Craig bloomberg biography
•
Blog
Meet the Media: Craig Trudell, U.S. Automotive Team Leader at Bloomberg
Craig Trudell is Bloomberg News Detroit Bureau’s new U.S. automotive team leader. He had been editor of Asia auto coverage for Bloomberg News in Tokyo. He joined Bloomberg in January and reported on Chrysler, Ford and GM from Detroit for three and a half years.
1. Without revealing any secrets, can you tell us what types of stories, trends or issues are on your radar now?
The only new product anyone wants to talk about of late happens to be a product of Queens, real estate, reality TV, and now, the White House. Yes, Donald Trump.
Id like to think that we in the automotive press will turn our attention back to stories, trends and issues that were plenty important before Nov. 8, but I dont know that weve ever had a president-elect weigh in on our industry in such a forceful way before hes even taken office.
Stories pertaining to trade and environmental policy, infrastructural investment
•
I recently had an opportunity to talk with Dr. Craig Blomberg, distinguished professor of New Testament at Denver Seminary. Bloomberg is the author, co-author, or co-editor of 14 books and more than 80 articles in journals or multi-author works. Many of his writings examine the historical reliability of the Scriptures, and he has also covered such diverse issues as wealth and poverty, hermeneutics, and women in ministry.
Thanks for taking the time to talk with us, Dr. Blomberg. Can you briefly share a little about where you were educated and where you currently teach?
You are most welcome. Thanks for the invitation. I grew up in Rock Island, Illinois, part of the Quad Cities, right on the Mississippi River across from Davenport, Iowa. I went to a Division III Lutheran liberal arts college in my hometown, Augustana College. After teaching a year of high-school math on Chicago’s North Shore, I attended Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in Deerfield, Illinois, where I met my
•
Why I Am Still a Christian, bygd Dr. Craig Blomberg:
I was raised in what inom later learned to identify as a very frikostig parish of the old Lutheran Church in amerika. I was confirmed in , the year American society seemed to be falling apart. I took it as seriously as anyone in my confirmation class, which isnt saying all that much. We spent more time discussing Simon and Garfunkel lyrics and Jesus Christ Superstar than we did Luthers Catechism.
In my public high school my best friend brought me to our Campus Life club. There for the first time I met kids my own age who spoke about having a anställda relationship with Jesus and it was clearly making a difference in their lives. In a culture in which eggheads like me who were neither