Published by: Princeton Theological Seminary
President: Jonathan Lee Walton
Editorial Staff
Editor in Chief: Linda Romano
Managing Editor: Cherrelle Nicholson
Designer: Michelle Baker Design LLC
Photography: Kevin Birch, Thato Dadson, Jenna Perfette
Contributors:
John Chadwick; Daniel L. Migliore MDiv ‘59; Nathan T. Stucky MDiv ‘10, PhD ‘15; Steve Vivona
Contact Information
64 Mercer Street, Princeon, NJ 08542 609.921.8300 communication@ptsem.edu ptsem.edu
Copyright © 2025 by Princeton Theological Seminary. All rights reserved.
ISSN: 1937-8386
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Acknowledgments
We extend our gratitude to:
Dr. Nathan Stucky, Director of the Farminary, for contributing his reflections on the Farminary’s 10th Anniversary.
Dr. Daniel L. Migliore, Charles Hodge Professor Emeritus of Systematic Theology, for sharing his reflections on his enduring relationship with Princeton Seminary.
Letter from the President
Princeton Seminary Welcomes Five New Faculty Members
Embracing Difference, Finding Purpose: Jamie Neal’s Story of Faith and Formation at Princeton Seminary
A Different Kind of Leader: Reflections on the Farminary’s 10th anniversary —Past, Present, Future
Can Anything Good Come from the Seminary?
President Walton’s Commencement Speech
Ministry Without Borders: Alumni Redefining Ministry
Faith Seeking Understanding: Honoring Professor Emeritus Daniel L. Migliore MDiv ’59
We Are Educators. We Are Learners. Martha Redondo: A Face of Welcome for International Students
A Message from the Board Chair: Camille Cook Howe MDiv ‘06 Board of Trustees
The Cheerful Giver: Chip Hardwick MDiv ’99, PhD ’07
Report &
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Dear Friends of Princeton Theological Seminary,
Fall reminds us of fresh starts. This is particularly the case in the life of an academic learning community like Princeton Seminary. New students. New faculty. New Board leadership. New opportunities. The fall is a season of anticipation and renewal, a time for setting new goals and rediscovering one’s purpose. Therefore, as the leaves turn and a new semester unfolds, we are honored to share with you this expanded edition of The Princeton Seminary Bulletin
Following our limited-release relaunch last winter, we are delighted to share this Fall 2025 edition with you—our cherished alumni, friends, and supporters of the Seminary. This edition includes stories of scholarship, service, and spiritual growth, as well as our Annual Giving Report for Fiscal Year 2025. Your support affirms that theological education matters and that Princeton Seminary continues to matter. Princeton Seminary matters for learners who are reimagining ministry. The Seminary matters for communities hungry for Christian moral leadership. Princeton Seminary matters for a world in desperate need of institutions that cultivate wisdom, expanded moral imaginations, and hope.
This edition also spotlights those who bring life to our mission at the Seminary. We seek to introduce individuals who teach, serve, and learn diligently and faithfully. For instance, we celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Farminary, the Seminary’s 21-acre farm and learning laboratory that combines theological and ecological reflection. Dr. Nate Stucky, the Farminary’s Founding Director, offers an inspiring reflection on this decade-long milestone while reminding us of how rootedness in land and liturgy can transform the soul and our understanding of God’s call.
The Bulletin’s “We Are Educators” feature highlights the work of Martha Redondo, Associate Director of International Enrollment and Program Services. Along with her team in
the Office of Global Services, Ms. Redondo works tirelessly to create the conditions for all to flourish. Whether one hails from Seoul or South Africa, Brazil or Berlin, Princeton Seminary is a better institution because of the beautiful, diverse tapestry of international students and scholars who enrich our campus. Ms. Redondo’s contributions, along with so many others, remind us that it does not matter if one serves on the faculty, in facilities, food services, or administration. At Princeton Seminary, we are all educators!
Of course, no issue of The Bulletin would be complete without honoring our rich traditions at Princeton Seminary. We are privileged to include reflections from Professor Daniel L. Migliore, Charles Hodge Professor Emeritus of Systematic Theology. For many years, he served as editor of this very publication. Professor Migliore’s voice—forever faithful, thoughtful, and theologically rich—remains a source of instruction and inspiration.
Finally, as you read the Annual Giving Report, please know that your gifts sustain so much more than budgets and buildings. Your generosity supports the cultivation of conscience and character. Princeton Seminary’s influence extends into pulpits, nonprofits, classrooms, hospitals, and communities worldwide. Your giving affirms that theological education—in all its rigor, rootedness, and relevance—is vital for the challenges of our day.
So, welcome to this Fall edition of The Princeton Seminary Bulletin. It is one more way we live into our calling to be a learning community for life. May these pages remind you of the good that can come from the Seminary, and the good that continues because of you.
One Luv, JLW
Jonathan Lee Walton President, Princeton Theological Seminary
Princeton Theological Seminary is delighted to welcome five new faculty whose teaching and scholarship strengthen our commitment to academic excellence while expanding access to theological education for a wider, more diverse community of learners. With expertise spanning the Old Testament, African American Christianity, Asian Christianity, and modern European Christianity, these scholars bring fresh insight to enduring questions of faith, history, and community.
“Princeton Seminary has long been known for its accomplished faculty and preeminent academic programs,” notes Dean and Vice President for Academic Affairs, John Bowlin. “What excites me about these new colleagues is not only their scholarly excellence, but also the way their work addresses some of the most pressing issues of the day: empire and resistance, the bible and its histories, race and childhood, politics and the church, and the growth of Christianity across the globe.
Their teaching will challenge and inspire, equipping our students with learning and wisdom for ministry and scholarship.”
Dr. Mahri Leonard-Fleckman: Reading Scripture in Historical Context
Dr. Mahri Leonard-Fleckman joins Princeton Seminary as Associate Professor of Old Testament. She previously served as Associate Professor in the Departments of Religious Studies and Classics at the College of the Holy Cross.
attention to how local communities navigated imperial power. She is the author of The House of David: Between Political Formation and Literary Revision (Fortress, 2016), co-author of The Book of Ruth (Wisdom Commentary Series, Liturgical, 2017), and co-editor of A Community of Peoples (Brill, 2022). Her forthcoming book, Scribal Representations and Social Landscapes of the Iron Age Shephelah, will be published by Oxford University Press.
Leonard-Fleckman has also reached wider audiences through her award-winning Ponder: Contemplative Bible Study series (Liturgical, 2020–22), demonstrating her ability
History
Dr. Brennan Breed joins Princeton Seminary as Associate Professor of Old Testament from Columbia Theological Seminary, where he also served as Theologian in Residence at First Presbyterian Church in Marietta.
Breed is the author of Nomadic Text: A Theory of Biblical Reception History (Indiana University Press, 2014), which received the Manfred Lautenschläger Award for Theological Promise. He has co-authored a forthcoming, two-volume study of the early Hellenistic period in Egypt and the Levant with Davis Hankins, and is currently completing a commentary on the book of Daniel for the Interpretation series. He also serves as the Main Editor for Reception History in the Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception
Her research examines scribal practices, methods of history writing, and the dynamics of empire, with particular
A Princeton Seminary graduate, Breed brings both scholarly expertise and deep institutional connection back to campus.
Dr. Mélena “Mae” Laudig: African American Christianity and Equity in Higher Education
Appointed Assistant Professor of African American Christianity, Dr. Mélena Laudig brings innovative research and a strong record of advocacy for inclusive academic spaces.
Laudig holds a BA in Religious Studies from Yale, and an MA in Religion, and graduate certificates in African American Studies and Gender and Sexuality Studies from Princeton University, where she is completing her PhD in Religion. She has been awarded The Richard S. Dunn Fellowship at the McNeil Center for Early American Studies and the Lake Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship at The Lake Institute on Faith and Giving.
Her research focuses on early African American religious history, with particular attention given to Black children as religious thinkers and practitioners in the nineteenth century.
Alongside her teaching and research, Laudig holds a deep commitment to making higher education spaces more accessible and supportive for students of all backgrounds. Over the past several years, she has spearheaded a number of equity and inclusion efforts, including cofounding a wellness collective that seeks to increase marginalized students’ access to justice-informed and culturally nuanced approaches to holistic health.
Park’s scholarship explores the intersections of Asian religions and Transpacific Christianity from the sixteenth century to the present. Her current book project, Christian Vernaculars, examines how Korean Catholics developed new forms of faith expression that connected Asia and Europe in surprising ways. Her research interests also include Asian Catholicism, monasticism, women and celibacy, and interreligious dialogue.
Dr. Simon Unger: Christianity and Politics in Modern Europe
Arriving in January 2026, Dr. Simon Unger will serve as Assistant Professor of Modern European Christianity. A historian of Christian ideas in twentieth-century politics, Unger earned his doctorate in modern European history from the University of Oxford and his Habilitation from the University of Fribourg.
His first book, The Periodicals ‘Eckart’ and ‘Hochland’ (Schöningh, 2023), examined Christian political journalism in twentieth-century Germany. His forthcoming book, Consensus in Conflict: Nazism and the Shared Foundations of German Intellectual Culture (Cambridge University Press, 2025), explores political language under the Nazi dictatorship. He currently leads an international research group in the Vatican Archives on “The Global Pontificate of Pius XII” and is at work on a new book, Shadows of the Occident: Catholicism in the Political Thought of Post-War Europe, 1945–1960.
Unger has previously taught at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and Magdalen College, Oxford, bringing both international perspective and historical depth to his teaching.
BROADENING HORIZONS, DEEPENING FAITH
Dr. Shalon Park, a historian from South Korea and double alum of Princeton Seminary (MATS in Religion and Society; PhD in World Christianity and History of Religions), joins the faculty as Assistant Professor of Asian Christianity.
The appointment of these five scholars is more than an expansion of faculty, it’s a deepening of the Seminary’s shared mission. As President Jonathan Lee Walton notes: “We are thrilled to welcome these gifted scholars to Princeton Theological Seminary. Each brings not only expertise in their fields but also a passion for teaching and a commitment to forming leaders for the church, academy, and world. Their presence strengthens our shared vocation of preparing people for faithful service in diverse contexts, and their scholarship and witness will enrich this learning community.”
Shalon Park MA (T.S.) ‘15, PhD ‘24: Asian Christianity in Global Perspective
Jamie Neal, an MDiv/MACEF dual-degree student and President’s Fellow, admits that her journey at Princeton Theological Seminary started off slowly and roughly. Navigating a new academic environment—with its unfamiliar classroom dynamics, the pressure of starting something new, and the range of diverse perspectives— made it challenging to find her footing.
By her second year—completed earlier this summer— things began to shift. A church internship, hands-on ministry, and the opportunity to apply classroom lessons in a real-world context changed her experience for the better.
“It’s challenging still to this day,” Neal says “But it’s a beautiful challenge.”
While she’s no stranger to diverse communities, the breadth of faith perspectives at Princeton Theological Seminary initially surprised her. As a Pentecostal at a Presbyterian seminary representing more than 60 faith traditions, Neal quickly realized how different her background was from that of many of her peers.
“You realize that, as a Pentecostal, you’re a minority in a sense in this community,” she says, “but you also start to see the bigger picture—the love, the mission, and the journey we’re all on to find truth and to witness that truth to the people we encounter.”
She adds,
“I’m still rooted in my Pentecostal faith and tradition, but I’m also gracious enough and willing to lean in, to listen, and to learn from other people.”
Neal says there’s something sacred in every tradition and part of the work is discerning what’s sacred and right, while letting go of what isn’t pleasing to God.
“We’re searching for truth,” she says. “We’re searching for how to please God with our lives, with our worship,
with our daily acts. Having a diverse setting like Princeton Seminary is essential because it allows aspiring ministers to engage with different faith traditions.”
That sense of engagement deepened during her field education at Doylestown Presbyterian Church in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. As an intern, she assisted with worship each Sunday and was involved in nearly every aspect of ministry. She now serves as the interim youth director while continuing to support Sunday worship.
“It’s just a beautiful thing,” she says. “As they give me Presbyterian, I give them a little dash of Pentecostal. We’ve created an ecumenical environment in the church. It’s really been a blessing to me and the congregation.”
Timing made the experience even more meaningful. The church was in a leadership transition, led by an interim head pastor and actively searching for a new one. That liminal space gave Neal the opportunity to connect with people navigating uncertainty and change.
“It’s really been a full ministry experience that I couldn’t have asked for in any other place,” she says. “Just the ability to be there, to observe, to listen, and to learn. It really did a work in me, and I’m better for it.”
That attentiveness—listening, learning, caring—will serve her well as she transitions into full-time ministry. Neal is preparing for a career in military chaplaincy, where change is constant.
“As a minister intern, I got a first glimpse of what people feel when they’re about to go through a transition phase,” she says. “It put me in their shoes, and I’m able to see it from both sides and tend to that with gentleness and care.”
continued on page 11
Nathan T. Stucky MDiv ‘10, PhD ‘15, Director of the Farminary
For ten years, people have asked me, “What are you growing at the farm?”
My answer has changed over the years. But to understand that change, I need to tell a slightly longer story of the land that we now call the Farminary.
To our knowledge, the longest inhabitants of the land that is now the Farminary were Lenni-Lenape Native Americans. Their legacy of care across millennia is extraordinary. The legacy of their removal from the land is tragic, traumatic, and horrific. I don’t have time here to unpack these legacies, but they must at least be named. The land holds the memories of the Lenni-Lenape. I have held the artifacts in my hands. The stream that runs through the farm surely remembers.
More recently, the land at the Farminary has known other models and modes of relationship between people and place. From the 1950s to the 1990s, the land knew the exhaustive practices of sod farming—a form of agriculture that removes a thin layer of topsoil with each harvest.
I recall the sobering reality of attempting to start a small garden at the Farminary when teaching the first ever Farminary class in the spring of 2015. It’s hard to grow a garden without topsoil. What we suspected in those early days has since been confirmed: the land at the Farminary bears the wounds of an extractive and exploitative model of relationship between people and place.
The Farminary story begins with exhausted land that bears witness against every extractive and exploitative model of relationship between humans and the world they inhabit. From the beginning, the land at the Farminary had more to teach us than I ever could have imagined.
Thanks to some compost and topsoil that we hauled in for that first humble garden, we managed to eke out a few vegetables. Some potatoes, greens, and a few tomatoes. (As I recall, the green beans were a total flop.) It was humbling, but it was also a profound joy to teach and learn in that space.
As I chatted with people about the Farminary and described what we were doing, people would inevitably ask, “What are you growing at the farm?” For years, I answered according to the presumed intent of the question: “Potatoes, greens, and a few tomatoes.”
As the Farminary grew, my answer got longer. “Potatoes, greens, tomatoes, squash, cucumbers, carrots, beets, chickens … ”
As I gave these responses, I never lied to anyone, but my response failed to convey a deeper truth. It’s taken years to learn to articulate a response that sits closer to the mission of the Farminary.
What are we trying to grow at the Farminary? A different kind of leader. Myself included.
I wonder about the place where you work and serve. I wonder about your congregation, school, nonprofit, or neighborhood. And I wonder how much it resembles the land at the Farminary. My deep hunch is that the resemblances are greater than we might first suspect.
Recall again the sod farm. Recall the legacies of exhaustive models of relationships between people and place. I suspect the place you inhabit bears some of the same wounds as the land at the Farminary—the wounds of exhaustion, extraction, and exploitation.
It has never been the goal of the Farminary to graduate a bunch of farmers. Maybe a few, but that is beside the point. The point is a quality of education and formation that yields leaders equipped to respond to the world’s exhaustive ways with the slow, patient affection that nurtures rest, renewed vitality, healing for deep wounds, and the hope of resurrection life.
One extravagant gift that the farm perpetually gives us is the reminder that we are not alone in our search for healing and vitality. Innumerable creatures willingly join the quest—they uniquely facilitate healing and vitality. No place at the Farminary has taught us this more poignantly than the compost pile.
The compost pile is ground zero in our efforts to move the farm away from exhaustion and toward vitality. Every time we prepare garden beds for a new crop, we add a layer of compost. We give compost to the garden beds in thanksgiving for that which the land has already given and in anticipation of gifts yet to come.
I regularly tell students, “If you can learn to preach half as well as our compost piles, you’ll be just fine.”
Consider the makeup of a compost pile. At the Farminary, the main ingredients include leaves from the trees, food scraps from campus dining and housing, and spent coffee grounds from Small World Coffee. In other words, the compost pile takes into itself all that is passing away—the decaying leaves, apple cores, banana peels, moldy bread, and rotting greens. But it does not do this in order to give death the last word. Rather, the compost pile journeys unequivocally through death for the sake of new life in another season.
That sounds a lot like the Gospel to me. And there’s more.
What does the average adult in the Global West perceive when they look at a pile of leaves or a bucket full of rotting food scraps? Waste. The systems and structures of our economies and societies (and too often our theologies)
condition us to see these things as waste, fit only to be set at the curb and hauled off for someone else to deal with.
It takes the eyes of the good gardener, the good farmer, or the excellent ecologist … it takes perception attuned to the Gospel to recognize treasure and the keys to new life where the world only recognizes waste.
Like the savior of the world hung on a cross outside the city gates, at the garbage heap, all too easy to categorize it as waste. And yet in the divine economy, the garbage heap turns out to be a crucial stop on the journey to world-changing, vitality-inducing transformation.
This is the quality of perception the farm is trying to teach us. This is the kind of leader we are trying to grow. This is the kind of leader I am trying to become. Someone with Gospel-inspired perception. Someone attuned to seasons. Someone willing to enter the exhausted and exploited
spaces and places of our world. Someone capable of perceiving treasure, beauty, and the keys to new life in that which the world labels as refuse and waste.
