John White (Christian author)

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John White
Born5 March 1924
Died11 May 2002
Occupation(s)author, missionary, psychiatrist, academic, pastor and speaker
SpouseLoretta May O'Hara

John White (1924–2002) was an evangelical Christian author and international speaker who worked with the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students of Latin America and published many books through InterVarsity Press.[1]

White moved to Canada in 1965 and completed his residency in psychiatry in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He then served as associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Manitoba and also as pastor of Church of the Way.

White helped to start the Surrey Vineyard of Vancouver, British Columbia. He was also involved with the national Association of Vineyard Churches.

Life[edit]

John White was born on March 5, 1924, in Liverpool, England.[2] He grew up in Manchester.[1]

White served in the Fleet Air Arm as a reconnaissance photographer during World War II.[2] He completed medical training at Manchester University.[2]

He went on various short-term mission trips, including beyond the Iron Curtain as a Bible smuggler.[2]

White met Loretta Mae O'Hara in Pennsylvania at a missions conference on June 10. They married on June 25, 1955, and left for a mission to Bolivia with New Tribes Mission on October 25 of the same year.[1][2]

They had five children while working as missionaries: Scott (born in Bolivia), Kevin and Liana (Argentina), and Miles and Leith (Peru).[2]

The entire family left the mission field and moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada in 1965.[1] White completed his residency in psychiatry and then took a position as associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Manitoba.[2]

John and Loretta became involved in a small group, which they were asked to lead, and which would eventually become the Church of the Way, growing to around four hundred.[2] After retiring in the 1980s White moved with his family to Pasadena, California, and concentrated on his writing.[2]

In 1986 the White family moved again, this time to North Delta, British Columbia, to serve as assistant pastors at North Delta Vineyard Church which would eventually become Surrey Vineyard Church.[2]

He died on May 11, 2002, after battling Alzheimer's disease and heart disease.[2]

Spirituality[edit]

White became involved in the Charismatic Movement, finding his entrance into the movement while taking a class by Dr. John Wimber at Fuller Theological Seminary.[3]

Christian academic work[edit]

White taught courses at Regent College.[2]

Books[edit]

Eros Defiled[edit]

One of White's earlier popular books is Eros Defiled which tackles the topic of Christians and sexual sin. White would later come to regret this book and its continuance in print because he no longer held that psychiatry was the answer to freedom from sexual sin. Instead, he recommended his later book entitled Eros Redeemed.[3]

In the section on homosexuality in Eros Defiled John White describes how, as a junior high school student, he suffered sexual abuse at the hands of a Christian youth worker.

Quotations[edit]

These quotations represent significant aspects of Dr. White's thought, with an emphasis on what might be considered the less orthodox and more exploratory areas.

  • "[The Archives] stirred the most deeply in people. And I have a feeling that the stories in the historical records in scripture are far more important than the doctrines and prophetic utterances based on them. That we read to read the stories first. We need to focus on the stories because I’ve learned from my own experience that the stories are more powerful."[3]

Bibliography[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d About John White [dead link] Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, Intervarsity Press, 2012
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "John White: a personal tribute". Canadian Christianity. Archived from the original on 2012-12-09. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  3. ^ a b c Loren, Julia (2000), "Interview with John White", Small voices, archived from the original on 2002-03-21.