath, War, and Women and War and Peace in the New Testament in AWRW II.26.3. Jeni Hiett Umbles research and publications have explored the roles of sixteenth-century Anabaptist women, especially their involvement in suffering and martyrdom. She received her M.A. in Modern European History from Southern Methodist University and her M.Div. from Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary (1998). She is pastor of Southside Fellowship, Elkhart, Indiana.
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