On his retirement in 2003 Williams had completed a period of 37 years as a lecturer within the Faculty of Theology of the University of Wales. He served as Principal of the United Theological College in Aberystwyth between 1998 and 2003.
Achievements
Williams served two terms as Dean at the Aberystwyth and Lampeter School of Theology (1985–1987 and 1994–1997),[6] and was visiting professor at Acadia Divinity College, Acadia University in Nova Scotia in 1997. He sat on the translating panel for the New Testament section of Y Beibl Cymraeg Newydd (The Revised New Welsh Bible) from 1975 onwards[7] and was secretary of the Theological Branch of the University of Wales's Guild of Graduates for 36 years. He also served as chief A level examiner in Religious Studies for the WJEC for twelve years.
Currently, he is an honorary research fellow at the University of Wales, Lampeter's Department of Theology and Religious Studies[8] and Research Fellow at the National Library of Wales. In 2002/03, he was Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Wales's Association in the South and was the General Assembly's Moderator in 2006/07. In 1990 he was elected Moderator of the Free Church Federal Council in Wales and England: only the second of his denomination to fill the post in half a century.
In 2006, Williams received the honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity from the University of Wales in recognition of his contribution to biblical scholarship and to religion and education in Wales. In 2011 the volume The Bible in Church, Academy, and Culture: Essays in Honour of the Reverend Dr. John Tudno Williams edited by Alan P. F. Sell was published in honour of his contributions to the Church and to scholarship.[2] In 2012 he was elected a Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales.[9]
Williams married Ina Evans in 1964; the couple have two children, Haf and Tomos Tudno Williams.[10]