Al and Mary Ann Solmonson

Ask Mary Ann Solmonson how she thinks of stewardship and she'll tell you it's: "Everything I am and everything I do after I say what I believe." She's lived this out loud and clear as a Luther Seminary volunteer. She has been a volunteer for more than 10 years and has served on the seminary's board of directors, and been a member of the Called and Sent campaign partnership gifts committee. She has also assisted with various development initiatives and leadership programming in the Southwestern Washington Synod.
Looking back on her life and connection with Luther Seminary, she sees the blessings that were made possible by the generosity of many stewards who have supported Luther Seminary.
A young bride in 1965, she entered the Lutheran community when her late husband, Rick Halvorson, began his studies at Luther Seminary. "I grew up in a very small town in South Dakota and belonged to an Episcopalian church. My experiences with the Lutheran tradition were so few," she said. "I didn't know what to expect and was very nervous." But the people she met at Luther demonstrated how 'to witness to salvation through Jesus Christ and to serve in God's world.'
Over the next 27 years after Rick's graduation and ordination, Solmonson leaped into ministry with him, serving various roles in the congregation and community. In 1991 Rick was diagnosed with cancer and died nine months later. "My life was changed that day," she said.
Not long after Rick's death, the opportunity to serve on the seminary's board was presented to her through her bishop. "I felt like a brick was lifted off my heart. I wanted to be active in the life of the local congregation but found that it was just too difficult," she said. "Because the seminary had done so much to mold me into the person I was, I felt a calling to share my gifts with the seminary."
Solmonson's service is fueled by her desire to be a faithful steward of what she's been given. "I bring to my service at Luther Seminary the perspective of a pastor's wife and a layperson who sits in the pew every Sunday," she said.
She also takes the Luther Seminary story to local congregations. "I have a deep commitment to share the seminary's story and its mission with local congregations," she said. "I also want students at the seminary and those considering ministry of some sort to feel encouraged in their calls and excited to do ministry."
Today, Solmonson continues to serve her calling to stewardship with her husband Al, sharing Luther Seminary's story with families in the Northwest and Alaska. In addition to serving the seminary and her congregation, Solmonson is part-time registered nurse at St. Peter Hospital in Olympia, Wash. Al is a retired pastor and does some supply preaching. "We are trying to be faithful stewards of the seminary's mission statement, stewards of our finances by sharing with others, and stewards in the vineyard of our congregation by looking for prospective students and encouraging their calls."
The Solmonsons, who live in Olympia, have five adult children and five grandchildren.