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Belief, Bricks, and Beyond
After nearly a decade of turmoil, Yale’s Divinity School is undergoing fundamental changes, from the $42-million reinvention of its campus to the installation of its first female dean.

Although sequestered in a complex of its own roughly a mile from the central campus, Yale’s Divinity School is nevertheless closer to the University’s heart and history than any of the other professional schools. Indeed, Yale’s founders declared 300 years ago that its role was to prepare students for service in clerical no less than civil positions. Its early alumni included Jonathan Edwards and a host of other influential divines. And when divinity was given a separate department in 1822, it eventually came to be seen as a training ground for what was then the nation’s elite—a “West Point of mainline Protestantism,” as one writer put it.

But in recent years, the School has struggled with financial woes, weakening enrollment, a deteriorating physical plant, and uneven leadership. And through the late 1990s, controversies over the School’s location and renovation plagued the campus.

 

“Chopp embraces both the mundane and the spiritual.”

Things are finally looking up. Not only has the Marquand Chapel spire that dominates Sterling Divinity Quadrangle been restored (it was about to disintegrate), but admissions are up, the funding is flowing, and the School’s leadership has been put in the hands of someone whose credentials seem designed precisely to address the issues now facing the School.

Rebecca Chopp, the School’s 13th head, is an ordained Methodist minister, as well as a leading feminist scholar, author of three books, and a seasoned administrator. Among her colleagues, Chopp is known as an energetic, disciplined thinker and manager. “With Rebecca there’s very little wasted motion,” says president William M. Chace of Emory University, where Chopp spent 15 years before leaving for New Haven in July. “She has a very lucid manner of thinking and a crisp, alert sensibility. She knows what she thinks, and she reflects what she’s been thinking.” She is also Emory’s former provost. “I understand a wee bit about budgets and administration,” she reassured the congregation at the news conference announcing her Yale appointment.

Chopp’s ability to embrace both the mundane and the spiritual will undoubtedly prove useful in handling the multitude of issues that have been afflicting the Divinity School in recent years. Not the least of them was a lingering question in some quarters of the University about the role of a Christian divinity school at a secular institution. Seminaries devoted to particular denominations offered ordination at virtually no cost (YDS charges upwards of $26,000 a year), while the growth of religious studies as an academic field at universities—including Yale—provided options for the traditional YDS candidates who were more interested in the books than the cloth. Beyond that, the student body had changed dramatically. Until the middle of the 20th century, YDS students were overwhelmingly Protestant, male, single, white, and young. They now include members of some 40 denominations, women, married people, people embarking on second careers, and even a few non-Christians, from Jews to Buddhists to Muslims.

Tensions created by these changes increased as the neo-Georgian campus of the school fell victim to “deferred maintenance,” and internal dissension among the faculty spread to the point that a student report described the atmosphere as “venomous.”

The institutional unhappiness was reflected in the admission rate, which by 1994 had risen above 85 percent. (Sixty percent is an appropriate rate for competitive divinity schools, according to YDS associate dean of admissions Guy Martin.) Enrollment, which had peaked at 400 in 1992, had slumped below 300.

In response to the situation, Provost Alison Richard in 1994 created the Divinity School Review Committee with a mandate to examine everything about the School, including its purpose, and even its location. The committee’s report, issued in 1995, reaffirmed YDS’s historic educational mission and offered what Richard described as a “road map” for the future, recommending that the school become smaller and more selective, shore up its faculty, fine-tune its curriculum, and increase its income. (See “The Future of Divinity,” Mar. 1996.) A second committee concluded in 1996 that moving the School to the central campus was feasible and even desirable. But further study and analysis by the New York architectural firm of R.M. Kliment & Frances Halsband (see page 42) resulted in the decision that YDS remain in its existing location, but that its buildings be adapted to its new needs.

Virtually all of the recommendations are now in the process of being fulfilled. YDS is substantially more competitive (a 68 percent acceptance rate in 2001), attracting more applicants (up 51 percent since 1995), and includes for the first time in its curriculum a required course in non-Christian religions. The original renovation plan, which sparked a loud and public debate, was altered, and the first of the new spaces—at an overall cost of roughly $42 million—are already welcoming students. The entire project is scheduled for completion in 2003.