What are we growing at the farm?
A different kind of leader.
If, in your neck of the woods, you find yourself in conversation about the Farminary with neighbors, and they ask you, “What are they growing at the Farminary?”
I hope you’ll take them out to the compost pile. If you don’t have one, maybe now is the time to start one.
And when you come to the compost pile, say a prayer of illumination, then stop and listen. You might just hear the Word proclaimed in a register you never could have imagined.
Thanks be to God.
Top: Nate leading a tour of the Farminary; Bottom left: students planting in one of the high tunnels in the spring; Bottom right: students harvesting crops in the fall
Jamie Neal, continued from page 7
As a President’s Fellow, Neal has had the chance to reflect, represent, and grow even more. She’s welcomed guests, shared stories, built professional connections, and served as a Seminary ambassador. One moment that stood out was a formal dinner at Springdale with trustees and fellows.
There, a strong-willed attendee shared that her faith remains central in her life, including business. That left an impression.
“It gives hope that you can be in any big industry and still keep God at the center,” Neal says. “When so much of society says it’s either this or God, and you can’t mix faith and work, she says otherwise.”
Neal’s path to ministry hasn’t been linear. After serving in the United States Marine Corps for more than eight years, she felt called by God to leave. She pursued ministry outside of the military and eventually came to Princeton. An encounter with President Walton—who learned about her military background—planted a new seed: chaplaincy. At least a dozen others affirmed the same calling.
Neal is now a Navy Chaplain Candidate Program Officer, already commissioned and currently training with the Navy during summers. That training gives her a head start on
officer development school, chaplaincy school, and on-thejob experience before she graduates in May 2027.
After graduation, she hopes to move into full-time active duty as a military chaplain—a role that allows her to bring the gospel into spaces not open to civilian ministers.
“As a minister of a church, you can’t step onto these military bases and minister to people,” she says. “But I can. I’ll be able to travel and step into those hard places that only a small percentage of Americans can reach because they’re in the military.”
Still, Neal doesn’t see the work as her own. Her calling, her ability, her presence, it all points back to God.
“I can’t help people without God,” she says. “Nothing I do is sufficient without Him.”
Years of experience and reflection have taught Neal the importance of surrendering her plans to God’s will. That humility continues to shape her life, ministry, and vision.
“At the end of this journey we call life, all we’re going to have is God,” Neal says. “I’m nothing without God. So ultimately, it’s not about me, it’s about God’s work through me. When someone thanks me for a great sermon, I say, ‘Thank God,’ because He’s the one who gave me the word to give to you today. It’s a humility of hearts.”
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Class of 2025, you did it!
You showed up to class. You pulled the all-nighters. You parsed the verbs, translated the Hebrew, and wrestled with theologians who wrote as if clarity were a sin. You did it!
You crafted sermons and led chapel prayers. You served in congregations and hospitals and prayed with the imprisoned. You held together the creative tension between the academy and the church, as well as critical inquiry and faithful devotion. You did it!
But let us be clear: you did not do it alone. A larger cloud of witnesses carried you:
A grandmother’s prayers.
A partner’s patience.
A church’s offerings.
A spouse’s reassurance.
A professor’s late-night feedback.
People who did not always understand what you were doing but walked alongside you, offering love, care, tenderness, and affection. So, to every partner, parent, pew member, undergraduate professor, and peanut butter and jelly sandwich-making friend, we say thank you!
To be sure, just because your loved ones sustained you on this glorious journey through Princeton Seminary does not necessarily mean that they understood WHAT you were doing. And, most likely, even fewer understood WHY you were doing it.
“What is this Seminary thing all about?” You have all fielded such questions from the first moment you considered theological education. The question takes different forms. For some, it’s—“Princeton Seminary, huh? A Master of Divinity? So what are you planning to do with that?”
I’m pretty sure when you informed a parent or mentor that you were considering Seminary, you may have heard, “So what happened to law school? I thought you were interested in medical school?? You can still do that afterward, right?”
Some of you might even be dreading post-commencement dinner. You know the question is coming—a question you have been answering all semester, “So what’s next?”
Class of 2025—it is fine. Do not be afraid or get frustrated. Such questions are often based on people’s impressive perception of you! And loved ones are trying to align their perception of you as extraordinary with their perception of a world that too often confuses success with salary and purpose with prestige.
Every society has clearly defined markers of status and significance. Every culture hands us a script of presumed excellence—what the Greeks called aretē or virtue. Such scripts are true in our world. They were true in Jesus’s world.i And in Jesus’s world, as in ours, those markers were clear: power, visibility, reputation, control.
i Haidt, Jonathan. The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness. New York: Penguin Press, 2024.
Yet, Jesus turns it all upside down. “The greatest among you shall be your servant.”
Jesus said this not to emperors or the imperial elites. He was not speaking to Caesar’s advisors or Herod’s cabinet. Jesus was talking to the overlooked and overwhelmed.
To those living under occupation.
To those mocked for their faith and monitored for their movements.
To people whose culture was caricatured, whose bodies were brutalized, whose very existence was considered expendable.
Women whose names were never recorded in synagogue scrolls.
Tax collectors who scraped by in the shadows of the underground economy.
The sick. The enslaved. The discarded and disavowed.
Jesus knew what it felt like to be conscripted to the cultural margins. Recall he was from Nazareth—an unremarkable, agrarian village—a provincial place full of people without prestige or pedigree. Jesus’s roots made people ask, “Can anything good come from Nazareth?”
Yet from that place, Jesus declared that greatness is not about platform or profile. It’s not about your résumé or your reach. It’s not measured by how many people follow you—but by how many people you are willing to follow in their pain, struggle, joy, and hope.
And that, dear graduates, is why theological education matters.
Not because it gives you a title.
Not because it confers prestige.
Not because it makes for a good cocktail conversation. Theological education matters because it cultivates alternative imaginations.
You have spent your years here earning a degree, yes, but also reorienting your moral compass. You have engaged ancient wisdom and sacred texts.You’ve read from Augustine and Aquinas to Katie Cannon and Dolores Huerta. You have debated John Calvin and James Cone.
You have pored over ethics, aesthetics, and eschatology. You have pondered such questions as, “What is right?”
“What is good?” and “What is fitting?”
You have studied competing visions of eudaimonia—the good life—to help a weary world rediscover what it means to be whole, to be well, to be human.
I know that you are clear-eyed and sober. You are leaving this campus and entering a world that may not reward
your sacrifice with the salaries of Wharton or the prestige of Harvard Medical School. There may be no signing bonuses for pastoral care. No venture capital for public theology. There is no corner office for those who bear crosses instead of wielding swords.
Nevertheless—make no mistake—this world needs you. The world needs your alternative imagination. In a culture captivated by brand enhancement, image maintenance, and algorithmic approval, the world needs your understanding of love, service, and sacrifice.
Our prevailing cultural scripts and presumed markers of significance have taken a toll on our society. We live in an anxious age—an age marked by isolation, volatility, and cultural vertigo.ii The ground beneath our feet feels unsteady. The rules keep changing. The goals feel just out of reach. And in such a world dominated by commerce and consumption, by hyper-competition on a shrinking playing field—what has happened to us?iii
Too often, we turn on one another. We make potential allies our adversaries. We confuse patriotism with prejudice. We tolerate cruelty and reward deception. And in insecure moments like these, people crave security—but settle for the spectacle of strongmen. People long for purpose—but fall prey to propaganda. We forget, as Voltaire warned us, that those who can make us believe absurdities can make us commit atrocities.iv
This is why your calling matters. You, dear graduates, are the ones the world may not expect but the world desperately needs! You are the ones called not to climb the ladder but to extend the table. To offer a model of greatness that kneels, listens, and lifts. To offer an alternative way of living to a culture that privileges individual autonomy over social accountability.
This is the problem with our hyper-individualized culture of so-called meritocracy. The prevailing view is about how hard I can work; what I can accomplish; what I can achieve; how I can “expand my brand.” Well, the results are in. Such a culture has cultivated a kind of moral loneliness. What writer Derek Thompson describes as the anti-social century.v We have disaffiliated from faith communities. We have disengaged from civic life. We have dismantled institutional networks, thus making us even more susceptible to forces that seek to divide and dominate.
This is a dangerous approach to life because when we retreat into ourselves, we forget how to belong to one another. We stop seeing people as neighbors and start seeing them as threats. We call people out before we
ii Rogers-Vaughn, Bruce. Caring for Souls in a Neoliberal Age. New Approaches to Religion and Power. New York, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016.
iii Sandel, Michael J. The Tyranny of Merit: What’s Become of the Common Good? New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2020.
iv Snyder, Timothy. On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century. First edition. ed. New York: Tim Duggan Books, 2017.
v Thompson, Derek. “The Anti-Social Century.” The Atlantic, January 8, 2025. theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2025/02/american-loneliness-personality-politics/681091/.
ever try to call them in. And this is the danger of a faith that becomes just another consumer product—tailored, isolated, and emptied of obligation.vi
These are the reasons why institutions like Princeton Seminary, our local churches, our universities, our public libraries, and our community theatres are so vital. They organize us toward causes, shared purposes, and common aims greater than the individual self. Institutions matter.
I understand that dismissing and denigrating institutions has become a popular and preferred sport. Institutions are easy targets—readily dismissed as outdated, corrupt, and unnecessary. But as any historian of authoritarianism will tell you: when institutions are discredited, truth becomes easier to manipulate, memory easier to erase, and difference easier to demonize. As historian Timothy Snyder writes in On Tyranny,
“Do not speak of ‘our institutions’ unless you make them yours by acting on their behalf. Institutions do not protect themselves. They fall one after the other unless each is defended from the beginning.”vii
So let me put it plainly:
If you care about democracy—defend a library. If you care about decency—join a church. If you care about education—invest in a school. Choose an institution you believe in. And take its side.
Because despite what popular pundits and cynical memes may say, institutions are not just bureaucracies or buildings. Institutions are vessels of memory.
They are communities of accountability. They are platforms for protest and imagination.
No, they are not perfect. They never have been. But neither are we.
And yet, grace calls us not to give up on each other—but to grow with one another. Institutions are the skeletal structure of a community.
This is why Princeton Seminary matters. This is why theological education matters. At Princeton Seminary, students have learned that it is not enough to feed those who are hungry. We must also interrogate why some zip codes have devolved into unsustainable food deserts. It is not enough to pray for the sick. We also need ministers of the gospel who understand social determinants of health like education, poverty, housing, and affiliation. And it is not enough to welcome the stranger. We must learn to identify culturally encoded bigotries and biases that render some people strange in the first place.
This is your charge, Class of 2025. So go forth, graduates.
Go forth as servant-leaders. Go forth as institution-builders. Go forth as agents of grace. And go forth as architects of hope.
And may the world be changed not because you climbed a social ladder—but because you built bridges of connection, service, and sacrifice.
vii
2025 graduating class
vi Voltaire, Pierre Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, Jean-Antoine-Nicolas de Caritat Condorcet, and Jacques Joseph Marie Decroix. Œuvres Completes De Voltaire. 70 vols. Kehl: Impr. de la Société littéraire-typographique, 1785.
Walton, Jonathan L. A Lens of Love: Reading the Bible in Its World for Our World. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press, 2018.
Each year, Princeton Theological Seminary honors alumni whose lives and ministries embody the Seminary’s deepest values. Through the Alumni Council Service and Distinguished Alumni Awards, we recognize graduates who have made a lasting impact, not only within their faith communities but also across broader cultural and global landscapes.
At the 2025 Reunion, we celebrated three such leaders: Dr. Teddy Rashaan Reeves MDiv ’13 and Dr. Erin Raffety MDiv ’08, recipients of the Alumni Council Service Award, and Dr. Richard A. Grounds PhD ’95, recipient of the Distinguished Alumnus Award. Their bold, unconventional paths reimagine what ministry can look like in today’s world.
FROM SEMINARY TO SMITHSONIAN:
DR. TEDDY REEVES USES FILM AND ART TO EXPAND THE BOUNDARIES OF FAITH
Dr. Teddy Rashaan Reeves MDiv ‘13, never aspired to a career in ministry. He grew up steeped in faith from his earliest days and loved Jesus passionately. A call to follow His example grew even louder, eventually bringing him to Princeton Theological Seminary.
It was a call that went beyond the confines of traditional Church, and Dr. Reeves has used his gifts as a storyteller to love those on the margins and bring them into a deeper relationship with God and each other.
Dr. Reeves currently serves as Curator of Religion at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. His series, gOD-Talk: Black Millennials and Faith Conversation, was created in
2018, and the film, gOD-Talk, was released last year. The film explores the lives of seven Black millennials (Atheist, Muslim, Ifa, Buddhist, Christian, and Spiritualist) and their challenges and discoveries with faith in the 21st century.
While he was always active in the church, Dr. Reeves’ original dream was to be a broadcast journalist. While teaching at an independent school in Ojai, CA, the first of several serendipitous moments occurred. “I was teaching a class on race and religion,” which discussed different social issues such as what it meant to be Black in America.
Dr. Reeves brought in Rev. Jeff Holland, Pastor of Ojai Presbyterian Church, and an alumnus of Princeton Theological Seminary, to engage students on what it meant to be Christian in America. “We discussed his experiences at Seminary, but I had no desire to go to Seminary.” However, the meeting would eventually prove prophetic.
His next stop was a day school in Charlotte, NC. “One day, I was teaching Death of a Salesman to my sophomores and heard a voice, as clear as day, saying, ‘Go to Seminary.’ I sat down immediately and began to look up seminaries. It was something that just never dawned on me. My mother would later confirm that she always knew, but it was not in my purview.”
Dr. Reeves thoroughly investigated his options and remarked that a visit to Princeton Seminary left him feeling “very peaceful.” When it came time to purchase money orders for his Seminary applications, “I heard that same voice say, ‘PTS.’”
“Like the Church, Princeton Seminary is always trying to figure out what it means to be a loving community,” Dr. Reeves noted. During his first semester, “We had a racial incident on campus” that eventually led to the Slavery Audit, which would examine the institution’s historic connections to slavery. “This and other initiatives would lead the Seminary on the better path that it is on now, but
when you’re the one who’s involved in the incident you have a different experience.”
The creativity initially fueled at Princeton Seminary has manifested itself in a myriad of ways that Dr. Reeves could never have envisioned while he was a student. In addition to his substantial work at the Smithsonian, he created the nonprofit organization, Art Like ME Inc., which gifts original artwork by Black and Brown artists to Black and Brown boys in an effort to enhance their emotional intelligence and self-awareness through art and culture.
Through his theological training and life experience, Dr. Reeves developed the critical understanding that his call went far beyond the local Church. “And that isn’t to say that the local Church is less than, but really my mandate to ministry was to follow the work and life of Christ. Jesus spent more time outside the temple than inside. I see my call now to those who find themselves outside the traditional space. It has taken me to the art world, to the entertainment space, to filmmaking.
“I am called to those who find themselves still living out the precepts and the concepts and the work of Christ, but doing it within and without the traditional Church.”
BRIDGING CHURCH AND ACADEMY: REV. DR. ERIN RAFFETY’S TRANSFORMATIVE WORK IN DISABILITY AND MINISTRY
Building bridges has been a consistent through line for the life and work of Rev. Dr. Erin Raffety MDiv ‘08. Dr. Raffety is a scholar, ethnographer, pastor, and advocate whose contributions have had a lasting impact on the academy and the Church.
She has studied foster families in China, Christian congregations in the United States, and people with disabilities around the world. She currently teaches and researches at Princeton Theological Seminary and Princeton University, and has written two books, Families We Need and From Inclusion to Justice. Yet before she found her academic calling, an unexpected invitation set her on a journey of vocational discernment—one that would ultimately shape both her faith and her future.
Dr. Raffety’s college roommate encouraged her to apply for a scholarship offered by Princeton Theological Seminary. While ministry was not on her radar at the time, after much discernment and reflection, she decided that this might be her path.
“I met my best friends in life at PTS, including my husband,” she stressed. “Those are the people who I keep in contact with and who really supported me.”
At Princeton Seminary, Dr. Raffety also encountered administrators and professors who “refused to choose” between the Church and the academy. “Victor Aloyo and Kenda Dean stand out as two PTS leaders during my time who really showed me how to be a minister-scholar because they were both working in the academy but also actively pastoring churches. I often felt like academia and ministry wanted me to choose. Victor and Kenda gave me hope that maybe I didn’t have to.”
She added, “This is very much how I see my vocation. With Victor and Kenda you could see how one vocation informed the other,” she explained. “That’s what God has asked of us—to give of our whole lives. So, to really live that out has been challenging.”
The roots of Dr. Raffety’s passion for disability advocacy in ministry run deep. “Looking back, I can see that I’m part of a proud, disabled lineage. My grandfather had a spinal cord injury when he was younger. He walked with two canes his whole life, and was one of the strongest people I’ve ever met.” Dr. Raffety’s mother lives with multiple sclerosis, “and she was really open with us growing up about how chronic illness impacted her.”
In her youth, Dr. Raffety was diagnosed with neurocardiogenic syncope, which is a temporary loss of
consciousness due to a sudden decrease in blood flow to the brain. “That was something that I buried away for the longest time. I was told I would grow out of it. That never happened.”
Learning to live with this condition was made easier by the research she has conducted. “The disabled people in my research became mirrors to see myself more clearly,” she stressed.
In 2014, Dr. Raffety’s daughter Lucia was born with leukodystrophy, a progressive genetic disease of the brain. She explained that the primary reason she and her husband wanted to become parents was through the example of the foster families she studied. “We had this imagination of what our family would look like that absolutely could include a disabled child.”
