

Founder of the TF Philosophy of Religion group and its Chairman 1991 – 2007. Paul taught Philosophy at Liverpool until becoming Professor of the History and Philosophy of Religion at King’s College, London in 1993. Since retiring he has been Teaching Fellow in Philosophy of Religion at Regent College, Vancouver.
Paul has written extensively on topics such as the eternal nature of God, divine sovereignty, faith and reason and the religious and philosophical ideas of John Calvin. His Tyndale Philosophy of Religion Lecture, ‘Eternal Creation’ appeared in Tyndale Bulletin in 1994. His books, John Calvin’s Ideas (Oxford University Press in 2004) and Calvin at the Centre (OUP, 2010) are among many monographs which he has published over the years.
Secretary of the group since shortly after its formation, Harold has taught Philosophy of Religion in the Faculty of Theology at Queen’s University, Belfast for many years. He also lectures on ethics in the Faculty of Medicine. His Tyndale Philosophy of Religion Lecture “God’s Law, ‘General Equity’ And The Westminster Confession of Faith’ (2002) was published in Tyndale Bulletin.

Chairman of the group since 2007, Harry Bunting lectured in Philosophy at the University of Ulster for many years. Since his retirement in 2010 he has studied and lectured on aspects of the relationship between theism and morality.
Harry Bunting has published in the fields of ethics, political philosophy and philosophy of religion. His article 'A Single True Morality? The Challenge of Relativism' appeared in Philosophy Supp. Vol 40 and his Tyndale Philosophy of Religion Lecture 'Ethics and the Perfect Moral Law' appeared in Tyndale Bulletin 2000.

Daniel is Lecturer in Philosophy at Liverpool Universit. His interests are in ethics, metaphysics, philosophy of religion and philosophical logic. Daniel delivered the Tyndale Philosophy of Religion Lecture, entitled ‘Language, Truth and Scripture’ in 2005 (unpublished). He has written Divinity and Maximal Greatness (Routledge Studies in Philosophy of Religion, 2005) and his article 'Ticking Bombs, Torture, and the Analogy with Self-Defense' appeared in American Philosophical Quarterly (44)2007.