Comment Home / Reviews & Opinions

Editorial: Building a Journal

Every few decades a magazine emerges that reinvigorates the North American public intellectual scene, and eventually reshapes the political and cultural landscape. In the 1930s it was the Partisan Review's amalgam of Trotsky's politics and Eliot

Every few decades a magazine emerges that reinvigorates the North American public intellectual scene, and eventually reshapes the political and cultural landscape. In the 1930s it was the Partisan Review's amalgam of Trotsky's politics and Eliot's poetry. In the 1970s it was Commentary's cold warrior/supply sider/traditional values neoconservatism. Comment can do this job in the early 21st century—provided we become the journal of choice of tomorrow's Christian leaders while they are still in college.

It is quite some time since Comment readers last were able to hold a paper issue of the magazine in the hand. We have tried for some time to publish Comment primarily online, and as of June 2005 we are publishing a new Comment article online every Friday, at http://www.wrf.ca/comment. But the insistence of our loyal readers that an online Comment is just not the same as a paper Comment has persuaded us again to publish a regular paper issue, as we had in the past.

This issue of Comment is also special in the sense that the scope of issues addressed and the points of view articulated in this issue of Comment have been selected to represent the mission and character of the Work Research Foundation. The mission of the WRF is to influence people toward a Christian view of work and public life. In this issue you will find a Christian view of work and public life articulated in a wide variety of ways, and by a rich array of voices. You will read about various situations in which these issues have been thrashed out—including among fishmongers and labour unions, student groups and city intellectuals. You will read the views of proponents of the WRF's founding tradition, the neocalvinism of Abraham Kuyper and H. Evan Runner, as well as the views of people from other, very different traditions.

The Work Research Foundation has developed significantly since last we published a paper issue of Comment. We not only advocate the building of institutions as part of our Christian cultural responsibility (a topic that is being addressed in our weekly Comment updates online), we practice it. The WRF has expanded its activities in almost every area, and has added staff to be able to support this expansion.

With the help of this expanded community of WRF staff, Comment is now able to publish a weekly online update, and we hope to be able to print and widely distribute two further issues on paper during 2005: a Summer issue with the theme What is to be done?, and a Fall issue with the theme City and country—urbanism and agrarianism.

The Work Research Foundation is the beneficiary of the legacy of several generations of serious Christain cultural engagement, and it is our hope and dream to pass this legacy along to the next generation, and to pass it along enriched. It is our hope to be able to draw on this legacy as we engage with the issues of work and public life in our own generation, and to make a positive contribution in the public square here in Canada and America. We hope that this issue of Comment will provide you with nourishing food for thought. We cherish your good wishes, and your support.

Gideon Strauss Gideon Strauss
Gideon Strauss is president of the Max De Pree Center for Leadership in California. ... read more »

Posted in Journalism, Legacy.

Add Your Comments


Copyright © 1974-2012 Cardus. All Rights Reserved.

| More

Feature Essays

  1. If Wishing Made it So: Teaching Students to Make Change

    May 14, 2012 | Gloria Stronks and Julia Stronks

    Parents and teachers want children to have the skills to make a difference. But what can we teach to help them survive their teen years, 20s, and 30s with convictions and charac...

Reviews & Opinions

  1. American Heretics

    May 23, 2012 | Kevin Flatt

    While too benevolent, and even-handed to a fault, Ross Douthat's Bad Religion offers diagnosis and prescriptions for American Christianity that are spot on.
  2. Do Not Open—No User Serviceable Parts Inside

    May 22, 2012 | David Greusel

    Why do so many of us have to work where the windows don't open? Engineers, architects, and lawyers have their reasons, but must workplaces be less humane than homes?

Six Questions

  1. Saying "there is not enough time" is heresy

    May 2, 2012 | Stephanie Gehring

    SIX QUESTIONS . . . The new culture I am making is an attempt to say hold still and look at this.

Cardus Blog

  1. A Heterosexual Problem

    May 23, 2012 | John Seel

    Marriage has a heterosexual problem. When the termites have done their work on the foundations of the home, it doesn't take much to knock it down. Such is the case of traditiona...
  2. Plus ca change

    May 22, 2012 | Peter Stockland

    On today's 100th day of protests by Quebec students, Journal de Montreal columnist Richard Martineau offers a scabrous depiction of his province. Citing former Laval University ...

Print Issue

  1. March 2012: Legacies
    Comment Magazine - Legacies Our culture does not know how to deal with legacies. We either treat the dead with some combination of awe and fear, or we think of our forebears as unworthy of remembrance, to ...