Dr. Raffety has maintained strong ties to Princeton Seminary since graduation. She has served as the Senior Researcher on the Isaiah Partnership (a study of pastors leading innovation for theological education), the Empirical Research Consultant on the Imagining Church Project (a nationwide study of thriving congregations), and the Associate Research Scholar for the Institute for Youth Ministry.
Dr. Raffety believes her life’s work came into sharper focus at Princeton Seminary. “It allowed me so much flexibility. All those experiences together—taking classes across the street at the University, while I was doing my MDiv coursework, pastoring a Spanish-speaking church, which served as my field education—gave me such a robust experiential and classroom education.”
“I call the work that I do—human subjects and ethnographic research—‘deep hanging out.’ I get to spend my time listening to all of these people whose stories and experiences are the reason why Seminary exists.”
Teddy Rashaan Reeves MDiv ‘13, Erin Raffety MDiv ‘08, Richard A. Grounds PhD ’95, and President Jonathan Lee Walton
FROM ERASURE TO REVIVAL: PRINCETON SEMINARY ALUM LEADS EFFORT TO PRESERVE THE YUCHI LANGUAGE
Richard A. Grounds PhD ’95, is Executive Director of the Yuchi Language Project, whose mission is to preserve the rich heritage of the Yuchi people by creating new young speakers of a language that has been falsely reported as extinct.
The son of a Yuchi father and a European mother, Dr. Grounds grew up in a conservative Christian household. His first spiritual language came from the King James Bible, and he grew up recognizing the importance of words “and the value of living by them, instituting them in your life and having that cultural tradition to guide you on your pathway.”
While studying for his doctoral degree at Princeton Theological Seminary, Dr. Grounds came across a disturbing notation about the Yuchi Nation, the indigenous tribe from which he is descended. An article in a dictionary on Native American tribes claimed that the Yuchi Nation was extinct.
Knowing that to be false, he devoted his life to changing the narrative. “The reference section is normally the place for straightforward, reliable information that’s not highly interpretive or speculative. It was shocking to read that I was extinct.”
As Dr. Grounds noted to the contrary, “In the 1880s, literally every living Yuchi was a fluent native speaker of the language. These surreal claims of Yuchi extinction— along with other numerous such claims that I began finding—were a formative part of my education at the Seminary,” says Dr. Grounds.
That summer, Dr. Grounds returned home to the Elders of the Yuchi tribe, who, he pointed out, were unaware of what he had learned. “Instead, they were continuing our
ceremonies and dances around the summer solstice, which have never stopped for thousands of years, since time immemorial.” Dr. Grounds related that, “Our Elders often tell us that our languages are gifts from the Creator.”
These were the contrasting lessons which influenced Dr. Grounds during his graduate days: one, about the great love of diversity by the Creator, and the other, about the larger colonial project intent on destroying that diversity and erasing all differences of world view represented by Indigenous languages. His dissertation work would reflect these critical perspectives.
Bringing his life’s work into sharper focus, Dr. Grounds recalled his time at Princeton Seminary as “absolutely enriching—full of diversity, complexity, and numerous global perspectives. In seminars, you had graduate students from all over the world. The discussions in these seminars were processed through the diverse lenses of local histories and visions from all these different graduate students who had come from around the globe. It created such a rich exchange.”
He added, “The Seminary was really good at bringing in diverse guest faculty,” which provided him with not only a global perspective but also the ability to engage with faculty who refused to whitewash the treatment of Indigenous peoples by colonial powers.
Reflecting on his years at Princeton Seminary, Dr. Grounds noted, “One of the amazing, extraordinary things that we learned through the faculty, which brought such richness around the diversity of Christianity, the interfaith process, was the complexity and richness of all creation, and that the Creator God is all about diversity.”
Now, as a result of Dr. Grounds’s work through the Yuchi Language Project, young parents are once again raising and educating children in the Yuchi language. The Project develops grants to fund their work with remaining Elders who carry valuable language, stories, and cultural knowledge that is often relayed through recording sessions for future generations.
Earlier this year, Princeton Seminary announced the Daniel L. Migliore Distinguished Presidential Award for Faithful Leadership. Named in recognition of Professor Emeritus Daniel L. Migliore, this award celebrates those whose lives embody the Seminary’s highest ideals of theological education—scholarly excellence, pastoral humility, and faithful Christian witness.
Before this honor is bestowed upon others, it was only fitting that Professor Migliore himself become its inaugural recipient. A beloved teacher, gifted theologian, and gracious colleague, he has shaped generations of students through his scholarship, his witness, and his deep love for the church and the world.
To mark this honor, Professor Migliore contributes the following reflection, inviting us into his life, vocation, and enduring relationship with Princeton Seminary.
For fifty years, Princeton Theological Seminary was my home away from home, three of those years as a BD student. As I recall, my junior year began with an unsettling experience. Leaving my room early the first morning on campus, I made my way down the long hallway in Alexander dormitory to take a shower. The bathroom doorway, however, was suddenly filled—I mean totally filled—by a giant with a bath towel around his waist. Later, I learned that it was Donn Moomaw, the Hall of Fame linebacker of the UCLA Bruins football team. But at the moment of our first encounter, all I can remember thinking was, “Wow, Princeton Seminary students are really big.”
My favorite teacher during my student years at the Seminary was George S. Hendry, Professor of Systematic Theology, a quiet Scotsman with a razor-sharp mind, whose prayers at the start of class were as memorable as his sterling lectures. He also had a wonderful sense of humor. One warm spring afternoon, the huge windows in Stuart 1 were wide open. As Professor Hendry was lecturing, the mournful sounds of a bagpipe came from the quadrangle. Looking up from his lectern, Hendry exclaimed, “Do my ears deceive me?” He walked over to the window, listened for a while as if to verify what he was hearing, then returned to the lectern and said, “Actually, I traveled three thousand miles to get away from that sound.”
After completing my BD, I spent two years pursuing a PhD at Princeton University (in systematic theology, no less!). Unexpectedly, I was called to the Seminary to teach in the Bible Department, which had an opening at the time. When President James McCord asked me at the end of the three years whether I would like to continue in the New Testament area or return to my first love, Systematic theology, I chose the latter. But I have never regretted those three years of intensive New Testament study that provided me with a solid foundation for my subsequent constructive theological work. My early
years of teaching at the Seminary were tumultuous. It was the time of heartbreaking assassinations, mounting civil rights movements, and anti-Vietnam War protests. Students at the Seminary and the University were holding sit-ins; some students were burning their draft cards. On one occasion, seminarians chained shut the doors of the Board Room of the Library, demanding that the Trustees, who were holding their annual meeting there, issue a public declaration opposing the Vietnam War. The Trustees were able to get out of that room only by opening some windows and indecorously crawling outside. Now imagine the difficulty of trying to attend to your Greek or Hebrew assignments, or the required chapters of Calvin’s Institutes or Barth’s Church Dogmatics, in a situation that at times seemed on the verge of revolution. My heart was frankly always with the students, and sometimes my actions too. Professor Edward Dowey called me “The Junior Prophet.” I never knew whether he intended the tag as a compliment or not!
Not only did the Seminary weather the storms, it also continued to grow and flourish. “Voices long silent,” as the new Brief Statement of Faith of the Presbyterian Church would later put it, were increasingly among the student body and the faculty—women, African Americans, Hispanics, Asian Americans, students from many countries around the globe. What an exhilarating and humbling experience it was for me to teach, and continuously learn from these super bright, curious, dedicated students that filled our classrooms. I taught the introductory course in theology every year, sometimes by myself, but often with a colleague—eight different ones as I recall. The classes were often animated. A visiting professor from the university asked me after one class: “Are all classes here as lively as this one?”
I also taught courses with colleagues from other departments. An especially memorable one for me was
Dr. Daniel L. Migliore MDiv ’59, shares his insights and reflection on his everlasting connection to Princeton Theological Seminary.
with Professor Chris Beker on the importance of the New Testament apocalyptic. We agreed on many things, but also differed deeply on one thing. Chris argued that I tended to diminish the primacy in Christian life of the apocalyptic hope in God’s imminent, final victory over the forces of evil in the world. I countered that while we must hold on to that faith and hope, we are also called to continue working for a world of greater justice and peace as signs and intimations of God’s coming new world. I am sure the students sometimes thought the two of us were about to engage in a very undignified public wrestling match, but not so. We were and remained good friends.
In addition to my class responsibilities, I served at various times as Chair of the Theology Department (as easy as herding cats), Director of the PhD program, and Editor of The Princeton Seminary Bulletin
Looking back on my nearly half a century on the Seminary faculty, I can only hope I have remained faithful to the cardinal convictions of my life, my teaching, and my writing. That God is the living triune God, creator, reconciler, and redeemer, who from all eternity exists in the dynamic of reciprocal self-giving love, and who graciously invites us and all creation to share in that communion; that love of God and love of neighbor are inseparable; that faith continuously seeks understanding; that good theology begins and ends in prayer; that the Bible is not to be read as an infallible dictionary but as containing the unique, overarching story of God’s steadfast love that culminates in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the Lord and Savior of the world; and that His presence and work continues, often in surprising ways, in the life-renewing and community-creating activity of the Holy Spirit in us and in the world. What I know for sure is that I have been blessed and am thankful from the bottom of my heart for the awesome privilege and honor I have had in being a part of the life and mission of Princeton Theological Seminary.
For its first hundred and ten years, Princeton Seminary was a fortress of old school Reformed theology. It had its flaws, but its academic reputation was unimpeachable and its service to the church and world outstanding. By the mid-1920s, however, it became clear that church and world were changing. It was time to face faithfully and boldly the new challenges, not in repudiation of the school’s honored past but in recognition that God is never stationary. The living God does new things and summons us to new forms of service. In 1936, John Mackay became President of the Seminary and inaugurated a new era of the school. The Seminary grew in size and in worldwide influence. Its hallmarks were, as from the beginning, intensive biblical study, learning from the rich Christian theological and ethical tradition, and the best possible preparation for various forms of Christian ministry.
Almost another century after the beginning of a new era of the school in the 1930s, Princeton Theological Seminary, and indeed all theological schools, face new, unprecedented challenges and opportunities. Questions of the whither of theological education—its scope, range of participants, and means of teaching and learning are being charted anew. Under President Jonathan Lee Walton, a new vision of the mission of Princeton Seminary is aborning. And of one thing you can be sure, under his leadership, Princeton Seminary will play a leading role in envisioning new possibilities of theological education and new forms of preparation for Christian service. Happily, the recently launched series of The Princeton Seminary Bulletin will help keep alumni informed of the work of our new and brilliant young faculty, of important lectures and events on campus, of new degree programs, and of much more. Our common prayer is that God will guide and bless Princeton Theological Seminary in the years ahead.
Daniel L. Migliore
President Jonathan Lee Walton offering a toast to Dr. Daniel L. Migliore
Even before Martha Redondo first stepped foot on the campus of Princeton Theological Seminary, she thought the institution was “magical.” Eight years later, as Associate Director of International Enrollment and Program Services, her feelings of love and joy for the institution and its mission have only intensified.
Ms. Redondo brings a wealth of experience in higher education, counseling, and social work to her role at Princeton, having dedicated the first two decades of her career to student support and program development. She bridges cultures, supports students, and fosters a welcoming environment for international scholars. She offers a warm, openhearted presence that eases a transition that, for many, is fraught with stress and unease. She welcomes the stranger.
“I loved this place before I even came here,” she says about Princeton. “It was magical, and I wanted to be part of it.”
At the outset of her career, Ms. Redondo believed she would end up as a social worker, but encountered horrible situations that she could not endure for a lifetime. Yet she still wanted to be of service.
“You get to pick how you want to help people. I knew I couldn’t get too deep into these issues, or I wouldn’t be
able to function in life. I still wanted to help. We all have gifts and virtues.” After a career pivot, Ms. Redondo found her niche and thrived.
She spent 16 years at Union County College, beginning as a counselor, before moving into international student services, where she managed a caseload of nearly 300 students across three campuses. “It was a beautiful mix of countries, ages, and ethnic backgrounds,” she recalls. From there, she moved to Mercer County Community College, managing a federally funded healthcare training program for New Jersey’s baby boomer population.
When the position at Princeton Seminary opened, Ms. Redondo felt like she was a natural fit, and her prior work experience provided her with preparation for the role.
“It’s an honor for me to work here. I feel like there’s a lot of need among our students,” and she meets those needs with love, empathy, and compassion.
In her time at Princeton, Ms. Redondo has seen exponential growth in the programs offered to international students. As an initial point of contact, she helps applicants navigate a sea of paperwork, international bureaucracies unique to individual countries, everchanging laws, and all the worries associated with leaving home.
“The programs have grown dramatically,” Ms. Redondo noted. “When I started here, it was a smaller group of
international students. We had international students, as well as master’s level and PhD students. We’ve since acquired two new master’s level degrees, so we’re working with additional applicants and additional students.”
Ms. Redondo noted that since the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of applicants across all the programs in which she is involved has skyrocketed. “That’s a great problem to have,” she notes. She works diligently to make sure each new student feels welcome and heard. She is intimately involved with applications, visas, and the issuance of social security numbers for students who wish to work.
Princeton welcomes exchange students from 45 denominations, 24 countries, and 35 states, including D.C. and Puerto Rico, and as many as 10 visiting presidential scholars per year. The seminary acquired an Overseas Ministry Study Center, which allows international scholars to further their research. No matter what the season, Ms. Redondo is preparing for the arrival of new students, doing so with an exuberance and enthusiasm that never wavers, no matter what particular challenge she faces.
Beyond the paperwork, she stressed, there is a strong pastoral element to the work done by her and the Global Services office staff, all of whom she considers indispensable.
Ms. Redondo is mindful that her new charges are often leaving spouses and children in their home countries. “You’re watching your children grow through FaceTime, and that’s hard.” However, she agreed that because the Seminary is a faith-based institution, they are particularly attuned to those needs.
One of the most visible aspects of Ms. Redondo’s role is the week-long welcome program her office hosts for all incoming international students. The orientation includes campus tours, practical guidance, team-building exercises, and guest speakers from different departments. “It’s about building community during that week but also making sure they feel informed and supported. It’s very intentional,” Ms. Redondo explained.
“This is all so they can feel supported and loved. We do programs in different languages, and it’s really beautiful. People are so nervous at first, but then as they become more comfortable, you see more smiles.”
She added, “By the end of the program, people are hugging and we’re bridging our differences. It’s really beautiful. It becomes very intimate.”
One touch of which Ms. Redondo is particularly proud is the flags displayed in Mackay Dining Hall representing the home countries of international students. They are a beloved symbol of the diverse community she helps cultivate. “That’s a touch they really appreciate,” she stressed.
Ms. Redondo’s work is not without its challenges. Nearly all international students receive significant scholarships, and funding limitations impact how many can be accepted. “Financially, Princeton Seminary offers very generous scholarships to almost every international student who gets admitted. We need to remain mindful of the budget and ensure that funds are allocated appropriately.”
Embassy delays for providing visas, travel bans from countries such as Myanmar and the Republic of Congo, as well as compliance issues when students do not return to their home countries, also prove challenging for Ms. Redondo’s office. Regarding the bans, “You have no options but to stay and pray and hope that that’s lifted.”
Noting that what these students bring, and what they leave behind, enhances her own perspective, Ms. Redondo offered with a genuine sense of gratitude. “When somebody of a different faith teaches us something about their faith, it doesn’t mean we have to agree with them, and it doesn’t mean we have to change our faith. There’s so much to learn, and there’s so much beauty. That is part of what I love about what I do. We have people coming from literally all over the world, with different perspectives.”
She added,
“It’s so cool to welcome students and help them navigate the school. I don’t have all the answers, but I can help them and direct them to the right person, or call that person. When I see them graduate after whatever they’ve gone through, how wonderful is that?”
Princeton Theological Seminary is a place of welcome, she observed. “Here, you still find a welcoming face. If you see someone lost on campus, or maybe not lost, but they look like they need assistance, people will stop and ask if they can help. That’s a beautiful thing. You feel respected. There’s a special place for you here.”
When asked how she would sum up her time at Princeton Theological Seminary, Ms. Redondo was direct. “We care so much. Whatever we’re able to do, we do it. I’ve found a home here.”
Dear Friends,
It is my honor to greet you as the new Chair of the Board of Trustees and as an alumna of Princeton Theological Seminary. This remarkable community has shaped my own faith, my sense of calling, and my commitment to serving the church. As a trustee, I have been continually inspired by the loyalty of my fellow trustees, the scholarship of the faculty, the dedication of the administration, the compassion of the staff, and the callings of our students— indeed this is a cloud of witnesses at work in service to the Gospel.
I am proud to note that this year we welcomed the Seminary’s largest incoming class in six years. Their presence in our community is a visible sign of God’s Spirit moving among us and of the Seminary’s enduring call to prepare leaders for the church and world. As President Walton reminds our students: “You are the ones called not to climb the ladder, but to expand the table.” The education they receive at Princeton Theological Seminary equips them to lead with faith, integrity, scholarship, competence, compassion, and joy, carrying the gospel into classrooms, congregations, and communities across the globe.
It is your generosity that enables Princeton Theological Seminary to live into our mission. Every single gift strengthens the Seminary’s ability to provide a worldclass education, advance the work of faculty who shape theological scholarship worldwide, and offer students opportunities that deepen both scholarship and discipleship. This is the difference your support makes. It enables Princeton Seminary not only to educate, but to excel.
On behalf of the Board of Trustees, thank you for your prayers, your generosity, and your faith in the mission of Princeton Theological Seminary. Together, we are preparing leaders who will embody Christ’s love and help expand the table of God’s grace for generations to come. This is important and impactful work; I am humbled and grateful to be part of it. Thank you for the many ways you give and serve this beloved community.
