Featured Speakers
Presenter Information
Richard Muller | Richard Muller holds a Ph.D. from Duke University and currently serves as the P.J. Zondervan Professor of Historical Theology at Calvin Seminary. Dr. Muller is the author of: The Unaccommodated Calvin; After Calvin: Studies in the Development of a Theological Tradition; Post-Reformation Reformed Dogmatics (four volumes); God, Creation and Providence in the Thought of Jacob Arminius; Christ and the Decree; Dictionary of Latin and Greek Theological Terms; and The Study of Theology. |
Keith Stanglin
| Keith Stanglin received his Ph.D. from Calvin Theological Seminary, where his focus was Reformation and Post-Reformation Historical Theology. He completed part of his dissertation research at Universiteit Leiden in The Netherlands in 2004. Dr. Stanglin currently serves as an associate professor of Bible and Historical Theology at Harding University in Arkansas, where he also completed his M.Div. in 2001. Dr. Stanglin has published several books, including: Arminius: Theologian of Grace (Co-authored with Tom McCall), The Missing Public Disputations of Jacobus Arminius: Introduction, Text, and Notes (2010), Arminius, Arminianism, and Europe: Jacobus Arminius (1559/60-1609) (2009, co-authored with Th. Marius van Leeuwen and Marijke Tolsma), and Arminius on the Assurance of Salvation: The Context, Roots, and Shape of the Leiden Debate, 1603-1609 (2007) |
Stephen Gunter
| Stephen Gunter received his M. Div. from the Nazarene Theological Seminary and his Ph.D. from the University of Leiden, The Netherlands. He is currently a Research Professor of Evangelism and Wesleyan Studies at Duke University, where he also serves as the Asssociate Dean for Administration. His publications include: The Limits of Love Divine (1989), Wesley and the Quadrilateral (Co-author, 1997), Resurrection Knowledge (1999), The Quotable Mr. Wesley (1999 & 2002), John Wesley and The Netherlands (Co-author, 2002) and Considering the Great Commission (Co-editor and contributor, 2004). |
Jeremy Bangs
| Jeremy Bangs was born in Oregon but has lived in Leiden, The Netherlands, for nearly 30 years. After study at the University of Chicago he completed his degree work at the University of Leiden (Ph.D., 1976). He has published a variety of books and articles on Dutch art and architecture and Dutch and American history. Dr. Bangs is the Director of the Leiden American Pilgrim Museum, which he founded in 1997. |
Bruce McCormack
| Dr. Bruce McCormack is a professor of Systematic Theology at Princeton, Pasadena College alum, and notable Barth scholar. He earned his Ph.D. from Princeton Theological Seminary and also holds an M.Div. from Nazarene Theological Seminary and an honorary doctorate of theology from the Friedrich Schiller Universitat in Jena, Germany. A Presbyterian, McCormack is interested in the history of modern theology, from Schleiermacher and Hegel through Karl Barth. He is a member of the General Assembly committee commissioned to write a new catechism for the Presbyterian Church (USA) and has been a member of the panel on doctrine for the Church of Scotland. A member of the Karl Barth-Stiftung in Basel, Switerzland, he is North American editor of the Zeitschrift fuer Dialektische Theologie, published in Holland.
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