For all the troubles, YDS has remained dedicated to its original principles. Of the dozen or so university-based divinity schools in the country, Yale is one of only five (including the University of Chicago, Harvard, Howard, and Vanderbilt) that are interdenominational. According to YDS professor Robert R. Wilson, the School’s mission—“to foster the knowledge and love of God through critical engagement with the traditions of the Christian churches”—reflects a commitment dating from Colonial times to prepare people for “learned ministry—not just ministry, but ministry with a very deep scholarly base.”

For at least the last 50 years, continues Wilson, YDS’s mission has included three parts: the preparation of students for Christian ministry; preparation for the academic study of religion; and the provision of religious studies to students with other vocational interests. Daniel O. Aleshire, executive director of the Association of Theological Schools in Pittsburgh, adds that while Yale’s peers may also offer both training for the ministry and the education of scholars, YDS has the longest such tradition.

Like many current Divinity School alumni, John Branson ’74MDiv came to Yale not only because of its longstanding reputation, but also because, as an interdenominational, university-based school, it offered a broader range of experience than he could get at a seminary. Now a parish priest in Westport, Connecticut, Branson, who is also a member of the YDS alumni advisory board, recalls the School as “a very fertile place in ideas, backgrounds, and perspectives.”

 

“A key part of the education is real-world experience in churches and social service agencies.”

YDS grants three degrees: Master of Divinity (MDiv), Master of Arts in Religion (MAR), and Master of Sacred Theology (STM). Students take courses on topics ranging from Old Testament interpretation and the theology of John Duns Scotus, to the iconography of Christian art, and medical ethics. A key part of the education is real-world ministerial experience in churches and social service agencies.

YDS used to grant PhDs, but these degrees moved to the Graduate School’s department of religious studies (DRS) when it was created in 1963. As a result, says Wilson, who has served as chairman of DRS and currently holds joint appointments in both schools, YDS and the DRS haven’t always had a smooth relationship. In the 1960s, for example, some YDS professors resented the fact that they were not invited to participate in the new department, and that some of their PhD programs, such as one in Christian education, were abandoned. But, Wilson concludes, “we have tried very hard to smooth out those difficulties.”

Wilson thinks of the difference between YDS and the DRS as “functional.” While the department serves undergraduates and PhD candidates, the Divinity School serves those seeking master’s degrees. “There’s a booming business at places like Yale, Harvard, and Chicago in these two-year degrees,” he says. “Many undergraduate programs around the country don’t prepare people very well to go into PhD programs.”

Harry Adams, a former University Chaplain who filled in as interim dean following the departure of Chopp’s predecessor Richard Wood last year to become head of the New York- based United Fund for Christian Higher Education in Asia, stresses that faith remains a distinguishing characteristic of YDS. “We’re a Christian school; we’re not a graduate school in religion,” he insists. Adams adds that Yale is unusual among university divinity schools in its practice of community worship—in a variety of traditions—five days a week. “One of the strengths of the School is that people who come here don’t just read about how Episcopalians worship or how a gospel choir sounds, but experience it,” Adams says. “At the heart of our life together is our common worship of God.”

Cristina Sloan ’02 MAR, a student of church history, wanted to attend a divinity school rather than a religious studies department largely for that reason. “At a religious studies department you tend to study Christianity as if it were historical, as if it no longer existed,” she says, “whereas at a divinity school you’re surrounded by people for whom it’s a living thing.”

That certainly includes Rebecca Chopp. Raised in Kansas, Chopp became interested in religion in her teens, and by the time she got to college knew that she wanted to become a minister in the United Methodist Church, at least partly because it supported the ordination of women.

After earning a BA in 1974 at Kansas Wesleyan University, Chopp went on to the Saint Paul School of Theology and then to the University of Chicago Divinity School, where she earned her PhD in 1983 and served as assistant professor of theology. She moved to Emory University in 1986, and held several appointments at the Candler School of Theology and Graduate Division of Religion, the Institute for Liberal Arts, and the Institute for Women’s Studies before becoming provost. In a 1998 interview with Emory Magazine, she argued that “a good provost is someone who comes to the job right out of the classroom, first, because the teacher-student interaction is the heart of our community. But I also think it’s similar to teaching because you’re helping people to achieve their own goals.” She described the process as “leadership by facilitation.”