With gratitude,
Camille Cook Howe MDiv ‘06 Chair, Board of Trustees
Chair
Camille Howe, MDiv ‘06 Chicago, Illinois
Vice Chair
Gordon B. Fowler Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Secretary Michele Minter Plainsboro, New Jersey
Philip Amoa Philadelphia, PA
Pamela Davies Charlotte, NC
Michael G. Fisch New York, NY
Doris Garcia Rivera Carolina, PR
Nancy Gray Roanoke, VA
Charles Hardwick MDiv ‘99, PhD ‘07 Birmingham, MI
Marti Hazelrigg MDiv/MA ‘02 Greensboro, NC
Karen Jackson-Weaver Lawrence Township, NJ
Scott Johnston PhD ‘94 New York, NY
Shannon Kershner Atlanta, GA
Erik Khoobyarian MDiv ‘18 Cave Creek, AZ
Margaret Kibben MDiv ‘86, DMin ‘02 Alexandria, VA
Hana Kim ThM ‘05 Seoul, Korea
Jane MacKenzie MDiv ‘17 Lafayette, CA
Jay Marshall Wimberley, TX
Andrew McGaan Chicago, IL
Eustacia Moffett Marshall MDiv ‘06 Havertown, PA
Ray Owens MDiv ‘98, PhD ‘05 Tulsa, OK
Scott Sleyster Gladstone, NJ
N. Anthony Sundermeier MDiv ‘03 Atlanta, GA
Robert Underhill Bronxville, NY
Peter Whitelock ThM ‘89, DMin ‘03 Lafayette, CA
Steve Yamaguchi MDiv ‘88 Long Beach, CA
Sung Yim PhD ‘94 Seoul, Korea
Charles “Chip” Hardwick MDiv ‘99, PhD ‘07 made a major life decision this year: The Princeton Theological Seminary alumnus announced he’ll dedicate half his estate to the Seminary.
But this seven-figure planned gift raised a challenging question. “I never imagined I would be able to make such a substantial gift,” said Hardwick PhD ’07, MDiv ’99. “So then the question became, ‘how can this gift make the most impact?’”
An accomplished church leader who has served the Presbyterian Church (USA) as a pastor, denominational leader, and synod executive, Hardwick is also a thoughtful observer of church life whose articles in Presbyterian publications and videos from the Synod of the Covenant address a range of contemporary faith issues.
He thinks a lot about the future of the church and wants to help the Seminary safeguard that future.
“I don’t want this endowment to be irrelevant as time passes,” said Hardwick, who is also on the Seminary’s Board of Trustees. “I’m hopeful it will be useful for generations to come.”
He also notes that the endowment goes into effect after his death, which the 59-year-old said with a smile may not happen for decades.
“To set specific plans now in 2025 felt narrow,” he added. Ultimately, Hardwick decided on a gift that looks to the
future while reflecting his own past, which includes experience in both management and ministry.
Before seminary, Hardwick earned an MBA from Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management and launched a career at Bain and Co., the global consulting firm.
Though he very consciously left that career for a calling in the church, Hardwick has long believed that an understanding of organizational management is critical for church leaders. That’s especially true today, he said, when many congregations are struggling with aging membership, dwindling resources, and a younger generation less likely to affiliate.
“Churches are going through so many changes and there’s this whole body of knowledge on organizational change that pastors are not very familiar with,” he said. “I am all in favor of a classical theological education and I would not want people leading the church without it. But it is not enough these days.”
Accordingly, the Charles B. Hardwick Fund will augment the Seminary’s theology curriculum through instruction in such areas as change management, conflict resolution, and negotiation.
Seminary President Jonathan Lee Walton applauded the idea.
“This fund will support courses, seminars, and workshops on practical areas of ministry that are too often left unspoken,” Walton said during an event at the Seminary in May in which he announced the endowment and expressed deep gratitude to Hardwick.
“In Chip’s vision, our students will leave with theology in their heads, scripture in their hearts, as well as the wisdom to navigate the real-life complexities of leading God’s beautiful, yet complicated people.”
Hardwick’s vision reflects a fervent faith life, an intellectual curiosity that fostered a broad array of experiences, and a ministry career that showed him church life from many angles.
He grew up in Beavercreek, Ohio, where one of his first mentors was his church pastor, the Rev. Greg Anderson, a Princeton Seminary alumnus.
“He changed the direction of my life, and I continue to be grateful for him,” Hardwick said.
He attended Alma College in Michigan, where in his senior year he visited Princeton Seminary and considered enrolling in the MDiv program. After concurring with his parents, he decided business school might be the more practical path.
By the mid-1990s, it looked like he made the right decision: Hardwick was thriving at Bain where he earned a coveted early promotion to the company’s Madrid office. But he found the demanding job increasingly dull and shallow. There was the time he stayed up all night preparing a presentation for beer company executives.
“I was helping Guiness get cheaper beer bottles,” he said. “It was very mundane. I had no emotional pull towards it at all.”
Sarah Sarchet Butters, a fellow alum from Alma College and a 1992 MDiv graduate from Princeton Seminary, suggested to Hardwick that he reconsider seminary.
“It took about six to nine months of really heavy wrestling with it to feel like God was calling me to seminary, and
that I wanted to say yes to that call,” he said. “It required changing everything about my life.”
It was a decision he never regretted. At Princeton Seminary, he found strong mentors among the faculty like James F. Kay, retired Dean and Vice President of Academic Affairs, Joe R. Engle, former Professor of Homiletics and Liturgics, and Cleo LaRue, retired Francis Landey Patton Professor of Homiletics, as well as a demanding curriculum that launched him into his second career.
But what he recalls most vividly is the humanity of the Seminary community. During his MDiv years, Hardwick’s stepmother—the woman who had raised him—took her own life. The memory of how faculty, students, and staff rallied around him is still fresh in his mind.
A year after the suicide, he crossed paths with Elsie McKee, retired Archibald Alexander Professor of Reformation Studies and the History of Worship. “We said hello to each other, and five steps later, she turned around and said, ‘How’s your dad? It has been about a year, hasn’t it?’’’ Hardwick recalled.
“I’m getting chills right now thinking about it,” he said.
Hardwick went on to serve churches in Atlanta and in Bloomington, Illinois. In 2015 he moved to PCUSA headquarters in Louisville, Kentucky, to become Director of Theology, Formation, and Evangelism. He later returned to pulpit ministry at a church in Lake Forest, Illinois. And since 2020, he has served as Executive of the Synod of the Covenant, a denominational council that supports a network of 11 presbyteries and 650 churches in Ohio and Michigan.
He sees every experience as another step forward, with each one contributing to his faith, knowledge of the world, and understanding of the contemporary church.
“I see God at work through all these things, and I am so grateful,” he said. “It gives me such joy to think I can now help church leaders for generations to come.”
ANNUAL FUND
(July 1, 2024–June 30, 2025)
Gifts to the Annual Fund go directly into the Seminary’s operating budget to fund current programs and provide support for important new initiatives. These critical unrestricted funds allow us to sustain our generous scholarship program, enrich our residential model of formation, meet unexpected challenges, and seize new opportunities.
$5,230,722
Fiscal Year 24–25 Gifts & Grants
(July 1, 2024–June 30, 2025; includes restricted gifts, unrestricted gifts, and endowed gifts.)
$1,328,622 Raised by the 2024–2025 Annual Fund 917 alumni donors Made gifts during the 2024 Fiscal Year
51% Grants
25% Annual Fund
14% Endowment
10% Restricted
OPERATING BUDGET REVENUES
(July 1 2024–June 30, 2025)
Total $62,753,671
$43,939,460 Distribution from Endowment
$6,802,605 Gross Tuition and Fees
$5,299,288 Other Revenues
$4,459,530
Auxiliary Enterprises (Food Service, Housing, Campus Store)
$2,252,788
Unrestricted Gifts and Grants
BUDGETED EXPENDITURES
(July 1, 2024–June 30, 2025)
Total $62,753,671
$19,798,790 General and Administration
$10,944,447
Instruction
$10,387,656 Physical Plant
$8,038,550 Scholarship/Student Aid
$5,347,657
Auxiliary Enterprises ( Food Services, Housing)
$4,260,395 Student Services
$3,976,176 Library
2024–2025 DONORS
We thank the following individuals, congregations, churches, church organizations, corporations, foundations, and programs for their gifts. Without these gifts — and those made by a multitude of anonymous donors — Princeton Theological Seminary could not sustain its mission of preparing faithful servants.
Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the gifts to the Annual Fund, scholarships, capital projects, endowments, and other special purposes made in the 2024–2025 fiscal year, from July 1, 2024 to June 30, 2025. Please notify the Office of Advancement at 609.497.7756 or advancement@ptsem.edu if you notice discrepancies or have questions.
Martha Banyar Le Roy Legacy Society
The Martha Banyar Le Roy Legacy Society recognizes friends and alumni who have made planned and life income gifts to the Seminary through provisions in their wills and/or one of the life income arrangements offered through the planned giving program. When the Seminary becomes aware that a person has made such arrangements, that person is invited to become a member.
The Rev. Elaine Africa ‘70
Professor Rolf Ahlers ‘61
The Rev. William Alexander ‘78 and The Rev. Patricia Alexander ‘78
The Rev. Gregory Alford ‘97
The Rev. Dr. Fred Anderson ‘73, ‘81
The Rev. Kelley Angleberger ‘07
Andrew Armstrong and Caroline Armstrong
The Rev. Dr. Darrell Armstrong ‘99
The Rev. Deadra Ashton ‘84
The Rev. Donald Austin ‘71
Elaine Barger
The Rev. Dr. M. Craig Barnes ‘81 and Dawne Barnes
The Rev. Dr. David Beck ‘65, ‘73 and The Rev. Elizabeth Beck ‘67
The Rev. Dianna Bell ‘73
The Rev. Dr. Kenneth Bickel ‘77 and The Rev. Nancy Bickel
The Rev. Donald Potter ‘76 and David Binkley
The Rev. Dr. Edward Black Jr. ‘83
The Rev. Bruce Boak ‘72 and Martha Boak
The Rev. Dr. Richard Bradley ‘71
The Rev. Dr. Deborah Brincivalli ‘85, ‘95
Amy Brinkley and Robert Brinkley
The Rev. Dr. Stuart Broberg ‘83
The Rev. Gary Burdick ‘77
John Campbell
The Rev. Dr. April Campbell ‘04
The Rev. Dr. William Carlton ‘70
The Rev. Dr. William Carr ‘69
The Rev. J Cejka III ‘82
The Rev. Dr. Bruce Chapman ‘78
Elizabeth Chase
Dr. Shin Chiba ‘83
The Rev. David Choi ‘79
The Rev. Jane Brady-Close ‘99, ‘01
Mark Convoy ‘78 and The Rev. Mary Marcus ‘77
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Coye ‘73
The Rev. Richard Craig ‘59, ‘63
The Rev. Thomas Cramer ‘89
The Rev. Dr. Robert Crilley ‘87
Geraldine Deac
The Rev. Eugene Degitz ‘60 and Jacqueline Degitz
The Rev. Vincent deLalla ‘70
The Rev. Dr. Robert Dent ‘66
The Rev. Mark DeVries ‘86 and Susan DeVries
John Donelik and Barbara Donelik
Marjorie Douse
The Rev. Dr. Roger Dunnavan ‘62 and Louise Dunnavan
Charles Beck II ‘68 and Diane Beck
The Rev. Dr. Brent Eelman ‘76
Elizabeth Wilson
The Rev. Alex Evangelista ‘19
The Rev. Dwight Ferguson ‘58 and Donna Ferguson
Norma Ferguson
The Rev. Dr. Whitworth Ferguson III ‘99, ‘09
Dr. Dudley Field III ‘71, ‘72
The Rev. Brent Fisher ‘64
The Rev. Dr. Dean Foose ‘64, ‘65, ‘94 and Sandy Foose
Dr. Perry Foote Jr.
The Rev. Dr. Sarah Foulger ‘79
Gordon Fraser ‘82 and
The Rev. Julia Fraser
Eleanor Fujita
The Rev. Dr. Francisco Garcia-Treto ‘62, ‘67 and Bonnie Flake
The Rev. Dr. Brewster Gere Jr. ‘70, ‘82
The Rev. John Gibbs ‘77
The Rev. Gregory Gibson ‘73
The Rev. Dr. Randall Gill ‘77
The Rev. Dr. Marcia Graham ‘72
The Rev. Joyce Graue ‘82
The Rev. Donna Gray ‘73
The Rev. Dr. Guy Griffith ‘86
The Rev. Kent Groff ‘67 and Fredrika Groff ‘66
Dr. Jeffrey Guild ‘78
The Rev. Dr. Robert Gustafson ‘84 and Linda Gustafson
Heather Sturt Haaga and Paul Haaga Jr. Miriam Haddad
The Rev Dr. Charles Hardwick ‘99, ‘07
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Harmon ‘06
The Rev. William Hartfelder Jr. ‘76 and Julia Hartfelder
The Rev. Dr. Jefferson Hatch ‘83
The Rev. Dr. Robert Henderson Jr. ‘88 and The Rev. Dr. Suzanne Henderson ‘90
Rose Hinde
Elinor Hite ‘66
Dr. Ann Hoch ‘93
Chaplain James Hogue ‘85
The Rev. Dr. Jane Holslag ‘82
The Rev. Dr. James Horn ‘77
The Rev. Dr. William Hoyle ‘82
The Rev. Chase Hunt ‘61 and Suzanne Hunt
Judith Jackson
The Rev. David Jamison ‘59
Barbara Johnson
Dorothy Johnson
The Rev. Dr. Julie Johnson ‘87
Thomas Johnson and Cathie Johnson
Dorothea Johnston
The Rev. Dr. Philip Jones ‘79
The Rev. Dr. Kasonga Wa Kasonga ‘88
The Rev. Dr. James Kay
Dr. Jerry Kelly ‘68
The Rev. Dr. Margaret Kibben ‘86, ‘02
William Kirkpatrick II
Pamela Kling
The Rev. Linda Knieriemen ‘90
The Rev. Dr. Andrew Kort ‘03 and The Rev. Mihee Kim-Kort ‘04, ‘08
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Kort ‘73, ‘90
The Rev. Dr. Kenneth Kovacs ‘90
John Kresge
The Rev. Carl Lammers ‘88
The Rev. Dr. Cleophus LaRue Jr. ‘90, ‘96
The Rev. Barbara Laucks ‘68
The Rev. James Lawton ‘70
The Rev. Dr. Lonnie Lee ‘73
The Rev. Eric Lemonholm ‘98
John Loetscher
The Rev. Peter Loughman ‘93, ‘94 and Kathleen Loughman ‘94
The Rev. David Lowry ‘54
The Rev. Dr. Donald Maddox ‘69
The Rev. Donna Marsh ‘98
The Rev. Richard Martin ‘59 and Anne Martin
The Rev. Dr. David Marx ‘83
The Rev. Dr. Conrad Massa ‘54, ‘60
The Rev. John McAnlis ‘76
The Rev. Dr. Kari McClellan ‘76
The Rev. Dr. George H. McConnel ‘78 and Alice McConnel
The Rev. Dr. Robert McCreight ‘73
The Rev. Moira McGuinn ‘02
Daniel McKeon
The Rev. Deborah McKinley ‘82
The Rev. Dr. Paige McRight ‘71
The Rev. Maryla Meagher ‘95
The Rev. Dr. James Miller ‘85
The Rev. Dr. Steven Miller ‘91
The Rev. Dr. Carrie Mitchell ‘02
Caryl Mobley
Eileen Moffett ‘54
Cynthia Monie
The Rev. Carolyn Montgomery ‘76, ‘85
The Rev. Dr. David Mulford ‘56
The Rev. Judith Muller ‘73
The Rev. Laszlo Muzsnai ‘81
The Rev. Peter Del Nagro ‘78, ‘90
Richard Nathan ‘69
The Rev. Dr. Kathy Nelson ‘80, ‘86, ‘92
The Rev. Douglas Nettleton ‘81
Barbara Niebruegge
The Rev. Dr. Richard Nygren ‘60, ‘81 and Carolyn Nygren
The Rev. Kari Olson ‘15
The Rev. Paul Palmer ‘56
The Rev. Dr. Brian Paulson ‘87
The Rev. Dr. Mary Perrott ‘04
The Rev. Rodger Pettichord ‘78 and Trudy Pettichord ‘78
Constance Proffitt
Robin Rayner ‘78
The Rev. Max Reddick ‘93
The Rev. Dr. Robert Reynolds ‘70 and Vicki Reynolds
The Rev. Dr. Jong Rhee ‘56
The Rev. Elsie Rhodes ‘85, ‘91
The Rev. Dr. Don Richter ‘81, ‘92
The Rev. Florence Ridley ‘78 and Roy Dudley
The Rev. Dr. Randolph Riggs ‘71
The Rev. Dr. Peter Riola
The Rev. Dr. Nigel Robb ‘79, ‘89
The Rev. Mary Roberts ‘80
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Roberts ‘80
Dr. Bill Robinson and Bonnie Robinson
The Rev. Harry R. Robinson ‘57 and Rosa Robinson
The Rev. Melissa Rogers ‘94
The Rev. Barbara Rolph ‘84
Thomas Rosser
Carolyn Rusk
The Rev. Dr. Katharine Sakenfeld
The Rev. Dr. Gary Sallquist ‘93
The Rev. Nancy Sautter ‘86
The Rev. Clarence Scarborough Jr. ‘71
Martha Schilthuis
The Rev. Dr. Audrey Schindler ‘86
The Rev. Dr. Nancy Schluter ‘89
Chad Schwickerath ‘13 and Jason Frey ‘13
The Rev. Edward Seeger ‘71
The Rev. Dr. John Setzler ‘72
Chaplain (Colonel) Barbara Sherer ‘82
The Rev. Dr. Richard Spencer ‘65, ‘73
The Rev. Dr. Anne Stewart ‘08
Ms. Mary Stieb-Hales ‘57
The Rev. Dr. Denise Stringer
Remer Strong
Virginia Stuart
Justin Sundberg ‘96 and
The Rev. Renee Sundberg ‘98
The Rev. Dr. Allan Swan ‘54
The Rev. Jean Anne Swope ‘72
The Rev. Elizabeth Terrill ‘98, ‘99
The Rev. Dr. Barbara Therese ‘87
The Rev. Daniel Thomas Jr. ‘75 and Susan Thomas
The Rev. Dr. Charles Thorp III ‘00
The Rev. Dr. John Tobian ‘70
Dr. James Tuckett ‘71
The Rev. Dr. Gerald Tyer ‘71, ‘73 and Maxine Tyer
The Rev. Robert Undercuffler ‘62
The Rev. Dr. Jack Van Ens ‘72, ‘76, ‘84 and Sandra Van Ens
Dr. Angel Velez-Oyola
Antonio Vidal
The Rev. Henk Vigeveno ‘52 and Stephanie Vigeveno
The Rev. Dr. John Ward ‘86 and Brenda Ward
The Rev. Gary Watkins ‘80
The Rev. Dr. Arthur Webster Jr. ‘69
The Rev. Anne Weirich ‘98
The Rev. James Wheeler ‘91
The Rev. Dr. Peter Whitelock ‘89, ‘03
The Rev. James Wilken ‘95
Elizabeth Williamson
The Rev. Alfred Wilson Jr. ‘62
The Rev. Dr. George Wirth ‘72 and Barbara Wirth
The Rev. Charles Wright ‘78 and Susan Wright
Dr. Fu-Ya Wu ‘87
Dr. Robert Young
Anita Younkin
Alison Zimmerman and James Zimmerman
1812 Founders Society
(Life gifts of $100,000 or more)
The 1812 Founders Society recognizes individuals whose lifetime gifts total $100,000 or more. Their generosity enables the Seminary to continue the tradition of excellence that began in Princeton more than 200 years ago.
