David Buller
Author, Staff
Program Manager
David Buller is Program Manager at BioLogos, where he currently manages the BioLogos Voices speakers bureau and oversees planning for BioLogos national conferences. Prior to coming to BioLogos, David was a Program Associate in the Dialogue on Science, Ethics, and Religion program at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Washington, DC. At AAAS, he helped lead and plan projects working with scientists and seminary leaders on science engagement in theological training, as well as an additional project working with evangelical pastors and organizations. He is a producer on “Science: The Wide Angle,” a AAAS science video series tailored for use in religious education.
After completing his BS in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at Bob Jones University, David earned an MA in Theological Studies, Religion and Science Emphasis, from the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago. While in Chicago, David worked as a student coordinator on various events and symposia at the Zygon Center for Religion and Science. His academic efforts explored models of the God-world relationship, as well as using film as a dialogue partner in developing a Christian theology of nature. He has additionally served as Student and Early Career Representative to the American Scientific Affiliation Executive Council. Weekends find him and his wife enjoying books, arts, nature, and Anglican worship.
Resources by this author ...
If you enjoy this author, check out these resources:
All ResourcesHow Curiosity Builds Bridges Between Christians and Skeptics
David Buller talks about the curiosity that led him to a career exploring the intersection of science and faith.

Creation is the Temple Where God Rests
Walton's argument is fully convincing and enormously helpful: that Genesis 1 is an account of God's establishment of functional order to inaugurate the world as a cosmic temple.
Genesis is an Ancient Book, and that’s OK
We Evangelicals place ourselves under the authority of the Bible's content, but often subject the Bible to our own preferences for the form that we expect that revelation to take.
Reading Up On Our Christian Responsibility in a Changing Creation
David Buller simultaneously reads a book on creation care and also a well-known novel, and ponders how their messages prompt him to view the responsibility of creation care in a new way.
Five Amazing Creatures in God's Creation
The beauty of God's creation can be glimpsed in some of the wonderful creatures that inhabit it.
Forensic Science: Bringing Justice by Investigating the Past
The way in which a crime scene is investigated is not much different from the way scientists investigate the past.
How Curiosity Builds Bridges Between Christians and Skeptics
David Buller talks about the curiosity that led him to a career exploring the intersection of science and faith.

Creation is the Temple Where God Rests
Walton's argument is fully convincing and enormously helpful: that Genesis 1 is an account of God's establishment of functional order to inaugurate the world as a cosmic temple.
Genesis is an Ancient Book, and that’s OK
We Evangelicals place ourselves under the authority of the Bible's content, but often subject the Bible to our own preferences for the form that we expect that revelation to take.
Reading Up On Our Christian Responsibility in a Changing Creation
David Buller simultaneously reads a book on creation care and also a well-known novel, and ponders how their messages prompt him to view the responsibility of creation care in a new way.
Five Amazing Creatures in God's Creation
The beauty of God's creation can be glimpsed in some of the wonderful creatures that inhabit it.
Forensic Science: Bringing Justice by Investigating the Past
The way in which a crime scene is investigated is not much different from the way scientists investigate the past.
How Curiosity Builds Bridges Between Christians and Skeptics
David Buller talks about the curiosity that led him to a career exploring the intersection of science and faith.

Creation is the Temple Where God Rests
Walton's argument is fully convincing and enormously helpful: that Genesis 1 is an account of God's establishment of functional order to inaugurate the world as a cosmic temple.
Genesis is an Ancient Book, and that’s OK
We Evangelicals place ourselves under the authority of the Bible's content, but often subject the Bible to our own preferences for the form that we expect that revelation to take.