RESPONSE WITH A SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY : with Bethany Sollereder and Andrew Robinson, “Essays in Honor of Christopher Southgate: Introduction.” Evolutionary Theodicy with Denis Edwards, “Christopher Southgate's Compound Theodicy: Parallel Searchings”; Ted Peters, “Extinction, Natural Evil, and the Cosmic Cross”; Robert John Russell, “Southgate's Compound Only‐Way Evolutionary Theodicy: Deep Appreciation and Further Directions”; Bethany Sollereder, “Exploring Old and New Paths in Theodicy”; Holmes Rolston, III, “Redeeming a Cruciform Nature”; Ernst M. Conradie, “On Social Evil and Natural Evil: In Conversation with Christopher Southgate”; Philip Clayton and Steven Knapp, “Evolution, Contingency, and Christology”; John F. Haught, “Faith and Compassion in an Unfinished Universe”; Celia Deane‐Drummond, “Perceiving Natural Evil through the Lens of Divine Glory? A Conversation with Christopher Southgate”; Nicola Hoggard Creegan, “Theodicy: A Response to Christopher Southgate”; and Neil Messer, “Evolution and Theodicy: How (Not) to Do Science and Theology.”Myth, Mutual Interaction, and Poetry with John Hedley Brooke, “Darwin and Christianity: Truth and Myth”; Andrew Robinson, “Creative Mutual Interaction in Action”; Richard Skinner, “A Sonnet for Christopher”; and Margaret Boone Rappaport and Christopher Corbally, “Tracing Origins of Twenty‐First Century Ecotheology: The Poetry of Christopher Southgate.” Pedagogy in Religion and Science with Timothy Gibson, “Between Knowing and Being: Reflections on Being Taught Science and Religion by Professor Christopher Southgate”; Louise Hickman, “Modeling the Cosmos: Transformative Pedagogy in Science and Religion”; Willem B. Drees, “God, Humanity and the Cosmos: Challenging a Challenging Textbook”; and Christopher Corbally and Margaret Boone Rappaport, “Teaching Science and Religion in the Twenty‐First Century: The Many Pedagogical Roles of Christopher Southgate.”
: with Bethany Sollereder and Andrew Robinson, “Essays in Honor of Christopher Southgate: Introduction.” <b>Evolutionary Theodicy</b> with Denis Edwards, “Christopher Southgate's Compound Theodicy: Parallel Searchings”; Ted Peters, “Extinction, Natural Evil, and the Cosmic Cross”; Robert John Russell, “Southgate's Compound Only‐Way Evolutionary Theodicy: Deep Appreciation and Further Directions”; Bethany Sollereder, “Exploring Old and New Paths in Theodicy”; Holmes Rolston, III, “Redeeming a Cruciform Nature”; Ernst M. Conradie, “On Social Evil and Natural Evil: In Conversation with Christopher Southgate”; Philip Clayton and Steven Knapp, “Evolution, Contingency, and Christology”; John F. Haught, “Faith and Compassion in an Unfinished Universe”; Celia Deane‐Drummond, “Perceiving Natural Evil through the Lens of Divine Glory? A Conversation with Christopher Southgate”; Nicola Hoggard Creegan, “Theodicy: A Response to Christopher Southgate”; and Neil Messer, “Evolution and Theodicy: How (Not) to Do Science and Theology.”<b>Myth, Mutual Interaction, and Poetry</b> with John Hedley Brooke, “Darwin and Christianity: Truth and Myth”; Andrew Robinson, “Creative Mutual Interaction in Action”; Richard Skinner, “A Sonnet for Christopher”; and Margaret Boone Rappaport and Christopher Corbally, “Tracing Origins of Twenty‐First Century Ecotheology: The Poetry of Christopher Southgate.” <b>Pedagogy in Religion and Science</b> with Timothy Gibson, “Between Knowing and Being: Reflections on Being Taught Science and Religion by Professor Christopher Southgate”; Louise Hickman, “Modeling the Cosmos: Transformative Pedagogy in Science and Religion”; Willem B. Drees, “<i>God, Humanity and the Cosmos</i>: Challenging a Challenging Textbook”; and Christopher Corbally and Margaret Boone Rappaport, “Teaching Science and Religion in the Twenty‐First Century: The Many Pedagogical Roles of Christopher Southgate.”