Anonymous (2)
The Rev. Dr. Fred Anderson ‘73, ‘81
The Rev. Dr. M. Craig Barnes ‘81 and Dawne Barnes
Eve Bogle
Dr. Leslie Braksick and Matthew Braksick
Paul Branstad and Christine Branstad
Amy Brinkley and Robert Brinkley
Thomas Cousins and Amy Cousins
David Covin
Donald Deane
Mary Donelik
John Donelik and Barbara Donelik
John Emerson
The Rev. Dwight Ferguson ‘58 and Donna Ferguson
Michael G. Fisch
Dr. Mary Fitzgerald ‘61
Gordon B. Fowler Jr. and Patricia Ralph Fowler
Marie Frykberg ‘88
The Rev. Dr. Elizabeth Frykberg ‘77, ‘89
The Rev. Dr. Timothy Geoffrion ‘84 and The Rev. Dr. Jill Geoffrion ‘84
Carl Gerstacker
The Rev. Gregory Gibson ‘73
Janet Gray
Heather Sturt Haaga and Paul Haaga
Carrie Hanson
Patricia Holvick
Richard Hook
Craig Huff and Tracey Huff
Thomas Johnson and Cathie Johnson
Dorothy Johnson
The Rev. Dr. Todd Jones D.D. ‘79 and Connie Jones
Eun Hyung Diane Kim-Nam ‘92
Retta Law
David Mace and Rosemary Mace
The Rev. Jane MacKenzie ‘17 and David MacKenzie
Jay Marshall and Mary Beth Marshall
Ross Matthews
Chaplain Major Thomas Mattingly III ‘75
Dr. Philip Migliore and Ann Migliore
Eileen Moffett ‘55
David Morrison ‘16, ‘24 and Phebe Novakovic
The Rev. Thomas Nissley ‘58 and Emily Nissley
The Rev. Jeffrey O’Grady ‘88 and Lynn O’Grady
The Rev. Roy Pfautch ‘60
Scott D. Renninger and Barbara Bogle Renninger
The Rev. Lana Russell ‘03, ‘04
The Rev. Dr. Katharine Sakenfeld
Scott Schumacker
Terry Shaw and Paula Shaw
Martha Sievers
Robert Underhill and Sarah Underhill
James Unruh and Candice Unruh
Paul Vawter Jr.
Marguerite Walter ‘13
Jon Walton
The Rev. Dr. John Ward ‘86 and Brenda Ward
Gail Wilson
Alison Zimmerman and James Zimmerman
The Rev. Dr. Sunhee Kwak ‘65
Archibald Alexander Society
(Gifts of $20,000 or more)
The Archibald Alexander Society recognizes the first professor of the Seminary who taught Bible and both systematic and pastoral theology for nearly 40 years. The Seminary’s first building, completed in 1817, was later named in his honor.
Anonymous (1)
Amy Brinkley and Robert Brinkley
Dr. Pamela Davies and Bob Davies
Michael Fisch
Gordon B. Fowler Jr. and Patricia Ralph Fowler
Heather Sturt Haaga and Paul Haaga Jr.
Craig Huff and Tracey Huff
Dr. Carolyn Spanier-Ladwig ‘83 and Lee Ladwig
The Rev. Jane MacKenzie ‘17 and David MacKenzie
Jay Marshall and Mary Beth Marshall
Andrew R. McGaan
The Rev. Roy Pfautch ‘60
The Rev. Lana Russell ‘03, ‘04
Scott Sleyster and Sherry Sleyster
Robert Underhill and Sarah Underhill
Alison Zimmerman and James Zimmerman
Isabella Brown Society (Gifts of $10,000–$19,000)
The Isabella Brown Society recognizes the vision and generosity of a woman from Baltimore, Maryland, who, in the midst of the Civil War, made possible the building of Brown Hall, which was completed in 1865.
Shannon Allen ‘00 and Marc Allen
Philip Amoa and Natalie Amoa
Dr. Shane Berg ‘00 and Corrie Berg
Jeffrey Bromme and Nicole Bromme
The Rev. Dr. Dharius Daniels ‘04 and Shameka Daniels
Geraldine Deac
The Rev. Pamela Driesell ‘98 and Joseph Loveland
Professor Eddie Glaude
Kirk Griswold and Lynn Griswold
The Rev. Dr. Brenda Halbrooks-Walker ‘84
The Rev. Dr. Charles Hardwick ‘99, ‘07
Dorothy Johnson
Robert A. Manchen
Michele Minter and Jeffrey Yuan
Claire Noon
The Rev. Dr. Ray Owens ‘98, ‘05 and Dr. Dion Owens
Scott D. Renninger and Barbara Bogle Renninger
James Unruh and Candice Unruh
The Rev. Dr. Susan E. Vande Kappelle ‘75
The Rev. Dr. Jonathan Lee Walton ‘02, ‘06 and Cecily Cline Walton
Dr. Donald Weisbaker ‘56
Jane Wolfe and Scott Wolfe
Presidents Society (Gifts of $5,000–$9,999)
The Presidents Society celebrates the remarkable succession of presidents of Princeton Seminary including Francis Landey Patton (1902–1913), J. Ross Stevenson (1914–1936), John A. Mackay (1936–1959), James I. McCord (1959–1983), Thomas W. Gillespie (1983–2004), Iain R. Torrance (2004–2013), and M. Craig Barnes (2013–2022), and Jonathan Lee Walton (2023–present).
In addition to being advocates for excellence in theological education, they have been outstanding leaders in the Church.
Dr. Leslie Braksick and Matthew Braksick
John Campbell and Jean Campbell
The Rev. Mark DeVries ‘86 and Susan DeVries
Mary H. Donelik
The Rev. Dr. Craig R. Dykstra ‘73, ‘78 and Elizabeth A. Dykstra
Eleanor M. Fujita
The Rev. Dr. Camille Howe ‘06 and David Howe
The Rev. Dr. Margaret Kibben ‘86, ‘96, ‘02 and Timothy Kibben
Professor Daniel Migliore ‘59
The Rev. Carolyn Montgomery ‘76, ‘85
The Rev. Judith Muller ‘73
The Rev. Dr. Timothy Sloan ‘98
The Rev. Dr. Anne Stewart ‘08
The Rev. Dr. Arthur Sundstrom ‘72, ‘80 and Sara Sundstrom ‘79
Hany N. Takla
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Tewell ‘73
The Rev. Dr. Mark Thomas ‘80, ‘97
Marguerite Mudd Walter ‘13
The Rev. Dr. Peter Whitelock ‘89, ‘03 and Anne Whitelock
The Rev. Dr. George Wirth ‘72 and Barbara Wirth
Robert E. Speer Society (Gifts of $2,500–$4,999)
The Robert E. Speer Society recognizes Speer’s 46 years of service as executive secretary of the Board of Foreign Mission of the Presbyterian Church, his service as a member and president of Princeton Seminary’s Board of Trustees, and his leadership on behalf of the world mission of Christ’s church.
The Rev. Caroline Braskamp ‘01 and Steven Braskamp
Dr. Joel Carpenter and Janis Carpenter
Jeffrey B. Chu ‘19
Dr. Soojin Chung and Daniel Lee
The Rev. Donna Gray ‘73
The Rev. Chase Hunt ‘61 and Suzanne Hunt
The Rev. Dr. Karen Jackson-Weaver ‘06 and John Weaver
The Rev. Dr. Todd Jones D.D. ‘79 and Connie Jones
Dale E. Jones
The Rev. Dr. Hana Kim ‘05 and Yoon Kim
Esther Lee ‘97, ‘98
The Rev. James Murray ‘62 and Anna Murray
Edward Nabhan ‘04
The Rev. Thomas Nissley ‘58 and Emily Nissley
The Rev. Jeffrey O’Grady ‘88 and Lynn O’Grady
Eric Osborne ‘07 and Dr. Eleanor Osborne
The Rev. Dr. John Ronald Owens ‘71
J. Courtland Robinson
The Rev. Dayle Rounds ‘89, ‘97 and Dr. Stephen Rounds Jr.
The Rev. Thomas Rusert ‘10 and
The Rev. Abigail Rusert ‘08
The Rev. Ruth Santana-Grace ‘94 and The Rev. Dr. Edward Santana-Grace ‘92
The Rev. Dr. N. Sundermeier ‘03 and The Rev. Dr. Katie Sundermeier ‘04
Every effort has been made to accurately recognize our donors. However, if there is an error, please accept our apologies and let us know.
The Rev. Daniel Thomas Jr. ‘75
Samuel B. Wheeler
The Rev. Dr. Steven Toshio Yamaguchi ‘88 and Alison Yamaguchi
The Rev. Dr. Sung Yim ‘94 and Minsook Yim
Theodore Sedgwick Wright Society (Gifts of $1,000–$2,499)
The Theodore Sedgwick Wright Society is named for the first African American to graduate from a theological seminary in the United States. A graduate of the Class of 1828, he was pastor of the First Colored Presbyterian Church in New York City, a founding member of the American Anti-Slavery Society, and a leader in the Underground Railroad.
The Rev. Dr. Fred Anderson ‘73, ‘81
The Rev. Dr. Jerry Andrews ‘78
The Rev. John Ash III ‘62
Dr. James Aydelotte ‘60 and The Rev. Susan Denne Aydelotte
The Rev. Yeong Bae ‘94 and
The Rev. Wonjae Choi ‘02
Jeanette Behm
The Rev. Dr. Scott Johnston ‘94
The Rev. Bruce Blackie ‘64
The Rev. Bruce Boak ‘72 and Martha Boak
The Rev. Michael Bongart ‘92 and Susan Wright-Bongart
Kevin Boswell ‘06 and Elizabeth Boswell ‘06
The Rev. Dr. Michael Brothers ‘86, ‘94, ‘03 and The Rev. Lauren McFeaters ‘91
The Rev. Dr. Patricia Brown-Barnett ‘82 and Mark Brown-Barnett
Susan Brubaker
The Rev. Dr. Sarah Sarchet Butter ‘92 and Dr. John Butter
The Rev. Albert Butzer III ‘80, ‘85 and Betsy Butzer
The Rev. Dr. Elizabeth Callender ‘04
The Rev. Dr. Lawrence Chamberlain ‘65 and Alice Chamberlain
The Rev. Douglas Chase ‘05
The Rev. Virstan Choy ‘74 and Marina Lew Choy
Dr. George Cladis ‘80
The Rev. Robert Crall ‘79 and Marsha Crall
The Rev. Dr. Keith Curran ‘81 and Debra Curran
Dr. David Cuttino ‘69 and June Cuttino
David Dawson and Joan Dawson
The Rev. Dr. Kenda Dean ‘97 and Dr. Kevin Dean
The Rev. Dr. Lindley DeGarmo ‘08 and Sarah Finlayson
The Rev. Daniel del Rosario ‘04 and Elaine Pearce ‘04
The Rev. Dr. Gary Dennis ‘72 and Sarah Dennis
Mark Di Pietro and Christie Di Pietro
The Rev. Dr. Robert Duffett ‘81 and Connie Duffett
The Rev. Guy Dunham ‘78 and Susan Dunham
The Rev. Dr. Abigail Evans ‘61
The Rev. Dr. William Evertsberg ‘85, ‘04 and Kathy Evertsberg
The Rev. Robert MacFarlane Jr. ‘58
Drew Gilpin Faust
The Rev. Dr. Whitworth Ferguson III ‘99, ‘09
The Rev. Dr. Laurie Ferguson ‘80
Robert Finertie ‘60
Robert Flegel ‘67
The Rev. Dr. Douglas Fletcher ‘75, ‘82 and The Rev. Dr. Wesla Fletcher ‘78
The Rev. Dr. Sarah Foulger ‘79 and Russell Hoffman
The Rev. Denise Fournier ‘97
The Rev. Dr. Harry Freebairn ‘62, ‘84
The Rev. George Gaffga ‘75 and Molly Gaffga
The Rev. Dr. Francisco Garcia-Treto ‘62, ‘67 and Bonnie Flake
Karen Nordhus George ‘63
The Rev. Dr. Brewster Gere Jr. ‘70, ‘82
Nancy Gray and David Maxson
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Hamlin ‘85
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Hastings ‘04 and Carol Hastings ‘08
The Rev. Dr. Robert Henderson Jr. ‘88 and
The Rev. Dr. Suzanne Henderson ‘90
Rachel Herr
Margaret Hsiao
The Rev. Dr. John Huh ‘06, ‘13
Dr. Rodney Hunter ‘65, ‘74 and Ann Hunter
Jane James
The Rev. Dr. Robert Jewett ‘56, ‘57 and Audrey Jewett
Thomas R. Johnson
The Rev. Raymond Judd Jr. ‘59 and Mary Jane Judd
The Rev. Dr. James F. Kay and Thomas Brown
The Rev. Dr. Chi Young Kay ‘70
Jacquel Kelewae Jr. ‘72
The Rev. Shannon Johnson Kershner
Sangeon Kim
The Rev. Vince King ‘07
The Rev. Noelle Kirchner ‘06 and Chad Kirchner
The Rev. Dr. Kenneth Kovacs ‘90
The Rev. Samuel Lamback Jr. ‘76 and Virginia Lamback
The Rev. Peter Lane ‘03 and Erin Lane
Dr. Hwain Lee ‘88 and Dr. William Lee
Dr. Eunny Lee ‘97, ‘04
The Rev. Dr. Paul Leggett ‘71 and Beth Leggett
The Rev. Donald Lincoln ‘80
The Rev. Dr. David Lovelace ‘94 and Mimi Lovelace
Laura MacDougall
The Rev. Stacy Martin ‘03 and John Martin
The Rev. Richard Martin ‘59 and Anne Martin
The Rev. Kenneth Mast ‘80 and The Rev. Donald Stroud ‘75, ‘79
The Rev. Stephen Mather ‘74, ‘82
Nancy Matthews
The Rev. Brian McCollum ‘10
The Rev. Deborah McKinley ‘82
The Rev. Dr. Harland Merriam Jr. ‘75 and Barbara Merriam
The Rev. Stephen Mitchell ‘78
Dr. Paul Molnar
Richard Nathan ‘69 and Joy Nathan
Royce Nicolaisen and Marjorie Nicolaisen
The Rev. CarolAnn North ‘00
Professor Dennis Olson and Carol Olson
The Rev. Dr. Peter Paris and Adrienne Paris
The Rev. Charles Peyton ‘72, ‘80
Diane Pomeroy
Aleta Ricciardi
The Rev. Dr. Randolph T. Riggs ‘71
Dr. Bill Robinson and Bonnie Robinson
Dr. Ann Elisabeth Rondeau
The Rev. Dr. Katharine Sakenfeld
Joanne Sauereisen
The Rev. Dr. Beverly Schmidt ‘85
The Rev. Raymond Smith ‘75
Dr. Inseo Song ‘15
The Rev. Dr. Marshall Stanton ‘61 and Janice Stanton
The Rev. Donald Steelberg ‘59
Virginia K. Stuart
Sarah Taber
The Rev. Susan Thomas ‘80 and Curtis Kochner
The Rev. John Thomson III ‘56, ‘67
Virginia Thornburgh
The Rev. Dr. David Tomlinson ‘65 and Anne Tomlinson
The Rev. Karol Van Wulfen ‘97
Sharon Wada
The Rev. Dr. Christian Weber
The Rev. Dr. Ronald White Jr. ‘64 and Cynthia White
The Rev. William Whitmore ‘13
The Rev. William Wildhack III ‘85, ‘86 and The Rev. Holly Wildhack ‘87
The Seminary Chapel Society (Gifts of $500–$999)
The Seminary Chapel Society is named in honor of the building that is the heart of the campus, where the Seminary community gathers for daily worship and to share the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper every Friday when classes are in session.
