We have good news to share from Luther Seminary. This spring, we completed campus visits with reviewers from both the Higher Learning Commission and the Association of Theological Schools, our two accrediting institutions. This is the culminating step, on our end, in a reaffirmation of accreditation process that takes place every 10 years.
Maintaining our status as a rigorously academic, degree-conferring graduate institution is critically important to our mission of educating leaders for Christian communities. The reaccreditation process asks us to reflect back over the last decade and evaluate how the fulfillment of this mission and sustainability for our learners, the contexts where they serve, and our operations carry forward in the midst of a rapidly changing world.
And much has indeed changed. Enrollment across theological education has shifted dramatically in the last ten years, with trends that began even further in the past. In response, we have dramatically rethought how we deliver theological education and, with confirmed success, provided ever more innovative ways of teaching—from episodic, strategic in-person learning to travel courses, on-site intensives, cohort retreats, and much more.
As we think about how much the world has changed in these past 10 years—including how students pursue higher education and how we engage in community and work life after a global pandemic—we give thanks for the growth of our many digital resources that serve Christian communities around the world, from the creation of Faith+Lead to exponential expansion of online engagement with our Working Preacher and Enter the Bible websites.
Reporting to both external accreditors through comprehensive, community-wide evaluations of every aspect of Luther Seminary gives us confidence as we move forward into a dynamic, hopeful future. At our commencement next month, we will celebrate nearly 100 graduates who will go out from the seminary excited and ready to continue their work of sharing the good news of Jesus Christ.
We are adapting to new realities and continue to provide a world-class theological education to leaders who will serve in God’s world. Through it all, we ask that the Spirit help us remain faithful to this mission. Thank you for making this possible, and please continue to pray for our students and the places they will serve.
Peace,
Robin Steinke
President
Read other installments in our recent 2025 series on how Luther Seminary continues to lead in providing theological education for the church:
- Disruptions and Discernment in Theological Education – January 2025
- What a Strong Seminary Can Offer – February 2025
- One Mission, Many Ways – March 2025
- Reimagining Leadership Everywhere – April 2025