In her scholarly work, Chopp, who will also serve YDS as the Titus Street Professor of Theology and Culture (her husband, Fred Thibodeau, will be working in the central development office), has concentrated on feminist, liberation, and political theologies and theories of rhetoric, pragmatism, and poststructuralism. She is the author of The Praxis of Suffering: An Interpretation of Liberation and Political Theologies (1986); The Power to Speak: Feminism, Language, God (1989); and Saving Work: Feminist Practices of Theological Education (1995).

Chopp feels that one of her greatest accomplishments at Emory was fostering “interdisciplinary and cross-school conversation.” Such dialogue is not only beneficial to society, she believes, but also good for scholarship, because it leads to new ways of looking at timeless questions. Among the initiatives Chopp helped launch at Emory were the Interfaith Health Program, which investigates the role of faith in health, the Religion in Law Program, which studies human rights, and the Interdisciplinary Center for the Study of Religion.

Chopp established Emory’s first major office for community partnerships, which brings Emory’s scholars together with Atlanta’s community groups. (Recently, when an Atlanta non-profit organization for mothers and girls suspected that local foundations favored nonprofits for boys, it engaged a political scientist at Emory to conduct a gender relations study. Data from the project helped shift the funding balance.)

Chopp also helped expand Emory’s Office of International Affairs, which through the Claus M. Halle Institute sponsors seminars on internationalism and takes groups of faculty members on two- to six-week seminar trips to parts of the world they’ve never visited. She formed the Council of Deans so that administrators could be more involved as what she calls “university citizens” with administrative budgets.

So why would Rebecca Chopp move from Atlanta to New Haven? One reason, she says, is that she considers Yale to be “poised to enter a new stage of theological education for the 21st century. This is a unique opportunity in the history of theological education.”

Chopp thinks theological education today must respond to and be shaped by an increasingly pluralistic society, in which one’s neighbors may include Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Hindus, and Muslims. “In traditional American culture, the dominant voice was Protestant,” says Chopp. “Now that has irrevocably changed. Christianity has to rethink some of its basic messages in terms of its relationships to many other religions in this country.”

Among the questions to which Chopp’s students may be seeking answers are, according to the dean: “How does watching people live faithfully in a different faith affect traditional claims about Christ as the only way to salvation? What is the role of evangelism and proselytizing in a multi-religious world? Can a Buddhist speak from the pulpit of a Christian church?”

Chopp also believes that Christians must embrace the fact that Christianity has evolved into a world religion, and that most Christians today live not in Europe or North America but in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. “It’s important to help Christians in the first world see themselves as part of a worldwide religion, not simply a western one,” she says. Furthermore, she feels, in a global society, divinity educators must probe what it means to train Christian ministers who are engaged internationally, who understand their religion as one among many.

In Chopp’s view, religious leaders today must address public issues in a cross-disciplinary fashion “because current questions are complex and cannot be answered solely by religion or school or politics. Genetic testing and engineering, for example, prompt deep, value-laden, ethical questions about what it means to be human, and require input from many thinkers. I don’t think scientists want to be the only ones to answer them. Many scientists are desperately hungry for theologians and ethicists to be involved in responding to those questions.”

While Chopp acknowledges that America has always been a religious society, she thinks it has entered, within the past ten or so years, a period of particular religious curiosity. “Enlightenment thought predicted that we would all wake up one day and religion would be gone,” she notes. “And that’s not happened. The academy, after many years of thinking that religion was what you learned in Sunday school, has awakened to the incredible role of religion in people’s lives and around the world.”

 

“It’s very confusing to many Americans to know how to belong.”

This spike of interest comes at a time when, the dean argues, “the moral texture of society—the fabric, in a sense, of how we organized our lives and how we associated—is undergoing immense turmoil and change. Society is grasping, struggling to figure out how to create its moral networks and fibers and how to live in communities. It’s very confusing to many Americans to know how to belong. We are a very transient culture. We don’t have firm, narrow, religious traditions.”

