Company Profile
United Lutheran Seminary
Company Overview
Our Mission
United Lutheran Seminary builds and sustains an affirming and diverse learning community of faithful, well-educated leaders skilled at guiding grace-filled encounters. Deeply rooted in the history of Lutheranism within Christianity, we are witness to and participate in the work of God in the world through spiritual leadership, public advocacy, impactful worship, and care of neighbor.
Our Core Values
Called by the Holy Spirit as disciples of Jesus Christ, all who are part of United Lutheran Seminary live in God’s reign of mercy and justice and are committed to living the following values:
Love – We embody God’s radical love wherever we live, learn, teach, and lead. We celebrate the dignity of all and embrace the multidimensional diversity within the communities surrounding the seminary and the world. Love is practicing compassion, forgiveness, reconciliation, humility, respect, and openness.
Inquiry – We are grounded by a biblical, liturgical, and Lutheran confessional foundation which equips students to be critical thinkers within and beyond their own traditions. Students are formed as public leaders who listen thoughtfully to what the Spirit is saying in a forward-looking and evolving context. Inquiry is a life-long engagement with the way of Jesus.
Community– We are more than a place. We are an academic community of hospitality that cultivates personal and communal well-being within the Body of Christ. We center worship, model formation, and create opportunities for sustained civil discourse. Community means creating connections, practicing discipleship, stewardship, advocacy, and peace-making.
Integrity – We are accountable to God to live the grace given to us. The seminary holds itself accountable to the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, in collaboration with churches of other traditions. Integrity includes rejecting physical, verbal, sexual, emotional harassment, or abuse.
Commitment – We embrace Martin Luther’s approach to theology, centering God’s love for what God has created, shown forth in Jesus Christ, and active in the Holy Spirit through the church and its ministry. We are committed to communal deliberation, which counters absolutism and challenges hyper-individualism. Commitment means translating theology into lifegiving conversations and actions, incorporating the understandings given to us through science, and attending to the real needs of the world.
Our Vision
?Empowered by the Gospel to preach, teach, lead, and cultivate flourishing communities within a just and sustainable world.
Our Lutheran Foundation
As a Lutheran seminary, we embrace and critically reflect on Martin Luther’s approach to theology. This means prioritizing God’s deep love for all God has created as shown forth in Jesus Christ, and active in the Holy Spirit through the church and its ministry. In openness and trust, we commit ourselves to communal inquiry and ecumenical dialogue among the traditions represented at the seminary. We do this with humility and in the hope of avoiding narrow dogmatism and hyper-individualism. This way of doing theology also attends to the real needs of the world, engages in interreligious conversation, incorporates the understandings gained through science, and translates theological commitments into lifegiving conversations and actions.
United Lutheran Seminary is a Reconciling in Christ seminary.
Company History
United Lutheran Seminary, formed in 2017 (the year marking the 500th anniversary of the Reformation), joined two historic Lutheran institutions into one.
These two seminaries – Gettysburg founded in 1826 and Philadelphia founded in 1864 – share a common history in a robust and religiously diverse region of the nation. Pennsylvania sits astride the pathways of the story of American freedom: the forging of the nation in Philadelphia and the new birth of freedom in Gettysburg. The seminary’s 1826 founding in Gettysburg prepared students for pioneer efforts in the field of mission, education, and parish ministry. During the civil war, tensions within the small Gettysburg faculty over the language for study – German or American English – together with disputes over the direction of study, towards assimilation into American evangelical reform, or towards a greater emphasis on Lutheran distinctives, especially the Lutheran Confessions, led to the separate founding of the Philadelphia seminary in 1864.
Throughout their histories, both seminaries continued to innovate to prepare students for ministry in the expanding country. Students in Gettysburg sponsored Daniel Alexander Payne as the first African American to be enrolled in a Lutheran seminary in 1835. A missionary zeal included a witness against slavery, and for other moral reforms, like Sabbath observance. Philadelphia’s dynamic urban setting fostered innovation in the development of Lutheran institutions to minister to the poor, particularly the female diaconate. The Philadelphia seminary’s strong tradition of scholarship in theology and liturgy led the Lutheran churches in America to forming a Common Service Book, the first step in the gradual path towards a united Lutheranism in the United States.
Leaders from both seminaries began to work together in the 20th century to prod and push other Lutherans towards wider fellowship and to strengthen the witness of Lutherans in the wake of two world wars. Abdel Ross Wentz, President of Gettysburg’s seminary, drafted the constitutions of both the Lutheran World Federation and the World Council of Churches. He brought the first woman professor at a Lutheran seminary, Bertha Paulssen, to Gettysburg (1945) where she introduced the social sciences to the curriculum. Dr. O. Fredrick Nolde, who served as professor of Christian Education and Dean of the Graduate School at the Philadelphia seminary, was influential in the language used in the United Nations Charter and especially the freedom of religion sections in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948). Franklin Clark Fry, Philadelphia’s alumnus whose master of parliamentary procedure vaulted him to the presidency of the United Lutheran Church, The Lutheran World Federation, and the World Council of Churches, was even on the cover of TIME, as Mr. Protestant. United Lutheran Seminary now can claim as its joint heritage other notable graduates, including Elizabeth Platz (1965), the first woman to be ordained by an American Lutheran body (1970).
In addition to the general curriculum, there are other learning opportunities that directly and indirectly support the pedagogical tasks of unifying, learning, and serving. The Seminary Ridge Museum in the seminary’s historic civil war building interprets the theological disputes over slavery that shaped American religion and society. The Urban Theological Institute enables engagement with African American theology, preaching, and church history throughout the curriculum. The Town and Country Church Institute offers students the possibility of honing ministry to meet the needs of rural and small-town churches in a time of profound change. The annual Asian Theological Summer Institute enables mentorship of Asian and Asian-American doctoral students.
Graduates today serve churches all across the ecumenical spectrum, locally, nationally, and internationally. They are equipped to serve in different callings as public leaders in church and society, in parish ministry, specialized chaplaincy, diaconal ministries, and social service organizations. ULS prepares faithful servants to witness to the ongoing struggle for equality and dignity for all people, and to be builders of a public theology that speaks to a global community where the quest for justice is an urgent issue of our times.
United Lutheran Seminary Indigenous Land Acknowledgement
The land on which United Lutheran Seminary sits, and which stretches between its two campuses, is tribal land, inhabited originally by the Lenni Lenape, the Susquehannock, and the Seneca tribes. We honor those original caretakers of this land, and we pay respect to the original inhabitants of what we now call Pennsylvania. Acknowledging this history is consistent with the seminary’s commitment to welcome and equity, which calls us in Christ to repentance, reconciliation, and wholeness. Even though the sad history of colonization cannot be undone, this land acknowledgement is one small way for us to remember what happened here, to understand our part in this story, and to develop a more healthy relationship with the land and its original inhabitants.
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