The Rev. Dr. Zachary Guiliano is chaplain and career development research fellow at St Edmund Hall, Oxford.
He is the author of various articles, short essays, and reviews, and co-editor of two volumes in Studies in Episcopal and Anglican Theology. His academic work focuses on the history of biblical interpretation, preaching, and liturgy, drawing on rarely utilized manuscript sources. His first monograph considers how Charlemagne’s influence decisively shaped theology and liturgical prayer in the Latin West. It will be published by Brepols in 2021 as The Homiliary of Paul the Deacon: Religious and Cultural Reform in Carolingian Europe. He is now at work on a project about power and poverty in the Middle Ages, considering how the Gospel of Luke and the thought of its most important medieval interpreter, Bede, affected practices of charity, work, and ownership among kings, bishops, and other elites.
Ninian, a Briton of the 4th or 5th century who studied in Rome, is a prime example of missionary fervor, Catholic identity, and internationalism among the early British and English churches.
If we look on Anglican divisions and blame only other parties, seeing no good in them and no fault in us, we have not yet come to the fullness of Christian love, repentance, and unity in truth.