Dr. Lizette Acosta
Blair Alexander ‘23
Kerri Allen
The Rev. Dr. Gregory Anderson ‘80 and Holly Anderson
The Rev. Dr. Emily Anderson ‘89
The Rev. Richard Aylor ‘15
The Rev. Mary Azada and Christopher Simmons
The Rev. Dr. Eric Barreto ‘04 and Holley Barreto
The Rev. Charles Barton ‘66 and Ruth Barton
The Rev. Dr. Charles Bartow ‘63 and Paula Bartow
Alison Bass
Lorenzo Tony Bates
The Rev. Robert Beringer ‘61
The Rev. Dr. Kenneth Bickel ‘77 and The Rev. Nancy Bickel
The Rev. Jon Black ‘72 and Jane Black
The Rev. Dr. Donald Boardman ‘64
Carl Bracy and Kathy Bracy
Dr. Andrea Brassard
The Rev. Dr. Randal Bremer ‘75 and Donna Bremer
Samette Britt
The Rev. Richard Bundy ‘65, ‘66
The Rev. Martha Campbell ‘02
Irene Carson
The Rev. William Carter ‘85 and Jamie Carter
The Rev. Canon Charles Cesaretti ‘75
Caryl Chambers
Jeff Chesebro ‘78 and Elaine Chesebro
Thomas Chester and Theresa Chester
Jeanette Christianson ‘15
The Rev. James Cortelyou ‘63
The Rev. Emily Corzine ‘08 and Jeffery Corzine
The Rev. Kelby Cotton ‘80 and Marilyn Cotton
Janice Courter
Timothy Crowley ‘87
The Rev. Emily D’Andrea ‘97
Dr. Teresa Delgado
Jun Ding
The Rev. George Doering Jr. ‘65
The Rev. Nancy Donnelly ‘95
The Rev. Heather Prince Doss ‘06
The Rev. Dr. Donovan Drake ‘92 and Beth Drake
Larry Droppa and Jane Droppa
David Erdman and Eleanor Erdman
Jon Erdman
The Rev. Shelley Gardner ‘07
Griffin Gasink ‘14
The Rev. Dr. Aaron Gast ‘53
The Rev. Dr. David Gellert ‘67
The Rev. John Gibbs ‘77
John Gilmore and Linda Gilmore
The Rev. Richard Gronhovd ‘61, ‘62
The Rev. Kenneth Gruebel ‘72 and Gail Gruebel
Dr. Darrell Guder and Judith Guder
The Rev. Dr. John Hart ‘84 and Rebecca Hart
Daniel Hartman
The Rev. Norman Hatter ‘02
Norman Hayes
The Rev. Dr. Edwin Hurley ‘81 and Gayle Hurley
The Rev. Kimberly Hyatt ‘96
The Very Rev. Timothy Jones ‘79 and The Rev. Jill Zook-Jones ‘79
Lionel Kennedy and Sherrie Kennedy
The Rev. Dr. David Kim ‘07 and Jane Kim
The Rev. Philip King ‘97 and Cindy Van Dijk
The Rev. Richard Klein Jr. ‘80
The Rev. Anne Koehler ‘02
The Rev. Stephen Kolderup ‘79
Leo Krusius and Jennifer Krusius
The Rev. Dr. Robert Larson Jr. ‘65 and Dorothy Larson
The Rev. Dr. George Furniss and
The Rev. Sandra Larson ‘77
The Rev. Barbara Laucks ‘68
Dr. Bo Karen Lee ‘99, ‘07 and Professor David Thomas
The Rev. Dr. Christopher Lenocker ‘78 and Martha Lenocker
The Rev. Dr. Lewis Leon ‘75 and Terri Hawkins Leon
The Rev. Joan LeRoy ‘69
The Rev. Ray Lindquist ‘67
The Rev. Eunhyey Lok ‘05
The Rev. Daniel Love ‘95
The Rev. Scott Lumsden ‘98
The Rev. Donald Lundgren ‘60 and Melissa Lundgren
David Mace and Rosemary Mace
Dr. Robert Maclennan ‘66 and Jane Maclennan
Chaplain Bruce Martin ‘85 and Judith Martin
Elaine Matthews
John McAloon and Joanne McAloon
Daniel McKeon
John Merrick
Dr. Alan Meyers ‘72 and Rosemary Meyers
Dr. Cara Miller ‘04 and Matthew Miller
The Rev. Stephanie Miller ‘94
The Rev. Scott Mitchell ‘83
The Rev. Dr. James Moorhead ‘71 and Cynthia Moorhead
Tracy Muirhead and Will Muirhead
Dr. Hart Nelsen ‘63 and Dr. Anne Nelsen
The Rev. Dr. Robert Norris ‘79, ‘86, ‘04 and Debra Norris
The Rev. Kari Olson ‘15
The Rev. Dr. Brian Paulson ‘87
The Rev. Dr. Keyon Payton ‘04
Dr. Travis Pickell ‘11 and Sarah Pickell
The Rev. Dr. LeQuita Porter ‘02 and William Porter
Mark Read
The Rev. Dr. James Roghair ‘68 and Elizabeth Roghair
Dr. Paul Rorem ‘80 and Kate Skrebutenas ‘78
The Rev. Dr. Charles Rowins ‘87 and Suzanne Rowins
Johnny Salgado and Celeste Salgado
The Rev. Michael Samson ‘05
The Rev. Dr. MacHenry Schafer II ‘99 and Kathryn Schafer ‘99
The Rev. Ricardo Sheppard ‘15
The Rev. Jasmine Smart
The Rev. Dr. John Snyder ‘57, ‘65
Marcena Steele ‘65
The Rev. Robert Stoddard Jr. ‘65 and Judith Stoddard
The Rev. Dr. David Stout ‘66 and Betty Stout
John Stuart
The Rev. Samuel Taylor ‘00 and Kathryn McAllister
Nancy Tindall
Dr. Ralph Underwood ‘65
The Rev. Dr. Jack Van Ens ‘72, ‘76, ‘84 and Sandra Van Ens
Elizabeth Walters
The Rev. Denise Welsh ‘11
Richard White ‘02, ‘03 and The Rev. Deirdre White ‘02
Paul Williams
Marcia Willsie and Bruce Willsie
The Rev. Dr. Michael Wilson ‘95 and Tricia Wilson
Dr. Carla Works ‘11 and
The Rev. Dr. Nick Works
Dana Wright ‘99 and Judy Wright
The Rev. Charles Wright ‘78 and Susan Wright
Ralph Wyman
Margaret Yar
Muriel Van Orden Jennings Society (Gifts of $250–$499)
The Muriel Van Orden Jennings Society celebrates the life and ministry of the Seminary’s first woman graduate, who earned ThB and ThM degrees in 1932. In the 1950s, she made it her mission to raise awareness about interracial and intercultural acceptance by securing scholarships for needy children. In 1981, she was honored for 50 years of children’s and youth work at the Montrose Bible Conference.
Anonymous (1)
The Rev. Dr. George Abdo ’72
The Rev. Dr. Julie Adkins ‘85
The Rev. Elizabeth Affsprung ‘87
The Rev. Dr. Bankole Akinbinu ‘10
The Rev. Carl Anderson ‘69 and Julie Anderson
The Rev. Dr. Hans Andreasson ‘93 and Christina Andreasson
The Rev. Kent Annan ‘99 and
The Rev. Shelly Satran ‘00
The Rev. Mary Anton ‘89
The Rev. Amy Aspey ‘04
The Rev. Mary Atkinson ‘88
Donald Barringer and Kathleen Barringer
The Rev. Dan Baumgartner ‘96 and Anne Baumgartner
The Rev. Joicy Becker-Richards ‘90 and Timothy Richards
The Rev. Helen Beglin ‘63
Robert B. Bell Jr.
Rowland Bennett ‘73 and Linda Bennett
The Rev. Judith Birdsall ‘85, ‘92 and Douglas Taylor
The Rev. Lindsay Borden ‘07
The Rev. Richard Brand Jr. ‘68 and Elizabeth Brand
The Rev. James Brazell Jr. ‘80
The Rev. Christa Brewer ‘08
Marlon Brown and Caleb Brown
Carolyn Bryson
The Rev. Zane Buxton ‘89 and Karol Buxton
The Rev. Dr. Clifford Cain ‘75
The Rev. Kathryn Jones Calone ‘10
The Rev. Mr. David Carlisle ‘77 and Janet Carlisle
Fei Chao
Dr. Mary Chapin
Kim Tsong Chen ‘71 and Wang Chen
Mary Chesnutt
Joseph Chmielewski
The Rev. Dr. Floyd Churn Jr. ‘68, ‘95 and Janet Churn
The Rev. Dr. Richard Coble ‘10 and Lindsey Williford
Dr. Elizabeth Conde-Frazier
The Rev. Mary Marcus ‘77 and Mark Convoy ‘78
The Rev. Mark Cooper ‘79 and Jill Cooper
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Coye ‘73
The Rev. Robert Culp ‘75, ‘92 and Kathryn Culp
The Rev. Eugene Degitz ‘60 and Jacqueline Degitz
The Rev. Peter Del Nagro ‘78, ‘90
The Rev. William Dent Jr. ‘63 and Judith Dent
Ian Douglas
The Rev. Dr. Barry Downing ‘63
The Rev. Dr. Cheryl Dudley ‘83
The Rev. Dr. Drew Dyson ‘00, ‘12
The Rev. Dr. Grafton Eliason ‘90
The Rev. Paul Evans ‘65
Jacky Ferguson
The Rev. Dr. William Findlay ‘66
Angela Fochtman
The Rev. Dr. Quinn Fox ‘89
The Rev. Donald Fox ‘85
Robert Frykenberg
The Rev. Dr. Daniel Fugate
Dr. Doris Garcia Rivera
Pastor Geraldine Godfrey ‘96
Dr. Michael Gorman ‘82, ‘89
The Rev. Lance Grothe ‘80
Veronica Haggart
Jean Hall
The Rev. Dr. Dennis Hamilton ‘80 and Cheryl Hamilton
Dr. Nathan Hatch and Julia Hatch
The Rev. David Haydu ‘74
The Rev. Dr. Marti Hazelrigg ‘02 and The Rev. Peter Hazelrigg ‘04
Judith Heagstedt
The Rev. Dr. Adam Hearlson ‘08, ‘13 and
The Rev. Dr. Christiane Lang Hearlson ‘05, ‘16
The Rev. Chris Herrin ‘97 and Dan Herrin
The Rev. Dr. Gordon Hess ‘67
Ann Hidalgo
Dr. Michael Holmes ‘84 and Mary Holmes
The Rev. Dr. Angela Hooks ‘23 and The Rev. Johnny Simon
The Rev. Robert Horrigan ‘76 and Christina Bruun-Horrigan ‘76
The Rev. Dr. M. Howard Jr. ‘72 and Barbara Howard
Dr. Melanie Howard ‘15 and Jeremiah Howard
William D. Howden ‘77, ‘86
The Rev. Dr. John Howell III ‘12
The Rev. Caroline Hughes ‘20 and Jacob Haller Hughes
The Rev. Dr. James Hulsey ‘76, ‘84 and Joanna Hulsey
The Rev. Dr. Ramon Hunt ‘76 and Beatrice Hunt
The Rev. Paul Jeanes III and Christina Jeanes
The Rev. Jeremy Jinkins ‘10 and The Rev. Caroline Jinkins ‘10
The Rev. Bertram Johnson ‘96 and Jason McGill
Leland Jones IV
The Rev. Robert Jones ‘63 and Priscilla Jones
The Rev. Mignon Jones-Spann ‘13
The Rev. Dr. Richard Kannwischer ‘98 and Kelly Kannwischer ‘99
Robert Keiter
The Rev. Frederick Kellegrew ‘89
The Rev. Lewis Kidd ‘86
Dr. S. T. Kimbrough Jr. ‘66
Dr. Kathleen Koenig ‘76 and The Rev. Dr. John Koenig
The Rev. Stephen Kyriacou ‘72
The Rev. Lisa Larsen ‘88
The Rev. Suk Lee ‘87
John Lemen
Carolyn Leon
The Rev. Gordon Letizia ‘67 and Carol Letizia
The Rev. Michael Livingston ‘74, ‘91 and Nancy Livingston
The Rev. Anthony Lorenz ‘07
Dr. Donald Losher ‘77
Glenda Love
Bishop Ernest Lyght ‘70, ‘79
The Rev. Dr. Stephens Lytch ‘78, ‘85, ‘91 and The Rev. Dr. Carol Lytch ‘80
The Rev. John Maltby ‘62
The Rev. Dr. Steven Marsh ‘82 and Janet Marsh
The Rev. Dr. Eustacia Marshall ’06 and
The Rev. Touré Marshall ’04, ’05
The Rev. Leslie Martin ‘00 and Linda Martin
The Rev. Jeffrey Mays ‘81
Captain Robert McClanahan Jr. ‘99
The Rev. William McCleery III ‘70
The Rev. Dr. Kari McClellan ‘76
The Rev. Dr. George McConnel ‘78 and Alice Connel
Mark Migliore
The Rev. Dr. Jonathan Miller ‘77, ‘93 and Karin Miller
Elizabeth Mochel
The Rev. Betsey Moe ‘03
The Rev. John Monroe III ‘84 and The Rev. Edward Van Gombos ‘79
The Rev. Richard Moyer ‘87
The Rev. Msgr. Thomas Mullelly ‘84
The Rev. Jeffrey Myers ‘74 and Sue Myers
Heidi Nam
Wesley Neal ‘98 and Jerusha Neal ‘14, ‘98
The Rev. Dr. John Nelsen ‘79, ‘90 and Rebecca Nelsen
The Rev. Dr. Kenneth Onstot ‘79, ‘97 and Nadine Onstot
The Rev. Dr. Dawn Ottoni-Wilhelm ‘86, ‘04
The Rev. Douglas Phillips ‘81
Samuel Picard ‘07
David Poinsett and Georgia Poinsett
The Rev. Dr. Chester Polk Jr. ‘95, ‘06 and Mildred Polk
Robert Pollsen ‘80 and Nina Rubin
The Rev. Donald Potter ‘76 and David Binkley
Lisa Dawn Powell ‘01, ‘08
Eric Pristell and Dr. Marla Frederick
The Rev. Allan Purtill Jr. ‘00
The Rev. Hannah Quick ‘16
The Rev. Werner Ramirez ‘18 and April Fellers
The Rev. Dr. Clarence Reaser ‘57, ‘65 and Ann Vaughan
The Rev. Dr. Robert Reynolds ‘70 and Vicki Reynolds
The Rev. Dr. Ronald Rice ‘61
The Rev. Dr. Amanda Riley ‘05 and Bill Riley
The Rev. Dr. Richard Rouquie Jr. ‘76
The Rev. Elizabeth Ryder ‘10
Chaplain Kenneth Sampson ‘96
The Rev. Robert Sams ‘97
The Rev. Dr. James Savage ‘67, ‘89
The Rev. Dr. Nancy Schluter ‘89
Chad Schwickerath ‘13 and Jason Frey ‘13
Mary Searl ‘84
Emra Seawood
The Rev. Pamela Sebastian ‘99
The Rev. Edward Seeger ‘71
The Rev. Michael Seely ‘81 and Carol Seely
The Rev. Benjamin Shaw ‘16
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Sheffield ‘73 and Kathleen Sheffield
Dr. Beth Sheppard ‘91 and Dr. James Sheppard
Dr. Barbara Simons ‘05 and William Simons
The Rev. Robert Simpson ‘63
The Rev. Sabrina Slater ‘15
The Rev. Dr. Ruth Smalt ‘14
Dr. John Starr and Lynda Starr
The Rev. Paul Stavrakos ‘69
The Rev. Dr. Brian Stratton ‘84, ‘97 and The Rev. Dr. Carol Gregg ‘84, ‘95
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Sullivan ‘81
The Rev. Susan Sytsma-Bratt ‘06 and Peter Bratt
The Rev. Dr. Barbara Therese ‘87
Christine Treger ‘07
Thomas Turnbull II and Ann Turnbull
Dr. Charles Van Engen and Jean Van Engen
The Rev. Calvin VanderMeyden ‘73
The Rev. John Vincent-Morrison ‘94 and Lisa Vincent-Morrison ‘91, ‘94
The Rev. Thomas Wanner ‘69 and Carolynn Wanner
Michael Watkins and Joy Watkins
The Rev. Dr. Arthur Webster Jr. ‘69
The Rev. Beatrix Weil ‘17 and Adam Nelson
Danny Williams Sr.
The Rev. Dr. Carlos Wilton ‘82 and
The Rev. Claire Pula
The Rev. Alexander Wimberly ‘03 and The Rev. Kiran Wimberly ‘05, ‘16
The Rev. Donald Winch ‘86 and Florence Winch ‘86
Matt J. Witkowski Jr.
The Rev. Elaine Woroby ‘86
The Rev. Dr. In Yang ‘89
Anita Younkin
William Tennent Society (Gifts of $100–$249)
The William Tennent Society is named for the Presbyterian pastor who established the “Log College” in 1726. It was the forerunner of the College of New Jersey, now Princeton University. In 1943 and in 1944, the Tennent College of Christian Education was moved from Philadelphia to Princeton.
