author
b. 1869
A progressive Christian writer and Anglican clergyman, he explored the life of Jesus, the Bible, and modern theology in books that aimed to make difficult religious questions accessible to ordinary readers.

by Joseph Warschauer
Born in 1869, Joseph Warschauer wrote religious and theological works in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Library and catalog records for his books also show his name in the form Joseph Warshaw, indicating that Warschauer was the name he originally used.
His known books include The Historical Life of Christ, The New Evangel, Problems of Immanence, and What Is the Bible? These titles suggest a writer deeply interested in Christian belief, biblical interpretation, and the effort to rethink faith in conversation with modern ideas.
The available records identify him as an Anglican clergyman as well as an author. Detailed biographical information appears to be limited in the sources I could confirm, but his surviving works show a serious, accessible engagement with theology for general readers.