At Yale, Chopp says, one of her top priorities will be to support teaching and research with “a real eye toward building bridges” between the Divinity School faculty and the faculties of Yale’s other graduate and professional schools. “I think YDS’s physical distance from some of the other professional schools, from the arts and sciences, means that the faculty and students have to work extra hard to reach out,” she says. She is also open to the possibility of adding non-Christian scholars to what is now an all-Christian faculty.

Some members of the Yale community, despite durable evidence to the contrary, still consider the Divinity School to be an artifact of another age, with no central role in today’s University. In their view, a school tied to one religion seems narrow and out of place in the multi-faith, multicultural world of today.

Not surprisingly, Chopp disagrees. In her view, if YDS were to abandon its religious roots, the University would lose not only a vital partner in a historical and spiritual dialogue, but also a crucial perspective on its own traditions.

Chopp points out that many theologians—including Paul Tillich and former YDS faculty member H. Richard Niebuhr—have believed that truth does not reside only in the past, and that Christian witness is not simply a matter of following a prescribed set of practices, texts, and traditions. “Tillich and Niebuhr represent what I like about Yale,” says the dean: “the belief that religion is a vital part of human existence, and that it must incarnate itself in every age.”  the end

 
     
 

More Than a Fix-up

For some years now, much of the Yale campus has been undergoing renovation to catch up with the effects of the “deferred maintenance” policy of the 1970s and 1980s. But in the case of the Divinity School, a deteriorated physical plant provided an opportunity to remake the existing buildings for fundamentally new uses.

Designed by the architectural firm of Delano & Aldrich and completed in 1932 at the north edge of Yale’s campus, the Divinity School’s U-shaped complex of brick buildings evokes the famous University of Virginia composition by Thomas Jefferson. But with 21 different levels and 38 entrances, the quadrangle was difficult to negotiate, and by the early 1990s the lack of upkeep had created a potentially hazardous environment. (Evacuation plans were drafted in case more than six inches of snow accumulated on the roof of the chapel.)

In 1996, the New York firm of R. M. Kliment & Frances Halsband Architects was engaged to study the problem and developed an “adaptive reuse” plan intended to preserve the historic exteriors while adapting the interiors to meet current needs. “Our key charge was to make a place that nurtured the sense of academic community,” says Robert Kliment ’54, ’59MArch. To that end, the plan converted the pavilions of the main quadrangle from their original use as dormitories to classrooms, faculty offices, a 150-seat lecture hall, and public gathering spaces. Future students will live in the apartment buildings that currently adjoin the site.

The plan moves Berkeley Divinity School (an affiliated Episcopal seminary that became part of YDS in 1971), the Institute for Sacred Music, the Common Room, the refectory, and the bookstore (all previously at the back of or off the campus) into new spaces on the main quadrangle, so that all components of the school are united. To better connect YDS to the life of University, two new public spaces—Berkeley Chapel and the Institute for Sacred Music’s Great Hall—have been placed at the front of the complex bordering on Prospect Street.

A crucial part of the plan is the creation of passageways that link the main buildings with ramps and the floors with elevators, making them not only accessible to people with disabilities, but also encouraging more contact among students and faculty. The conceptual goal, according to the architects, was to create a “sense of being between two worlds and therefore part of both, the cloistered academic environment and the outside world, and between the pre-existing and the new.”

Not all spaces will be new: Parts of the library, the Day Missions Reading Room, and Marquand Chapel will be restored, and three buildings at the rear of campus are being “mothballed” for as-yet unspecified future uses.

Those buildings nearly derailed the entire project. The original architectural plan called for their demolition. But local preservationists, supported by art history professor Vincent Scully and the dean of the School of Architecture, Robert A. M. Stern, began legal action to save the targeted buildings.The dispute was resolved in 1999 when the University agreed to retain the structures in hopes of finding future uses for them.

Funding for the project is coming from a variety of sources, including the University, the Lilly Foundation, the Luce Foundation, an anonymous donor, and alumni. Work is expected to be finished in 2003.

 
 
 
 
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