Douglas John Hall


Douglas John Hall is an emeritus professor of theology at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, and a minister of the United Church of Canada. Prior to joining the McGill Faculty of Religious Studies in 1975 he was MacDougald Professor of Systematic Theology at St Andrew's College in the University of Saskatchewan, Principal of St Paul's College in the University of Waterloo, and minister of St Andrew's Church in Blind River, Ontario.

Early life and education

Hall was born in 1928 in Ingersoll, Ontario. He attended high school and business college in Woodstock, Ontario, and worked for four years in that city's daily newspaper. In 1948–1949 he studied composition and piano at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto. He was graduated from the University of Western Ontario in 1953. His graduate degrees are all from Union Theological Seminary in New York City: Master of Divinity, Master of Sacred Theology, Doctor of Theology.

Professional life

The author of 24 published works, including a three-volume systematic theology, and numerous articles, Hall lectured widely in the United States and Canada during the period 1974–2010. He was Gastprofessor at the University of Siegen, Germany in 1980; Visiting Scholar at Doshisha University in Kyoto, Japan in 1989; Professor of Theology at the Melanchthon Institute of Houston, Texas in 1999; member of the Campbell Seminar on the Future of the Church at Columbia Seminary of Decatur, Georgia in 2000; Distinguished Visiting Professor at Trinity Lutheran Seminary, Columbus, Ohio in 2001; Theologian-in-Residence, Church of the Crossroads in Honolulu, Hawaii ; and Theologian-in-Residence, International Protestant Church in Vienna.
Hall was an active participant in many international consultations including the World Convocation of the World Council of Churches in Seoul, South Korea, 1990, and the UN AIDS theological symposium in Namibia. He served on theological committees of the WCC and the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, the United Church of Canada, The National Council of Churches USA, et al..

Thought

Influenced by his teachers Reinhold Niebuhr, Paul Tillich, John Coleman Bennett and others, as well as fellow-Canadians including George Grant and Emil Fackenheim, Hall desired to understand and further the biblical and mainstream Reformation Protestant traditions of critical and constructive theology. He argues that over the past two centuries the Christian religion has been experiencing a momentous and disconcerting transition : after fifteen centuries of legal and cultural ‘Establishment’ in the West, Christianity is being challenged by the evolution of planetary history to assume a more modest, dialogical and humanly responsible position in the new global society.
Accordingly, he believes, the church must abandon the theological triumphalism that has typified its long fraternization with empire, and search its biblical and doctrinal traditions for ways of engaging, rather than seeking to monopolize the spiritual and intellectual life of humankind. In his books and lectures Hall argues that the stance appropriate to Christianity in the post-Christendom context is best illuminated by the theological tradition that Martin Luther named theologia crucis. That tradition, which Luther distinguished from the dominant religious and ecclesiastical conventions of Christendom, accentuates God's compassionate solidarity with the world; thus it opens the Christian movement to both secular and other faith-communities that seek planetary "peace, justice and the integrity of creation" .,
Hall affirms that theology, in contrast to both ‘doctrine’ and piety, involves both historical knowledge and conscious, informed immersion in one's cultural context . Authentic theology only occurs where the claims of faith meet and wrestle with the great questions and instabilities of the Zeitgeist . ‘Establishment’ Christianity was content to transmit dogma and morality from place to place, generation to generation; post-Christendom theology entails original and diligent thinking including the entertainment of doubt and disbelief, on the part of the disciple-community. Today faith in all its forms and expressions is called to rescue human thinking as such from its captivation by ‘technical reason’ or rechnendes Denken, as it manifests itself today in the West's educational emphasis on science, technology, engineering and mathematics often to the virtual exclusion of the arts and humanities.''

Personal life

Dr. Hall married the late Rhoda Catherine Palfrey, a fellow Canadian and graduate student at Columbia University, in 1960 at Riverside Church, New York City. They have four adult children, three of whom are professional musicians, and eight grandchildren.

Selected publications