AThe Rev. Ebenezer Addo ‘84
The Rev. Haruo Aihara ‘85
Cheryl S. Ali
The Rev. James Alley ‘96
Chaplain Sheryl Allston ‘11 and Mark Allston
The Rev. Peter Amerman ‘69
Janice Anderson ‘65
Andrew Armstrong and Caroline Armstrong
Andrew Armstrong Jr. ‘70 and Sharon Armstrong
The Rev. Mary Austin ‘94
Kathryn Avery ‘78
The Rev. Dr. Cesar Ayala ‘89
BThe Rev. Dr. Jack Baca ‘82
The Rev. Karen Bachman ‘16
Dwight Baker and Lois Baker
Mark Baker
The Rev. Eric Barnes ‘09 and Miriam Barnes
Miriam Barnes
The Rev. Dr. Robert Bayley ‘73
Edward Beasley Jr.
Charles Beck II ‘68 and Diane Beck
Amy Julia Becker ‘10
Ron Benham ‘74
Christopher Bennett
The Rev. James Bennett ‘93
The Rev. George Betz ‘74
The Rev. Dr. Donald Black ‘63, ‘82 and Doris Black
The Rev. Dr. James Black ‘64 and Virginia Ulch Black
The Rev. Dr. Jon Black ‘95, ‘03
The Rev. Dr. Dwight Blackstock ‘71 and Sharon Blackstock
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Blair ‘83
Wesley Blair III ‘77 and Rebecca Blair
Alan Blatecky ‘72, ‘73 and Gene Blatecky
Robert P. Boell
Nicholas Boolukos
The Rev. Dr. Greg Bostrom ‘83 and The Rev. Dr. Kathleen Bostrom ‘80, ‘83
Dr. John Bowlin and Mimi Bowlin
Jennifer Boyd ‘10
Sherry Brabham ‘76
The Rev. Aisha Brooks-Johnson ‘05
The Rev. Christi Brown ‘08 and Kelan Brown
Dr. Aliya Browne ‘16
Dr. Lang Brownlee ‘81 and Jean Brownlee
The Rev. Richard Buller ‘85
Timothy Burge-Lape ‘15 and Reed Burge-Lape
The Rev. Dr. Dave Burgess ‘01 and Sarah Burgess
Mary Burns
John Bush
The Rev. Willem Bynagte ‘81 and Jacquelin Bynagte
C
The Rev. Dr. David Cabush ‘94, ‘95 and Dr. Diane Cabush
The Rev. Dr. Samuel Calian ‘58 and Doris Calian
Jessica M. Campbell ‘03
The Rev. Hobart Campbell ‘59
The Rev. Jessica Bratt Carle ‘05
The Rev. Craig Cashdollar ‘60
The Rev. J. Cejka III ‘82 and Lisa Cejka
Mary Beth Charters ‘18 and David Charters
The Rev. Peter Chen ‘06 and Melody Chen
John Chen
Martha Chi
Ronald Chicken ‘12 and Jessica Ethridge-Chicken ‘14
Steve Cho
Dr. Ki Joo Choi
Margaret Christopher
Julie Chung
The Rev. Dr. Pedro Cintron-Lamourt ‘58
The Rev. Michel Clark
The Rev. James Clark ‘63 and Nina Clark
The Rev. Melanie Clark ‘84 and Richard Clark
Kevin J. Conner
Dr. Linda Conrad
Jerilyn Consla
The Rev. Andrew Cooke ‘04 and The Rev. Katelyn Cooke
The Rev. Nathan Cooper ‘99 and Lydia Cooper
Dr. Larry Covin Jr. ‘19
Dr. Sidnie Crawford
The Rev. Robert Cromwell ‘83
Dr. Donald Crosby ‘56, ‘59
Dr. Jeff Crosno ‘02 and Carmen Crosno
The Rev. Stephen Cureton ‘91 and Dawn Cureton
Dr. Winnifred Cutler
D
Oscar Dailey
The Rev. Cress Darwin ‘03, ‘04 and Rebecca Darwin
The Rev. Dwight Davidson ‘96
Gretchen Davies
The Rev. Gregory Davis ‘80
The Rev. Dr. Gary Davis ‘84
William Davis ‘72
The Rev. Dr. Rebecca Dean ‘96
The Rev. John Dennehy ‘02
The Rev. Dr. David DeRemer ‘79
The Rev. Keith DeVries ‘82 and Jennifer DeVries
The Rev. David Dietsche ‘88 and Susan Dietsche
The Rev. Jennifer DiFrancesco ‘01 and James Paulk
Professor F. W. Dobbs-Allsopp ‘87 and The Rev. Leslie Dobbs-Allsopp ‘87
Dr. Jane Douglass
The Rev. Ellen Dozier ‘70
The Rev. Dr. David Drain ‘69 and Marion Drain
Dan Dunaway
Dr. Rose Ellen Dunn
The Rev. Dr. David Van Dyke ‘78, ‘79
E
Lynn Elliott ‘88
The Rev. Mr. Jeffrey Erb ‘77
Joel Estes ‘12 and Sharon Estes
Gayle Etienne
The Rev. Douglas Etter ‘87
The Rev. Alex Evangelista ‘19 and Andrea Ayala
Margaret Everett
F
Dr. Dennis Falasco ‘81
Nancy Feather
The Rev. David Feltman ‘79 and Susan Feltman
The Rev. Richard Fennig ‘75
Elizabeth Ferguson ‘05 and Brent Ferguson ‘06
The Rev. Julio Filomeno ‘83 and Linda Filomeno
The Rev. Diane Jamison Fitch ‘93
Judy Flanigan
The Rev. Dr. Stephen Fritz ‘89 and Margaret Fritz
Charles Fulton and Judith Fulton
G
Dr. Roberta Gallagher
Rebecca Galli
Sarah Galloway
Professor David Garber ‘64, ‘74
The Rev. Adan Garcia ‘85
Pamela Gargett
The Rev. Dr. Robert Garwig ‘80
The Rev. Matthew Gaventa ‘12
Dr. Beverly Gaventa and The Rev. William Gaventa
Chaplain Karen Geiger-Behm ‘06 and Sarah Geiger-Behm
The Rev. Frederick Gibbs ‘61, ‘62
Charles Gillett ‘24
Woodrow Gilliland ‘69
Jack Gillum
The Rev. Linda Goeddel ‘09
Dr. Joan Gotwals
The Rev. Krystin Granberg ‘94
The Rev. Dr. Kenneth Green ‘01 and
The Rev. Dr. Tassie Green ‘01
The Rev. Emily Griffin ‘01
The Rev. Kent Groff ‘67 and Fredrika Groff ‘66
The Rev. Maynard Grunstra and Betty Grunstra
The Rev. Brett Gudeman ‘20 and Allyson Gudeman
Thomas Gunderman ‘92
H
The Rev. Paul Hackett ‘57
The Rev. Marilyn Hale ‘96
Antonia Hall
Terry R. Hamrick and Judith O. Hamrick
Annie Van Hanken
Dr. John Hardie ‘12
The Rev. Patrick Hardy ‘68 and Patricia Hardy
The Rev. Dr. James Harris Jr. ‘69 and Betty Harris
Dr. Gregory Hayes ‘79 and Diane Hayes ‘78
The Rev. Dr. Blake Heffner ‘75, ‘86
Benjamin Heidgerken ‘10
The Rev. Dr. Jan Heller ‘81
The Rev. Dr. Gregory Henley ‘79
Cullan Herald-Evans ‘74
The Rev. Allison Herman-Beaulieu ‘03
Dr. Raymond Herr ‘87
Perry Hewitt
Erin Hicks ‘15
Dr. Theodore Hiebert ‘76 and Paula Hiebert
The Rev. Evan Hierholzer ‘17 and Erika Hierholzer
Ruth Higuchi
The Rev. Julie Hodges ‘89
The Rev. Ann Holt ‘80
John Houston ‘05
The Rev. Dr. Jennifer Hrynyk ‘05
The Rev. John Huegel ‘54, ‘57
Nancy Hughes
The Rev. Robert Hunsicker ‘79 and Hedwig Hunsicker
Dr. Deborah Hunsinger and Professor George Hunsinger
The Rev. Walter Hunting ‘67 and Elizabeth Hunting
Chung Hur
The Rev. Shawn Hyska ‘09
J
The Rev. Kristen Jeide ‘82
Archie Jenkins II ‘77 and Marian Jenkins
Elizabeth J. Johnson
The Rev. Kathryn Johnston ‘00
The Rev. Dr. Tyrone Jones IV ‘10
The Rev. Dennis Jones ‘90
The Rev. Dr. Robert Jones ‘59, ‘62
The Rev. Sheree Jones ‘10 and
The Rev. Earl Jones Jr. ‘13
K
Dr. Cambria Kaltwasser ‘10, ‘17 and Jared Kaltwasser
Carter Karins and Joan Karins
Carol Kasabach and Haig Kasabach
Betty Katen-Narvell ‘05 and William Katen-Narvell
The Rev. Dr. Christopher Keating ‘87 and
The Rev. Dr. Carol Keating ‘87
The Rev. Dr. Robert Keefer ‘82 and Kathleen Keefer
The Rev. Alick Kennedy ‘58
The Rev. Keith Kerber ‘96 and Laurena Ketzel-Kerber
The Rev. James Kesler ‘57, ‘60
The Rev. Yung-Sun Kim ‘88 and
The Rev. Chang Kim
The Rev. Daniel Klement ‘68 and Judith Klement
The Rev. Linda Knieriemen ‘90
The Rev. Henry Koh ‘69, ‘70
Steven Ku ‘20
Chris Y. Kwak
L
Dr. Virginia Landgraf ‘03
The Rev. Richard Lanford ‘84
Riley Lannon and Madeline Lannon ‘23
Margaret Larom
Easten Law and Christine Fu
The Rev. Dr. Peter Lawson ‘85 and The Rev. Joyce Lawson ‘86
The Rev. Eileen LeCluyse ‘14 and Joseph LeCluyse
The Rev. Young Lee ‘94 and Sunghai Lee
The Rev. Dr. Lonnie Lee ‘73
The Rev. JyungIn Lee ‘15
The Rev. Jiman Lee ‘14 and Danielle Lee
Spencer Lee
Susan Legnani ‘78 and The Rev. Robert Legnani
Gloria Lehmann
Robert Lisi ‘60 and Barbara Lisi
The Rev. Daniel Little ‘59 and Elaine Little
Michael Livio and Todd Ritter
The Rev. Kenneth Locke ‘97 and Elizabeth Lindsey-Locke
John Loetscher and Mary Loetscher
The Rev. Dr. John Lolla Jr. ‘80, ‘94
The Rev. Deanna Lombardi ‘01
The Rev. Lisa Lopez-Meyer ‘11
Jennifer Lovers ‘02 and Mark Lovers
M
The Rev. Dr. John MacDougall ‘76 and The Rev. Priscilla MacDougall ‘76
The Rev. Dr. Robert MacSwain ‘95
The Rev. Dr. Donald Maddox ‘69
The Rev. Dr. Gordon Mapes III ‘87 and Susan Mapes
Dr. Camille Maravalli
The Rev. Brian Marsh ‘00 and Kristen Marsh
The Rev. Michael Martin ‘75
The Rev. Bradley Martin ‘84, ‘98 and
The Rev. Barbara Price-Martin ‘86
The Rev. Terry Martinson ‘72 and Marcia Martinson
Conrad De Master ‘67
The Rev. Timothy Maxa ‘84
Dr. Cynthia Mazur ‘80
The Rev. John McAnlis ‘76 and The Rev. Karin Nelson McAnlis ‘77
Michelle Doran McBean ‘00
Katy McBride
The Rev. James McCloskey III ‘84
The Rev. Dr. James McCormack ‘70 and Julie McCormack
Dr. Heather McDivitt ‘03
The Rev. Mark McFadden ‘94
The Rev. Michael McKay ‘82
Gordon McKay
The Rev. Dr. Gerald McKenny ‘82 and Phimpmas Bunnag
The Rev. Dr. Laura McKnight ‘06, ‘07
The Rev. Laurie McNeill ‘88
Dr. Jocelyn McWhirter ‘02
The Rev. Maryann Meador ‘95
The Rev. Dr. Horace Means II ‘95, ‘96, ‘05
Chaplain Earl Middleton ‘90 and Pascale Middleton
The Rev. Dr. Tonya Miles ‘10
The Rev. Neale Miller ‘79 and Linda Miller
Dr. Theron Miller ‘86
The Rev. Margaret Mitsuyasu ‘11
Caryl Mobley and Larry Mobley
Patricia Mochel
The Rev. Mr. Nathan Mochizuki ‘11
The Rev. Dr. David Moessner ‘75 and The Rev. Dr. Jeanne StevensonMoessner ‘75
The Rev. Dr. Jeffrey Mohr ‘73 and Patricia Mohr
The Rev. Darius Mojallali ‘81
The Rev. Ruth Montano-Acosta ‘95 and Rafael Acosta
Pastor Eliseo Morales Jr. ‘16
The Rev. Dr. John Morgan ‘85 and Ellen Morgan
The Rev. Dr. Robert Morris Jr. ‘86 and Virginia Morris
Jeremy Morse ‘92 and Laura Bessinger-Morse
The Rev. Don Mossa ‘01 and Elizabeth Bansfield-Mossa
The Rev. Dr. David Mulford ‘56
The Rev. Arthur Murray and The Rev. Dr. Laura Thelander ‘10
The Rev. David Myers ‘84 and
The Rev. Dr. Rhonda Myers ‘95
N
Ronnie Nagata ‘69
Barbara Nelson ‘66
The Rev. Drew Nettinga ‘73 and Susan Nettinga
The Rev. Douglas Nettleton ‘81
O
The Rev. Donald O’Dell ‘67 and Marcia O’Dell
The Rev. James O’Dell ‘64
Johannes Oesch ‘98 and The Rev. Anneliese Oesch ‘98
The Rev. Walter Owensby ‘59
P
The Rev. Kenneth Parker ‘65
Liliana Pastas ‘10
The Rev. Dr. Patrick Patterson
The Rev. Eric Peltz ‘11
The Rev. Alison Peters ‘14 and Mitchell Peters
The Rev. Rodger Pettichord ‘78 and Trudy Pettichord ‘78
Ruth Pitts
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Poetter ‘88 and Christine Poetter
The Rev. John Poling ‘74 and Jackie Poling ‘75
Mark E. Porizky ‘89
The Rev. Margaret Poteet ‘20
The Rev. John Potter ‘71 and Mary Potter
The Rev. Allen Presby ‘73
The Rev. Davis Price ‘72
The Rev. James Pulsifer ‘67 and Marion Pulsifer
Q
Lucia Quinn
R
The Rev. Richard Ramsey ‘74 and Nancy Ramsey
The Rev. Dr. Lydia Rappaport ‘83, ‘07
Sheldon Ray Jr. and Mary Beth Ray
Jean MacDonald Rea ‘79
The Rev. George Reed Jr. ‘67 and Anita Reed
The Rev. Ryan Reed ‘10
The Rev. Dr. Philip Reed ‘81 and Marguerite Clapham
The Rev. Matthew Reeves ‘02
The Rev. Susan Reichenberg ‘90
The Rev. Nancy Reinert ‘96 and Wayne Reinert
Dr. Lawrence Reinertsen ‘74
The Rev. Jana Reister ‘06
The Rev. Vernon Rice ‘68
The Rev. Clifford Richards ‘83
The Rev. Dr. Susan Richardson ‘04
The Rev. Anthony Riley ‘11
The Rev. Dr. Timothy Roberts ‘95 and Lisa Roberts
The Rev. Matthew Robinson ‘89, ‘90 and Peggy Robinson
The Rev. Harry Robinson ‘57 and Rosa Robinson
The Rev. David Robinson
The Rev. Hunter Roddey ‘90 and The Rev. Dr. Susan Roddey ‘90
Chaplain Robert Rodriguez ‘90
The Rev. Michael Roffina ‘78 and Susan Bleecker
Linda Romano
The Rev. Charles Ross Jr. ‘58
The Rev. Dr. Douglas Ruffle ‘87 and Tammie Ruffle
The Rev. Craig Rule ‘68, ‘88 and Jule Rule
S
Ariana Salazar ‘13
The Rev. Dr. Gary Sallquist ‘93 and Joyce Sallquist
Dr. Dennis Salmon ‘72
Carmelo Santos and Jennifer Landis
The Rev. Dr. Harry Schill III ‘75, ‘78
The Rev. Dr. Audrey Schindler ‘86 and Bruce Felix
The Rev. Dr. Daniel Schipani ‘81
The Rev. Edward Schneider ‘62
The Rev. Gary Schroeder
Dr. Dominic Scibilia ‘79 and Susanne Scibilia
The Rev. John Seabrook Jr. ‘71
The Rev. Alex Serna-Wallender ‘16 and Elena Serna-Wallender
The Rev. Dr. John Setzler ‘72 and Staci Setzler
Dr. Joseph Shaw ‘58
The Rev. Dr. Richard Sheffield ‘80 and Xavia Diane
The Rev. Austin Shelley ‘12, ‘14
The Rev. Dr. Barbara Sherer ‘82
The Rev. Rebecca Sherwood ‘89
Dr. Yuki Shimada ‘11
Mike Shook
The Rev. Marion Silbert ‘82
The Rev. Dr. David Simmons ‘74
The Rev. Dr. Robert Smith Jr. ‘72, ‘82 and Nancy Brady
The Rev. Bruce Smith ‘74 and Elizabeth Smith
The Rev. Phillip Smith ‘75
The Rev. Daniel Smoak ‘00
Judith Snyder
The Rev. Dr. Ruth Snyder ‘91 and Leif Aus
Barbara Snyder
Dr. Richard Snyder ‘63, ‘69
The Rev. Dr. Chandra Soans ‘90, ‘99 and Betsy Soans
The Rev. Dr. Gordon Sommers ‘68
Edward Song
The Rev. Dr. Paul Sorrentino ‘05 and Karen Sorrentino
The Rev. Frank Spada ‘80 and Maria Spada
Dr. Samuel Speers ‘08
Donald Spencer ‘63
Kenneth Sprang and Carol Sprang
The Rev. Mark Sprowl ‘95
The Rev. Dr. Scott Starbuck ‘88, ‘96 and The Rev. Pamela Starbuck ‘99
Judy Stebbins and Robert Stebbins
Mary Stieb-Hales ‘57
The Rev. Dr. Lawrence Stratton Jr. ‘02, ‘09
Andrew Strattton ‘24
The Rev. William Stryker ‘56
The Rev. Robert Stuart ‘62
The Rev. Scott Sullender ‘70, ‘73 and Linda Sullender
Bishop Eugene Taylor Sutton
Peter Suzuki ‘85 and Teri Suzuki
T
Kennie Taylor and Corliss Taylor
The Rev. George Taylor ‘74
Dr. Martin Tel and Sharilyn Tel
Suresh Thomas
Maureene Timken
The Rev. Allen Timm
The Rev. Dr. Nancy Topolewski ‘78
The Rev. Dr. Jacob Tsang ‘82 and Lisa Tsang
The Rev. Dr. Gerald Tyer ‘71, ‘73
U
The Rev. John Underwood ‘73, ‘88 and Judith Underwood
The Rev. Kim Urbanik ‘91
V
The Rev. Rachel Landers ‘09 and Adrian Vaagenes ‘11
James M. Van Hecke Jr.
