Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York
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Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York is a preeminent independent graduate school of theology, located in Manhattan between Claremont Avenue and Broadway, 120th to 122nd Streets. The seminary was founded in 1836 under the Presbyterian Church, and is currently affiliated with the nearby Columbia University.
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[edit] Campus
The brick and limestone English Gothic architecture, by Francis R. Allen (1844–1931) and Collins, completed in 1910, includes the tower (pictured), which adapts features of the crossing tower of Durham Cathedral. The Seminary is also adjacent to Teachers College, Barnard College, the Jewish Theological Seminary of America and the Manhattan School of Music and has cross-registration and library access agreements with several of these schools. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 23, 1980.
[edit] History
During the late-19th Century, Union Theological Seminary (UTS) became one of the leading centers of liberal Christianity in the United States. Among its graduates were the historian of Christianity Arthur McGiffert, biblical scholar James Moffett, Harry Emerson Fosdick, pastor of Riverside Church, who served as professor during his tenure there, and the Socialist leader Norman Thomas. It is home to the Burke Theological Library, which is second only to the Vatican Library in the scope of its collections.
[edit] Faculty
UTS currently employs several prominent theologians on its faculty. Dr. Joseph Hough, the current President, is an important Christian Democratic Socialist. Henry Sloane Coffin was a past president. Dr. James Hal Cone is one of the founders of liberation theology and is especially important in the development of African-American theology. Dr. Gary Dorrien is a leading church historian and social ethicist. Dr. James Forbes, the senior pastor of the adjacent Riverside Church, is an adjunct professor at the seminary and had been a full-time, chaired professor before accepting the Riverside post.
Reinhold Niebuhr and Paul Tillich made UTS the center of liberal Christianity in the post-War period. Prominent public intellectual Dr. Cornel West commenced a promising academic career at UTS in 1977. As liberalism lost ground to conservatism after the 1960s, UTS ran into financial difficulties, and shrank significantly. Eventually, the school agreed to lease some of its buildings to Columbia University and to transfer ownership of and responsibility for the Burke Library to Columbia. These agreements helped stabilize the school's finances, which had been hobbled by increasing library costs and the need for substantial campus repairs.
[edit] Degrees
The school confers Master of Arts, Master of Divinity, S.T.M, Th.D and Ph.D. degrees. The school has long been associated with ecumenism.
[edit] List of founders
- Charles Butler (NYU) (1802-97)
[edit] Notable Current Faculty
- Mary C. Boys — Skinner and McAlpin Professor of Practical Theology
- Euan K. Cameron — Henry Luce III Professor of Reformation Church History & Academic Dean. (1958-)
- David Carr — Professor of Old Testament; contributed to Genesis in the New Oxford Annotated Bible (New Revised Standard Version)
- James Cone — Charles A. Briggs Distinguished Professor of Systematic Theology - Founder of Black Liberation Theology.
- Gary Dorrien — Reinhold Niebuhr Professor of Social Ethics
- Paul F. Knitter — Paul Tillich Professor of Theology
- Chung Hyun Kyung — Associate Professor of Ecumenical Theology
- Barbara Lunblad — Joe R. Engle Associate Professor of Preaching
- Daisy L. Machado — Professor of the History of Christianity; first U.S. Latina ordained in the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
- Christopher Morse — Dietrich Bonhoeffer Professor of Theology & Ethics
- John Anthony McGuckin — Professor of Early Church History
- Anne Belford Ulanov — Christiane Brooks Johnson Memorial Professor of Psychiatry and Religion
Several of Union's members also teach in the Religious Studies department at Columbia University and at the Teachers College, Columbia University, and the Jewish Theological Seminary.
[edit] Former theologians and faculty
- William Greenough Thayer Shedd — professor of sacred literature (1863–1874) and of systematic theology (1874-1890).
- Charles Augustus Briggs — professor of Hebrew and cognate languages (1874–1891) and of Biblical theology (1891-1904); an important early leader of the Modernist movement.
- Reinhold Niebuhr (1892–1971) — professor of Applied Christianity - Christian social ethics -, author of the influential The Nature and Destiny of Man (1941), and the Serenity Prayer (popularized through the Twelve-step program).
- Paul Tillich (1886–1965) — German-American theologian and Christian existentialist philosopher.
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906–1945) — a German Lutheran pastor and theologian and participant in the resistance movement against Nazism, engaged in post-graduate studies at UTS.
- John Macquarrie — professor of Systematic Theology 1962–70, afterwards Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity in the University of Oxford and Canon Residentiary of Christ Church, Oxford 1970–1986.
- Robert Pollack — professor of Science and Religion
- Raymond E. Brown (1928–1998) — One of America's preeminent New Testament scholars and member of Pontificial Bible Commission was professor in UTS for 23 years.
- Edward Robinson Biblical scholar and discoverer of Robinson's Arch and Hezekiah's Tunnel in Jerusalem.
[edit] Notable alumni
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer — German theologian and Nazi resister who did post-graduate work at Union
- Marcus Borg — Popular lecturer and writer, Hundere Distinguished Professor of Religion and Culture at Oregon State University
- Frederick Buechner — Writer
- Frederick Buckley Newell (Bachelor of Divinity, 1916) — Bishop of The Methodist Church
- Nelson Cruikshank (Master of divinity, 1929) — Labor union activist and strategist responsible for the passage of Medicare
- Helen Flanders Dunbar (B.D. 1927) — an important early figure in U.S. psychosomatic medicine.
- Franklin I. Gamwell — Shailer Mathews Professor of Religious Ethics, the Philosophy of Religion, and Theology at the Divinity School of the University of Chicago
- Dr. David Gushee — Professor of Moral Philosophy at Union University. Author of 9 books and over 70 articles[1]
- Dwight Hopkins — Professor of Theology at the Divinity School at the University of Chicago
- Myles Horton — Co-founder of the Highlander Center
- Andrew McLellan — former Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland
- Bruce McLeod (PhD) — Moderator of the United Church of Canada
- Norman Thomas — American Socialist
- K. H. Ting — President emeritus of the Three-Self Patriotic Movement and China Christian Council
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Union Theological Seminary webpage
- Union Podcast
- The WPA Guide to New York City 1939, reprint 1982.
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Categories: Columbia University | Presbyterian universities and colleges | Seminaries and theological colleges in the United States | Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada | Universities and colleges in New York City | Universities and colleges in New York | Registered Historic Places in Manhattan | Educational institutions established in 1836