Dr. Deborah Savage is a Professor of Theology at Franciscan University of Steubenville who has a particular interest in Catholic Social Thought and the fundamental theological categories that serve as its substructure. Dr. Savage's unique blend of real-world experience and academic expertise shapes her approach to Theology and Philosophy.
Dr. Deborah Savage is Professor of Theology at Franciscan University of Steubenville, having joined the faculty in 2021. Previously she was on the faculty at the St. Paul Seminary School of Divinity at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota where she taught both philosophy and theology for thirteen years, having taught as an adjunct professor for fifteen years first in the College of Business and then in the Theology Department. She received her doctorate in Religious Studies from Marquette University in 2005; her degree is in both theology and philosophy. Deborah Savage is the co-founder of the Siena Symposium for Women, Family, and Culture, an interdisciplinary think tank, organized to respond to John Paul II’s call for a new and explicitly Christian feminism. Dr. Savage is a student of St. Thomas Aquinas with a particular interest in investigating his thought in light of contemporary questions. Her primary academic areas are philosophical and theological anthropology; her recent research has been focused on the development of a robust theology of the nature of man and woman, both their identities and their complementarity. A second research area is the meaning of human action, the significance of human work and of vocation, and the metaphysics of creation as a foundation for both stewardship and economics. She has a particular interest in Catholic Social Thought and the fundamental theological categories that serve as its substructure. She is a scholar of the work of Karol Wojtyla/John Paul II and has written and presented or published several papers on how his philosophical anthropology informs his body of work as Pope.
From Business to Academia
Prior to pursuing her doctorate, Deborah Savage worked for over twenty-five years in the business sector, holding a variety of positions primarily in manufacturing organizations. This experience and the questions that arose as a result led her to investigate the theological meaning of work as a locus of personal conversion and sanctification. Her dissertation was entitled The Subjective Dimension of Human Work: the Conversion of the Acting Person in the Thought of Karol Wojtyla/John Paul II and Bernard Lonergan, (Peter Lang, 2007). Dr. Savage's writing has appeared in several publications, Nova et Vetera, Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture, First Things, Humanum, Catholic World Report, and Public Discourse. Some recent publications include “Redeeming Woman: A Catholic Response to the Second Sex Issue,” published in the journal Religions and “The Therapeutic and Pastoral Implications of Pope St. John Paul II’s Account of the Person,” published in The Journal of Christian Bioethics. The most recent iteration of her theory of Man and Woman is a chapter in a volume entitled The Complementarity of Men and Women, edited by Dr. Paul Vitz and published by CUA Press (May 2021). She is currently at work on a book entitled “Woman and Man” for formal consideration by Catholic University of America Press which she hopes to complete this academic year.
Dr. Savage is a member of the Academy of Catholic Theology, the American Catholic Philosophical Association, and the Fellowship of Catholic Scolars. She served for several years as a member of the Board of Trustees at Franciscan University, resigning earlier in 2021. She lives in Steubenville, Ohio with her husband of thirty-five years, Andrew Percic, and their daughter, Madeline.