Raymond J. Klassen grew up in Manitoba, the youngest of eight children, in a family shaped by Anabaptist faith, storytelling, work, and community. Those early influences continue to shape his writing, especially his interest in how people are formed by the worlds they inherit and the choices they make within them. He now lives in Edmonton, Alberta, where he is married and the father of two grown children.
Ray’s love of travel came from his mother, whose curiosity about the world helped awaken his own. Over the years, he has lived and worked outside Canada in Thailand, South Korea, and Saudi Arabia, experiences that deepened his appreciation for culture, language, hospitality, and human difference. His love of teaching came from his father and has become one of the most enduring threads of his life, whether in classrooms, workshops, sermons, essays, or conversations with students.
Ray holds degrees in philosophy from the University of Winnipeg and the University of Windsor, and his long-standing intellectual interests include authenticity, freedom, identity, education, and the moral formation of the self. The work of Charles Taylor and Hannah Arendt has been especially important to his thinking. Alongside this philosophical work, Ray has built a long career in intercultural learning, English language education, academic writing, teacher development, and adult learning. His current writing brings these interests together through essays, sermons, educational reflections, and his forthcoming book, The Architecture of Authenticity.

