For years, Christian congregations and other faith communities around the country have been unevenly disrupted by a host of social and cultural factors. If we are faithful to our mission to prepare leaders to serve Christian communities, we must equip these leaders to navigate a changed and changing landscape.
Some congregations call one or more ordained pastors to lead them, others rely entirely on lay leadership. Some congregations meet in church buildings, others in coffee shops, breweries, camp grounds, campus ministries, and open fields. Christian communities inhabit rural, urban, and suburban locales.
Our student body, with record high enrollment this year, reflects these changes. Some of our students are able to move to the Twin Cities for theological education, others travel to Minnesota several times a year for intensive, in-person learning. Some of our students have reliable access to the internet, others do not. Some of our students are “digital natives” who easily grasp how to use social media, AI, and other virtual tools; others are actively learning how to effectively integrate these tools into their education and ministry.
Our success lies in our ability to adapt, to provide education for leadership across the many kinds of congregations throughout the ELCA and beyond. Equipping a variety of students for a variety of contexts with a single curriculum is a challenge. Our faculty and staff have spent years developing new modes of delivering education, restructured degree programs, and a curriculum focused beyond just passing on information—which virtual tools provide in a matter of seconds—but on creating spaces where we engage and cultivate stories of God’s love, grace, justice, and mercy for the world.
In these fluid educational contexts, our curriculum has changed, our teaching has changed, and now our campus will change. Each of these is part of a larger story of Luther Seminary’s calling to serve a changing church by opening wide the doors to theological education so we can educate more leaders for service in more places.
While significant institutional shifts are never easy, we see these changes as opportunities to steward even more effectively the resources with which we’ve been blessed for the sake of our students. Thanks to you for your steadfast support of our enduring mission to educate leaders for Christian communities.
Peace,
Robin Steinke
President
Read other installments in our series on why the church needs Luther Seminary in this moment:
A New Chapter for Luther Seminary – June 2025
Expanding Our Mission – July 2025
Our Mission Endures – August 2025
A Sense of Purpose and Place – September 2025