Moderator
- Katharine E. Harmon – Katharine E. Harmon, Ph.D., is Project Director for the Obsculta Preaching Initiative at Saint John’s School of Theology and Seminary in Collegeville, Minnesota.  A Roman Catholic pastoral liturgist and American Catholic historian, Harmon is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame’s liturgical studies program.  She has contributed over a dozen articles and chapters to the fields of both liturgical studies and American Catholicism.  She is the author of  There Were Also Many Women There: Lay Women in the Liturgical Movement in the United States, 1926-1959 (Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2013) and Mary and the Liturgical Year: A Pastoral Resource  (Chicago: Liturgy Training Publications, 2023). She edits the blog, Pray Tell: Worship, Wit & Wisdom.
Blog Assistant
- JP Misheff – JP Misheff, an MDiv student at Saint John’s University School of Theology, is also a member of the SoT’s Conversatio cohort. He has written and edited for various media outlets, primarily focusing on art and culture. His previous ministerial work includes serving as the weekend chef and an outreach coordinator at a shelter in Berkeley, CA, and completing a hospital chaplaincy internship at an inner-city hospital in Los Angeles.
Editor Emeritus
- Anthony Ruff, OSB: Fr. Anthony Ruff, OSB, teaches liturgy, liturgical music, and Gregorian chant at the College of Saint Benedict / St. John’s University – School of Theology and Seminary. He is the founder of the National Catholic Youth Choir. He is the author of Sacred Music and Liturgical Reform: Treasures and Transformations, and Responsorial Psalms for Weekday Mass: Advent, Christmas, Lent, Easter. He is organist and director of music at Saint John’s Abbey.
Past Editor
- Nathan Chase, PhD: Nathan Chase (1990-2025) earned his doctorate in liturgy from the University of Notre Dame. He served as Assistant Professor of Liturgical and Sacramental Theology at Aquinas Institute in St. Louis. His research focused on liturgical history, sacramental theology, Christian initiation, anaphoral history, and liturgical inculturation. His publications include The Anaphoral Tradition in the ‘Barcelona Papyrus,’ and his scholarly articles have appeared in Ecclesia Orans, Studia Liturgica, Archiv für Liturgiewissenschaft, and Worship.