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Dr.
Lisa Allen
Assistant
Professor, Worship and Music, Area IV
-B.A., Millsaps College
-B.M., Millsaps College
-M.Div., Candler School of Theology, Emory University
-M.M.Ed., University of Southern Mississippi
-Ph.D., University of Southern Mississippi
Dr. Lisa Allen became a member of the faculty in 2005.
She teaches courses on Christian music and worship.
Prior to coming to ITC,
she
was an associate pastor of Worship and Evangelism at
Kingswood
UMC and
is an ordained elder in the North Georgia Conference of
the United Methodist Church. She has a special interest
in Womanist theology, African American spirituality, and
worship as well as worship and liturgy. Her most
significant publications include “In the Spirit: Worship
in the African-American Tradition” in
Companion to the Africana Worship Book;
“Liturgy, Justice, and the Future of the Back Church”
(forthcoming), The Journal of the Interdenominational
Theological Center; and two book proposals: One
Word: A Guide to Holistic Worship and What
Pastors Wish Musicians Knew/What Musicians Wish Pastors
Knew.
Office: Chapel Bldg. 313
Phone: (404) 527-7730
E-mail:
lallen@itc.edu
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Dr. Margaret
Aymer
Associate
Professor, New Testament, Area I
-B.A., Harvard-Radcliff College
-M.Div., Union Theological Seminary
-M.Phil., Union Theological Seminary
-Ph.D., Union Theological Seminary
Dr. Margaret Aymer teaches courses on the New Testament
and has a special interest in biblical hermeneutics,
particularly how African diasporic communities signify
the Bible as “scripture.” Some of her most significant
publications are “Teaching Christians to ‘Read’:
Theological Education and the Church”; “Empire,
Alter-empire and the Twenty-first Century”; “What Do the
Gospels Say about Sex and the Church?” in Frequently
Asked Questions about Sexuality, the Bible, and the
Church; First Pure, Then Peaceable: Frederick Douglass
Reads James and a forthcoming book, African
American Biblical Interpretation: An Introduction
with co-author, Randall C. Bailey.
Office: Classroom Bldg. 308
Phone: (404) 527-7731
E-mail:
maymer@itc.edu
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Dr. Randall
C. Bailey
Andrew W.
Mellon Professor of Hebrew Bible, Area I
-B.A., Brandeis University
-A.M., University of Chicago
-M.Div., Candler School of Theology, Emory University
-Ph.D., Emory University
Dr. Randall Bailey teaches courses in the Hebrew Bible.
He has a special interest in the Pentateuch, historical
books, the new methods of interpretation. Dr.
Bailey
concentrates on ideological criticism especially as
race, class, gender, sex, and power intersect in the
biblical text. Some of Bailey’s most significant
publications are “Academic Biblical Interpretation among
African Americans in the United States” in
African Americans and the Bible: Sacred Texts and Social
Textures; “The Redemption of YHWH: A Literary
Critical Function of the Songs of Hannah and David”;
“And They Shall Know That I Am YHWH: The P Recasting of
the Plague Narratives in Exodus 7-11”; David in Love
and War: The Pursuit of Power in 2 Samuel 10-12;
Yet with a Steady Beat: Contemporary U.S. Afrocentric
Biblical Interpretation, ed.; and The Recovery of
Black Presence: An Interdisciplinary Exploration:
Essays in Honor of Dr. Charles B. Copher, Jacquelyn
Grant, co-ed.
Office: Classroom Bldg. 308B
Phone: (404) 527-7754
E-mail:
rcbailey@itc.edu
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Dr. Reginaldo Braga
Assistant Professor for Christian Education, Area IV
-B. Th., Seminario Teologico Congregacional
do Recife
-Ed.D., Union Theological Seminary
-ThM., Princeton Theological Seminary
-Ph.D., Columbia University
Dr.
Reginaldo Braga was New Minister for Multicultural
Ministries at West Park Presbyterian Church, New York
City, where his ministry involved the transition from a
mono-ethnic/mono cultural church to become a
multicultural/multiethnic community. Until 1994, Dr.
