1. Tovia Singer

    Tovia Singer (b. 1965) is the host of The Tovia Singer Show, a radio show that was launched in 2002, as well as a public lecturer who devotes his time to countering missionary work undertaken by such messianic organizations as Jews for Jesus. In that capacity he heads Outreach Judaism, which aims to provide educational resources to individuals targeted for conversion by missionary groups.

  2. Daniel Lapin

    Daniel Lapin (born 1950?) is a political commentator and American Orthodox rabbi living in Mercer Island, Washington, and the founder of Toward Tradition (a conservative Jewish-Christian organization). He also once headed the Pacific Jewish Center in Venice, Los Angeles, California,(as well as the Commonwealth Loan Company and the Cascadia Business Institute). Lapin is co-chair of the conservative American Alliance of Jews and Christians.

  3. Maia Morgenstern

    Maia Morgenstern is a Romanian film and stage actress. In the English-speaking world, she is probably best known for the role of Mary, the mother of Jesus, in Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ". In Romania, she has been nationally known since her 1992 role as Nela in "Balanţa", a film known in the United States as "The Oak", set during the waning days of Communist Romania.

  4. Aaronic Priesthood

    The Aaronic priesthood (also called the Levitical priesthood) is the lesser of the two (or sometimes three) orders of priesthood recognized in Mormonism. The others are the Melchizedek priesthood and the rarely-recognized Patriarchal priesthood. Unlike the Melchizedek Priesthood, which is modeled after the authority of Jesus and the Apostles, or the Patriarchal Priesthood, which is modeled after the authority of Abraham, …

  5. Roger Rusk

    Roger Rusk (1906-1994) was survived by his wife Ruth, who is now also deceased. His brother was the US secretary of state Dean Rusk. A noted Bible scholar, fluent in Hebrew and Greek, he wrote many influential essays, applying scientific principles and deep historical knowledge to analysing the contents of the Bible. Influential in the British Israel movement, his easy writing style gave his essays and books a broad appeal to Christian audiences outside the movement.

  6. Edgardo Mortara

    Edgardo Mortara (August 27, 1851 - March 11, 1940) was a Jewish-born Italian Catholic priest, who became the center of an international controversy when, as a six-year-old boy, he was seized from his Jewish parents by the Papal States authorities and taken to be raised as a Catholic. The Mortara case was the catalyst for far-reaching political changes, …

  7. E. P. Sanders

    Ed Parish Sanders (born 1937) is a leading New Testament scholar, and is one of the principal proponents of the New Perspective on Paul. He has been Arts and Sciences Professor of Religion at Duke University, North Carolina, since 1990. He retired in 2005. Sanders is a Fellow of the British Academy. In 1990 he received a D. Litt. from the University of Oxford and a D. Theol. from the University of Helsinki. In 1966 he received a Th.d. from Union Seminary in NYC.

  8. Keith Akers

    Keith Akers is a prominent American advocate of nonviolence, simple living and Christian vegetarianism. Akers graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1971 with B. A. (magna cum laude) in philosophy and was a professional computer programmer for many years. He is very active in the vegetarian community, as former president of both the Vegetarian Society of D. C. and the Vegetarian Society of Colorado, and as an officer in the International Vegetarian Union.

  9. Michael Dennis Rohan

    Michael Dennis Rohan is an Australian citizen who gained worldwide infamy on August 21, 1969, when he attempted to set fire to the Al-Aqsa mosque, located atop the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.

  10. Elio Toaff

    Elio Toaff (born April 30, 1915 in Livorno) is the former Chief Rabbi of Rome. On 13 April, 1986, he greeted and prayed with Pope John Paul II during an unannounced visit to the Synagogue of Rome. In 1947 he served as a rabbi in Venice and in 1951 he became the chief rabbi of Rome. One of his children is Israeli-Italian professor Ariel Toaff.

  11. Joseph Klausner

    Joseph Gedaliah Klausner , also known as Yosef Klauzner (יוסף קלוזנר) was a Jewish scholar born in Olkeniki, Lithuania who emigrated to the British Mandate of Palestine in 1919, and died in Israel. He was an intellectual and specialist in Jewish religion and history, and a scholar of modern Hebrew literature. He was the chief redacter of "The Hebrew Encylopedia", and taught Hebrew literature at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

  12. William H. Poole

    Rev. William H. Poole. LL.D was a minister known for his 1889 book called "Anglo-Israel or the Saxon Race?: Proved to be the Lost Tribes of Israel". It was originally presented as the first in a series of nine lectures and later published in Toronto, Canada beginning in 1879 and republished in New York during 1880.