NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS 333
L. William Oliverio, Jr. (Ph.D., Marquette University) is Pastor of
Immanuel Church (Assemblies of God) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
Lecturer in Theology at Marquette University, and adjunct faculty for
Pentecostal Theological Seminary and the School of Urban Missions.
He is the author of Theological Hermeneutics in the Classical Pentecostal
Tradition: A Typological Account and other writings at the intersection of
hermeneutics, Pentecostal theology, philosophy, and culture.
Jack Poirier (D.H.L., Jewish Theological Seminary of America) has pub-
lished scholarly articles in the areas of New Testament, Old Testament,
Judaism, church history, and hermeneutics. He is the author of The
Tongues of Angels: The Concept of Angelic Languages in Classical Jewish
and Christian Texts , and co-editor (with Jeffrey Peterson) of Marcan
Priority without Q: Explorations in the Farrer Hypothesis. He is currently
working on several projects, including a critique of the understanding of
Wittgenstein within the fi eld of theology.
Yoon Shin (Ph.D. Stud., University of Aberdeen) is Assistant Professor
of Philosophy and Ethics and Coordinator of Graduate Studies at
Southeastern University. He is doctoral work in Divinity at King’s
College—University of Aberdeen focusing on theological epistemology.
His main research interests are on the topics of and intersection between
postmodernism, epistemology, and apologetics.
Michael Tenneson (Ph.D., University of Missouri) is Professor of Biology
and Chair of the Department of Natural and Applied Sciences at Evangel
University, where he has taught for nearly 30 years. Initially trained as a
fi eld behavioral ecologist, he has done fi eld research on birds, frogs, por-
cupines, lizards, and snails. His current research examines attitudes and
beliefs of people related to science and theology. Tenneson has authored
or co-authored numerous papers and presentations, along with several
essays in edited volumes. He has led conference planning teams for three
well-attended Faith and Science Conferences in 2011, 2014, and 2016.
Jared Vazquez (Ph.D. Stud., University of Denver/Iliff School of
Theology) has scholarly interests in bodies, sexuality, identity, culture,
language, and religious experience. His primary fi elds of study include
continental philosophy, cultural and queer theory, Latino/a studies, and
Pentecostal studies. He has been a fellow at the Human Rights Campaign
Summer Institute of the Religion and Faith Program and the Hispanic
Theological Initiative at Princeton.