Braga was also a full-time professor at Seminario
Teologico Congregacional do Recife, Recife, Pernambuco,
Brazil.
Dr. Braga has an interest on /Education and
Multiculturalism, Education and Contemporary Liberation
Theologies, Critical Theories and Christian Education,
Postmodern Philosophies and Education. He specializes in
Freirean Studies.
Publications (the most significant ones – books,
articles, etc.): Multiculturalism as an
Opportunity for Encounter and Transformation Paper
presented at annual meeting of REA – Religious Education
Association, Boston, MA.
Reinventing the Church in Pos-Modernity: The Project of
a Multicultural Church: Learning of a Brazilian in New
York.
Paper presented at Simpósio de Teologia & Pastoral, in
São Paulo, Brazil
The
Church as an Educational Place: Paulo Freire in
Religious Education.
Paper presented at Simpósio de Teologia & Pastoral, in
São Paulo, Brazil.
The
Forgetfulness of Being: Beyond Inclusiveness in the
Presbyterian Church (USA) Paper presented at Presbyterian Welcome's annual meeting.
New York.
Paulo Freire's Critical Pedagogy: Critical Thinking as
Passion for Possibilities Paper presented at annual meeting of APRRE - Association
of Professors and Researchers of Religious Education,
Orlando - Florida.
Office: Classroom Bldg. 205
Phone: (404) 614-6361
E-mail:
rbraga@itc.edu
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Dr. Michael
I.N. Dash
Professor, Ministry and Context, Area IV
-Dip. Theology, University of London
-S.T.M., Christian Theological Seminary, Indianapolis,
IN
-D.Min. Boston University School of Theology
Dr. Michael Dash teaches “Ministry and
Context I and II” and has an interest in congregational
studies. He served as co-director of the ITC Faith
Factor Project 2000 Study of Black Churches, which had
as its focus African American-congregational life and
was published in The Journal of the
Interdenominational Theological Center. His other
research interests are spirituality and spiritual
formation. Dr. Dash’s publications include Hidden
Wholeness: An African American Spirituality for
Individuals and Communities, co-authored with
the late Jonathan Jackson and Stephen C. Rasor; The
Shape of Zion: Leadership and Life in Black Churches,”
a collaborative effort with Christine D. Chapman; and
The Mark of Zion: Congregational Life in Black Churches
with co-author Stephen C. Rasor; “The Evaluation Process
and the Members Voice Project: Perspectives and
Commentary”; and “Learning from the First Years:
Noteworthy Conclusions from the Parish Experience of
Recent Graduate of ATS Schools.”
Office: Classroom Bldg. L-123
Phone: (404) 527-7762
E-mail:
mdash@itc.edu
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Dr. Riggins
R. Earl Jr.
Professor, Ethics and Theology, Area II
-B.A., American Baptist College
-M.Div., Vanderbilt University Divinity School
-Ph.D., Vanderbilt University
Dr. Riggins R. Earl’s primary research is in the area of
the history and the religious moral life of Black
Americans. He teaches courses in ethics; the moral
dimensions of the Civil Rights Movement; the church,
ethics, and public policy; and Black film as a genre of
theological reflection. His significant publications
include Dark Symbols, Obscure Signs: God, Self and
Community in the Slave Mind; Dark Salutations:
Ritual, God, and Greetings in the African American
Community; The Jesus as Lord and Savoir Problem:
Blacks’ Double Consciousness Self-Worth Dilemma
(forthcoming); and current research on the book-length
manuscript: Blacks, the Bible, and the Constitution.
