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Project : Neighbor is a think tank and training ground for spiritual formation and the common good.
Our work focuses on helping the Church think theologically about everything—from soil to sky, photography to politicking, coffee to calling—and spiritually form Her for any stage or office in life—from crib to casket, parent to professor, rocker to retiree.
Kyle is Co-Director of Project : Neighbor, Founder of Seminary for Society, Director of Education at Beverly Heights Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and a 2024-2025 Scholar in Residence at the Mouw Institute of Faith and Public Life at Fuller Seminary. He is the author of Practices of Love: Spiritual Disciplines for the Life of the World (Brazos Press, 2017). Kyle has served as an Elder in the Reformed Church of America and Presbyterian Church of America. He is currently an endorsed ordinand. Kyle has a B.A. in Ministry and Philosophy from Geneva College, an M.A. in Theology, and a Ph.D. in Philosophical Theology from Fuller Seminary. Kyle lives in Pittsburgh with his wife, Andrea, and their three children: Elliott, Miles, and Calvin.
Chris is Co-Director of Project : Neighbor. He serves as Director of the National Institute for Newman Studies. He also serves as Associate Editor of the Newman Studies Journal and Teaching Fellow in the Dept. of Catholic Studies at Duquesne University. He is the author of the monograph, John Henry Newman’s Theology of History (Peeters Press, 2017), and contributing co-editor of the volumes, Salvation in the World: The Crossroads of Public Theology (Bloomsbury, 2017) and One Bread, One Body, One Church (Peeters Press, 2021). He has a Ph.D. in Systematic Theology from Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium). Chris lives in Pittsburgh with his wife and better half, Abby, their two children, Evelien and Charlie, and their cat, Gizmo.