A Note from Our Editor: “Global Journal’s Canadian Issue” -- By: John Warwick Montgomery
Journal: Global Journal of Classical Theology
Volume: GJCT 19:1 (Jul 2022)
Article: A Note from Our Editor: “Global Journal’s Canadian Issue”
Author: John Warwick Montgomery
A Note from Our Editor: “Global Journal’s Canadian Issue”
Jeremy Hexham’s article below evidences the international presence of bad reasoning in theology. On the positive side, it offers our readers a Canadian focus.
Your editor served for three years as Chairman of the History Department of what was then the Waterloo Lutheran University, in Kitchener-Waterloo, some sixty miles to the west of Toronto. Later, the University secularized, becoming Wilfred Laurier University. (The institution demonstrated how much of a tightwad it was by choosing a new name with the same initials, thereby facilitating the use of already printed materials headed “WLU.” During my Canadian period, I learned quite a bit about the Canadian mentality. First, the positive; then, the negative.
I applied for and received a Canada Council Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship, making possible the obtaining of my second doctorate, the Doctorate in Protestant Theology at the University of Strasbourg in France and a lifelong connection with French civilization and eventually French citizenship. When the money was running toward the end of my doctoral studies, my Canadian bank manager advance additional funds—even though I was unable to offer any collateral. If the manager had been Roman Catholic, he should have received many years off his time in Purgatory.
My career in debating religious liberals took off with my decimation of Professor Abram Stroll at the University of British Columbia, leading to the publication of my book, History and Christianity (now expanded as History, Law and Christianity).
Following my lecture on legal apologetics at another Canadian university, I came in contact with a Christian law student, Dallas Miller, who later became a distinguished provincial judge and a close friend.
Then, just last year, after the sudden death of my wife, I married Carol Gracina Maughan, a retired Canadian schoolteacher.
On the negative side, some of my Canadian students were not exactly the clearest of all thinkers. At the time of the U.S.-Cuban missile crisis, the student population was very much against the American refusal to allow a Russian military presence in the Caribbean. I had to remind them that Toronto was really not much farther from Cuba than New York City should Russian missiles ever come into use. And one of my undergraduate students, though evangelical, has since become a leading Mennonite theologian who staunchly refuses to accept the formal principle of all biblical theology, the inerrancy of Holy Writ.
In more general terms, I found that Canadians have a real problem with national identity. They certainly don’t have trouble asserting what they are not—not British and ce...
Click here to subscribe