Office: Classroom Bldg. 308
Phone: (404) 527-7728
E-mail:
rearl@itc.edu
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Dr. Mark
Ellingsen
Associate
Professor, Church History, Area II
-B.A., Gettysburg College
-M.Div., Yale Divinity School
-M.A., Yale University
-M.Phil., Yale University
-Ph.D., Yale University
Dr. Mark Ellingsen teaches the core courses, “Church
History I and II,” as well as courses on “Augustine,”
“Martin Luther King Jr. and the Civil Rights Movement,”
and “Reformed Theology.” He has special interest in the
pre-modern era (especially Augustine), Wesley,
religion-science dialogue (including ecology and
spirituality) as well as theological hermeneutics. His
publications include fourteen books and over three
hundred articles. Some of his most recent publications
are Reclaiming Our Roots, Vols. 1 and 2; The
Richness of Augustine: His Contextual and Pastoral
Theology; The Integrity of Biblical Narrative: Story in
Theology and Proclamation; Jesus’ Vision of a Fun, Free
Life, Not Driven By Purpose; and When Did Jesus
Become a Republican? Rescuing Our Country and Our Values
from the Right: Strategies for a Post-Bush America.
Office: Costen Bldg. 208
Phone: (404) 614-6325 / (770) 732-1329 - Home
Email:
markellingsen@aol.com
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Dr.
Jacquelyn Grant
Director,
Black Women in Church and Society and Womanist Scholars
Program, Callaway Professor of Systematic Theology, Area
II
-M.Div. Turner Theological Seminary at ITC
-Ph.D., Union Theological Seminary
Dr.
Jacquelyn Grant teaches courses on theology and Womanist
Studies. Dr. Grant founded the Black Women in Church and
Society Center at the Interdenominational Theological
Center in 1981, and has served as its director since
then. Her publications include White Woman’s Christ,
Black Woman’s Jesus.
Office: BWCS
Center
Phone: (404) 527-5712
E-mail: jgrant@itc.edu
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Dr. Maisha
Handy
Assistant
Professor, Christian Education, Area IV
-B.S., Lincoln University
-M.Div., Emory University
-Ph.D., Emory University
Dr. Maisha Haney was a Womanist Scholar through the
office of Black Women and Society in 2005-2006. She has
a special interest in the research of religious
education and hip-hop culture, as well as Womanist
approaches to religious education. Some of her most
significant writings include “Getting Real” in
Keeping It Real: Working with Today’s Black
Youth; “Fighting the Matrix: Toward a Womanist
Pedagogy for the Black Church,” The Journal of the
Interdenominational Theological Center; and “Christian
Education and Hip-Hop Culture” in Black Church
Studies: An Interdisciplinary Anthology
(forthcoming).
Office: Costen Bldg. 306
Phone: (404) 614-6345
E-mail:
mhandy@itc.edu
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Dr. Marsha
Snulligan-Haney
Professor, Missiology and Religions of the World, Area
III
-B.A., Johnson C. Smith University
-M.R.E., Interdenominational Theological Center
-M.Div., Interdenominational Theological Center
-Th.M., Fuller Theological Seminary
-Ph.D., Fuller Theological Seminary
Dr. Marsha Snulligan-Haney has taught, preached,
lectured, and engaged in theological research and lead
mission group tours in more than thirty countries. She
has an interest in mission studies, ecumenism, and world
Christianity as well as Islam and Christian-Muslim
relations. Of her multiple publications, the most
significant are Evangelism among African American
Presbyterians: Making Plain the Sacred Story; Africentric
Approaches to Christian Ministry: Strengthening Urban
Congregations in African American Communities; Islam
and Protestant African-American Churches: Responses and
Challenges to Religious Pluralism; “The Changing
Nature of Christianity and the Challenge of U.S.-Africa
Mission Partnerships” in Freedom’s Distant Shores:
American Protestants and Post-colonial Alliances with
Africa; and the editorial consultant for the theme
issue of The Journal of the Interdenominational
Theological Center: Health, Wholeness and Spirituality
of the Pastor, writing the introductory article,
“Introducing the Theme: Health, Wholeness and
Spirituality of Pastors.”
Office: Main Classroom Bldg. 300
Phone: (404) 614-6323
E-mail:
mshaney@itc.edu
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Dr.
Wallace Hartsfield
New Homiletic
Theory, Area IV & I
-Ph.D., Emory University
-M.Div., Interdenominational Theological Center
-B.A., University Missouri-Kansas City
Dr.
Hartsfield’s teachings and research interests are:
Hebrew Bible Ethics and Interpretation & New Homiletic
Theory. His dissertation is titled: The Ethical
Function of Deception and Other Forms of Intrigue in the
Jacob Cycle of Stories.
Office: Costen Bldg. 210
Phone: (404) 614-6338
E-mail: wshartsfield@itc.edu
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Dr. Jamal-Dominique
Hopkins
Assistant Professor for New Testament, Area I
-Editor, Journal of the
Interdenominational Theological Center
-B.A., Howard University
-Master of Theology, Fuller Theological
Seminary
-Ph.D., University of Manchester (England)
Dr. Hopkins was an Assistant Professor
of Bible and Theology at Crichton College in Memphis, Tennessee.
He is a consultant for Church Growth and Development, and the
founder of J. D. Institute (www.jdinstitute.org), a public
intellectual institute which engages in social and cultural
thought from a biblical perspective. He is a member of
the Society of Biblical Literature, the Society for
Pentecostal Studies, the COGIC Scholars Fellowship
of the Obsidian’s Society, and is a board member of
the National Black Evangelical Association (NBEA).
Much of Dr. Hopkins’ research has lead to scholarly
presentations throughout the United States and in such
countries as Italy, England, Slovenia, Austria and
Scotland. His article entitled “Dead Sea Scrolls:
Jerusalem Priesthood in the Scrolls,” appears in
the Encyclopedia for the Historical Jesus
(Routledge Press). Other publications include,
“The Authoritative Status of Jubilees at Qumran,”
in Henoch: Journal of Second Temple Judaism (2009/1)
and “Duty or Responsibility? The African-American
Evangelical Identity,” in the Journal of African
American Christian Thought (2008/1).
Office: Classroom Bldg. 306
Phone: (404) 527-7746
E-mail:
jhopkins@itc.edu
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Dr. Mark
Lomax
Assistant
Professor, Area IV
-B.A., Heidelberg College
-M.Div., Trinity Lutheran Seminary
-D.Min. United Theological Seminary
Dr. Mark Lomax, who now serves as the interim dean of
the Johnson C. Smith Seminary, has a special interest in
homiletics, African traditional religions, and
African-American religious history. His significant
publications are “Theology of Marcus Garvey”; “The
Historical Meaning and Manifestation of Liberation and
the Vision for the Future”; “Spirituality and Leadership
in the Afrikan Church in North America: A Reflection,
The Journal of the Interdenominational
Theological Center; and Jesus for the Hip-Hop
Generation.
Office: Johnson C. Smith Theological Seminary
Phone: (404) 527-7782
E-mail:
mlomax@itc.edu
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Dr. Temba L. J.
Mafico
Professor, Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, Area I
Associate
Vice President for Academic Services/
Associate Provost
-B.A., University of London
-M.Div., Harvard University
-Ph.D., Harvard University
Dr. Mafico’s main research focus is on the
Hebrew Bible and its relation to ancient Near
Eastern myth and African tradition. He examines
how African and ancient Near Eastern myth may have
impacted the thought of the Israelites in Old Testament.
His acuity in word study has led to his major publication:
Yahweh’s Emergence As “Judge” Among the Gods: A Study of
the Hebrew Root SPT. He has also published a chapter
commentary on “Judges” in the International Bible Commentary;
“Judge/Judging,” “Just /Justice,” and “Ethics of the Old
Testament” in the Anchor Bible Dictionary; “The Divine
Name Yahweh Elohim and Israel’s Polytheistic Monotheism,”
Journal of Northwest Semitic Languages; “God’s Call and
the Requisite Preparation for Performing Various
Ministries,” The Journal of the Interdenominational
Theological Center; and “Patriarchs” in The New
Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible, Vol. IV.
Dr. Temba Mafico is also pastor of the Village
of Hope Baptist Church in Stone Mountain, Georgia.
Office: Classroom Bldg. 110
Phone: (404) 527-7751
E-mail:
tmafico@itc.edu/tmafico@bellsouth.net
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