Ronald VanSchenkhof ‘70
The Rev. Dr. Andrew Vaughn ‘91, ‘96
Sara Vaux
The Rev. Dr. Roger Verse ‘72, ‘79
Meghan Vesel
Tylka-ann Vetula ‘75
The Rev. Dr. Lawrence Vilardo ‘09 and Lorraine Vilardo
George Vorsheim Jr.
Raymond De Vries ‘94 and Patricia De Vries W
The Rev. Dr. Alexander Wales ‘73
The Rev. Dr. David Walker
The Rev. Zach Walker ‘07 and
The Rev. Dr. Meredith Holladay ‘06
David Wall ‘80
Michael Wang and Ann Wang
The Rev. Bertram Watkins Jr. ‘72, ‘73 and Nancy Watkins
Rodney Watkins
The Rev. Stuart Wattles ‘76 and Jennifer Wattles
The Rev. James Weaver ‘53
Nan Weir
The Rev. Dr. David Welton ‘87 and
The Rev. Rosemary Welton ‘01
The Rev. Peter Wernett ‘70
The Rev. Dr. Rebecca Weston ‘08
Delroi Whitaker Jr. ‘00
The Rev. Lerrill White ‘75
The Rev. David Widmer ‘94, ‘00
Amy Wiegert
The Rev. Harold Williams Jr. ‘59
The Rev. Daniel Willson ‘81
The Rev. Amanda Fleishman Wilson ‘02
The Rev. Dr. Stephen Wilson ‘82
The Rev. Zachary Wilson ‘00 and The Rev. Jennifer Rome ‘00
The Rev. Kent Winters-Hazelton ‘84
The Rev. Kenneth Wonderland ‘83 and The Rev. Susan Wonderland ‘83
Dr. Stanley Wood ‘70, ‘89
The Rev. Terry Woodbury ‘72
The Rev. Kyle Woodrow ‘03
Bobby Woodard
Jane C. Wright
Tynesha Wright-Lindo ‘15
The Rev. Dr. John Wurster ‘90
Y
Kyungmoon Yoon
Carl Young ‘96
The Rev. David Young ‘87 and The Rev. Dr. Nancy Young ‘93
The Rev. Michael Young ‘68
Chaplain Jeffrey Young ‘78 and Monika Young
Z
The Rev. Dr. Gary Ziccardi ‘87 and The Rev. Rosalind Ziccardi ‘87
Seminary Friend
(Gifts up to $100)
A
Anonymous (1)
The Rev. Jacob Adams III ‘60
The Rev. Edwin Alspaugh ‘87
Claudia Alvarez
William Amend Jr. and Constance Amend
Paul Mark Andres
The Rev. Eugene Augustine Jr. ‘67
J. Keith Ausbrook
B
Carlton Badger Jr. ‘83
The Rev. Harvey Bartz ‘64 and Janet Bartz
Ravneet Bean and Refried Bean
Cortlandt Bender
The Rev. John Berghorst ‘78
Dr. Elizabeth Biggers ‘66
Marie Blohm ‘88
The Rev. Dennis Booth
The Very Rev. Richard Bower ‘69 and Stephanie Bower
Angelina Bowers
Martie Bradley ‘95
The Rev. Dr. Ryan Brodin ‘00 and Kendra Brodin
Marguerite Bronkema-Allen
The Rev. Dr. Hugh Brown III
Lynn Bucka
The Rev. Dr. David Burke ‘64
Jonathan Burke ‘19 and Genna Burke
Harold Burrows Jr.
CThe Rev. Dr. Phillip Camp ‘96 and Amy Camp
The Rev. Donald Campbell ‘69 and Diane Campbell
Margot Carey and Grace Kelly
The Rev. Jonathan Carlisle ‘77
The Rev. Dr. David Carlson ‘98
Jenny Carson ‘12 and Brian Carson
The Rev. Patsy Chaney
Joao Chaves
Kim Colando
The Rev. Christopher Cottrel ‘84
Lucila Crena
The Rev. Dr. Robert Crilley ‘59 and Virginia Crilley
The Rev. Dr. Ronald Crouch ‘74
DThe Rev. Mark Davies ‘71 and Linda Brondsted
Dr. Maria Davila
Keith Davis
The Rev. William Dodge ‘62 and The Rev. Lois Dodge ‘62
Sister Diane Driscoll ‘79
Dr. Wesley Ellis ‘16 and Amanda Ellis
The Rev. Dr. Milton Eng
The Rev. Dr. David Evans ‘72
F
Kathleen Farewell
The Rev. Dr. Robert Faser ‘79 and Rosalie Faser
The Rev. Robert Felix ‘08
Elizabeth Ferrard
Natalia Fisher
The Rev. Kenneth Forbes ‘84 and Bonnie Forbes
Dr. Mary Ford-Grabowsky ‘81, ‘85
V. Kimble Forrister ‘82
The Rev. Ernest Freund ‘65
Faith Fuller ‘82
G
Abigail Gary
Rachel George
The Rev. Catherin Gumpert ‘00, ‘08
H
The Rev. Dr. Barbara Hager ‘82
The Rev. Dr. Alf Halvorson ‘90, ‘91 and Shari Halvorson
The Rev. Cheryle Hanna ‘01
Irene Harris
The Rev. Elizabeth Hatter ‘99, ‘01
The Rev. Kelsey Hawisher-Faul ‘15 and Mr. Peter Hawisher-Faul ‘16
Tamara Hemingway
The Rev. Elias Henry ‘24
Aaron Henry
Francisco Herrera
Jacqueline Hidalgo
James Hines ‘80
Lieutenant Commander James Hogan ‘20 and Sarah Hogan
William Howell
The Rev. Peter Hoyer ‘74
Bryan Hsu
I
Maritza Irizarry
J
The Rev. Dr. Earl Johnson Jr. ‘67
The Rev. Dr. Thomas Johnston Jr. ‘63 and Anna Johnston
The Rev. Dr. Peter Jones Sr. ‘64
Reggie Joseph
K
Ed Kaiel ‘73
Myungchan Kang
Richard Kauffman ‘81
The Rev. Christina Keller ‘05
The Rev. Joel Kelly ‘07
Robert Kestyus Jr.
The Rev. Dr. Eun Kim ‘93, ‘96
Soo Young Kim
Hyungseok Kim
The Rev. Louise Kingston ‘78
The Rev. John Koch ‘74
Jera Koelling ‘04
Rob Kraft ‘21
The Rev. Bruce Kreutzer ‘82 and Marie Kreutzer
Annah Kuriakose ‘24
L
Kary LaFors and Nanette LaFors
The Rev. Lynn Lampman ‘85
Edwin Landis Jr.
The Rev. Dr. Michael Langford ‘01, ‘10 and
The Rev. Kelly Langford ‘05
Nina Laubach ‘24
The Rev. Dr. Marlin Lavanhar
The Rev. Lucia Lloyd
The Rev. James Long ‘69 and Judith Long
Hugo Lopez
Leni J. Louisse
Charles Luff ‘09
M
The Rev. Shanda Mahurin ‘76 and Randy Mahurin
The Rev. Franklin Mansell ‘97 and The Rev. Deborah Mansell ‘97
The Rev. Dr. Lydia Hernández Marcial
Luke Martin ‘77
The Rev. Joanne Martindale ‘88
The Rev. John Mather ‘63
The Rev. Hugh Matlack ‘81, ‘84
Kevin McClellan
The Rev. Dr. Douglas McClure ‘81
Denise McGough
The Rev. William McLean II ‘07 and Katherine McLean
The Rev. Annie McMillan ‘12
The Rev. Edwin McNamara ‘71
Peter McWilliams ‘69 and Bonnie McWilliams
Dr. Charles Miller Jr. and Charles Gibson ‘95
The Rev. Emily Mitchell ‘13
Dr. Paul Moessner ‘76
The Rev. Dr. David Moyer ‘86 and Ann Moyer
The Rev. Allison Muenzer ‘23
Dr. Rodger Murchison ‘95 and Margaret Murchison
The Rev. Sandra Murphy ‘77
Sharon Murphy
Dorothea Murray
The Rev. Katherine Murray
N
The Rev. Dr. Kang-Yup Na ‘89 and The Rev. Amy Na ‘89
The Rev. Dr. Larry Nallo ‘92 and Kathleen Nallo
Inna Nikolyukin ‘19
Eleanor Nimmer ‘84
O
The Rev. Ernest Olsen
P
The Rev. Sang Park ‘73
Robert Parker Jr. and Elizabeth Taylor-Parker
Joan Petrowski
The Rev. Dr. Peter Powell Jr. ‘79
Titus Presler
Dr. Matthew Puffer ‘09
Clifford Putney
R
The Rev. Paul Rack ‘01 and
The Rev. Susan Rack ‘00, ‘01
The Rev. Alan Ramos ‘90
The Rev. Teddy Reeves ‘13
Donna Garzinsky Reiche ‘87
Christopher Renshaw ‘21
The Rev. William Ripley ‘84
The Rev. Mary Robinson-Mohr ‘84 and Randy Mohr
The Rev. Joanne Rodriguez ‘99, ‘02
Miguel Romero
The Rev. Anne Ross ‘02
The Rev. Suzanne Rudiselle ‘76, ‘87
Cheryl Ryan
S
James Sack and Carol Sack
Timothy Sahr ‘88, ‘89 and Barbara Sahr
Renn Sanderman ‘05
The Rev. Suzanne Schafer-Coates ‘81
Jill Flemington Schutte
The Rev. Theodore Scott ‘65
Dr. Donald Shaffer ‘86
The Rev. Dr. Holton Siegling Jr. ‘98 and Martha Siegling
The Rev. Harry Skilton Jr. ‘72 and Elizabeth Skilton
The Rev. Sherman Skinner ‘63 and Lorrie Skinner
The Rev. Dr. Philip Sommer ‘70
The Rev. Dr. Dave Spahn ‘70
The Rev. Lynwood Spell ‘17 and Assiyah Spell ‘17
The Rev. Dr. Stephen Starzer ‘81
Mary Stevenson ‘15
The Rev. Edwin Sumner Jr. ‘85 and Carol Sumner
The Rev. Bruce Swenson ‘61
T
Robert Parker Jr. and Elizabeth Taylor-Parker
Peter Thambidurai ‘93
Robert Thurston-Lighty and Kathleen Thurston-Lighty
The Rev. Dr. George Toole ‘63, ‘67, ‘82 and Donna Toole
Kenneth Trimble and Mary Trimble
Daphne Turner
U
The Rev. Holly Ulmer ‘88
V
The Rev. Dr. Jeffrey Vamos
Dr. Angel Velez-Oyola
W
The Rev. Catherine Wait ‘03 and Casey Thompson
Mary Wallace ‘85
Chaplain John Weatherly
The Rev. Randy Weber ‘82
The Rev. Walter Wenhold ‘56, ‘66 and Edna Wenhold
Noel Werner and The Rev. Wendi Werner
Bruce Wertheimer ‘69
The Rev. Amy Fowler ‘84
Elizabeth Williamson
Gregory Wortley ‘88 and Amy Wortley
X
Mark Xu
Z
Jacob Zeller ‘20 and Caris Zeller
The Rev. Dr. Catherine Ziel ‘91
CONGREGATIONS, CHURCHES, & CHURCH ORGANIZATIONS
South Korea
Myungsung Presbyterian Church
California
Lafayette
Lafayette-Orinda Presbyterian Church
Los Angeles
Mount Hebron Baptist Church
Menlo Park
Trinity Episcopal Parish in Menlo Park
Newport Beach
St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church
Connecticut
Hamden
New Haven Korean Church
Hartford
Asylum Hill Congregational Church
District of Columbia
Washington
The Georgetown Presbyterian Church
Georgia
Atlanta
First Presbyterian Church of Atlanta
Illinois
Edwardsville
First Presbyterian Church of Edwardsville
Indiana
Jeffersonville
Committee on Theological Education PC(USA)
Presbyterian Foundation
Kansas
Topeka
Westminster Presbyterian Church
Kentucky
Louisville
Presbyterian Mission Agency
Maryland
Potomac
Potomac Presbyterian Church
Massachusetts
West Boxford
Second Congregational Church of Boxford
New Jersey
Bordentown
Jacksonville Presbyterian Church
Every effort has been made to accurately recognize our donors. However, if there is an error, please accept our apologies and let us know.
Fair Lawn
Warren Point Presbyterian Church
Metuchen
First Presbyterian Church of Metuchen
Neptune
The United Methodist Church of Greater
New Jersey
Point Pleasant Beach
Point Pleasant Presbyterian Church
Princeton
Nassau Presbyterian Church
Rumson
St. George’s-by-the-River
Episcopal Church
Trenton
Shiloh Baptist Church
Union Baptist Church
Woodbridge
First Presbyterian Church of Woodbridge
New York
New York
Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church
Trinity Church Wall Street
Queens
Myanmar Baptist Church New York
North Carolina
Charlotte
Covenant Presbyterian Church
Raleigh
North Raleigh Presbyterian Church
Pennsylvania
Camp Hill
Harrisburg Korean Presbyterian Church
Doylestown
St. Paul’s Lutheran Church
Lansdale
Gwynedd Square Presbyterian Church
Philadelphia
Grace Trinity United Church of Christ
The First Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Shadyside Presbyterian Church
Texas
Humble
The Luke Church
Wisconsin
Ripon
Wisconsin Conference of The United Church of Christ, Inc.
FOUNDATIONS & CORPORATIONS
AdventHealth
Alaska Native Heritage Center
American Endowment Foundation
American Online Giving Foundation, Inc.
Austin Community Foundation
AYCO Charitable Foundation
Bank of America Foundation
Barnabas Foundation
Calvin University
CF Foundation, Inc.
Commercial Cleaning Corporation
Community Foundation of Henderson County
Community Foundation of Tampa Bay, Inc.
DAFgiving360
Erwin T. Koch Charitable Trust
EwingCole
Fidelity Charitable
Finger Lakes Area
Community Endowment
Flagler College
Foundation for the Carolinas
Frederick Buechner Center
George Kaiser Family Foundation
Glenmede Donor-Advised Fund
Graduate by Hilton Princeton
Greater Cincinnati Foundation
Henry P. Bridges Ministers’ Trust
Herbert B. Davison Trust
Hyatt Place Princeton
K/T Foundation
Karl Barth-Stiftung
Keimyung University
Kucker Haney Paint Co.
Lilly Endowment, Inc.
Margaret D. Chubet Trust
McCarter & English, LLP
McDonald Agape Foundation
Ministry Architects
National Christian Foundation – Georgia
National Endowment for the Humanities
National Philanthropic Trust
On The Mark Communications, LLC
Panwy Foundation, Inc.
PNC Financial Services Group
Princeton Area Community Foundation, Inc.
Rancho Santa Fe Foundation
Raymond James Charitable
Redding’s Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning
Renaissance Charitable Foundation, Inc.
RootedGood
SEI Giving Fund
St. Shenouda the Archimandrite
Coptic Society
Steelcase
Stevens & Lee
Stout’s Transportation
Sustainable Faith
The Byron Fellowship
Educational Foundation
The Millennium Group
The Spartanburg County Foundation
The UK Online Giving Foundation
Thrivent
United Charitable
University of California Berkeley
Vanguard Charitable
Verizon Foundation
W.K. Kellogg Foundation
Wabash College
William A. and Eugenie H. Sullivan Trust
Wipf & Stock Publishers, Inc.
BEQUESTS
In gratitude for their lives, Princeton Seminary recognizes individuals who have joined the Church Triumphant. The
following gifts have been received, and special funds have been established in their memory. We honor their legacy of faithfulness and excellence as pastors, church leaders, and educators.
Estate of Robert M. Adams
Estate of Pat Aho
Estate of Peggy L. Barton
Estate of Arlo D. Duba
Estate of Robert W. Finertie
Estate of John T. Galloway Jr.
Estate of John Chong-Soung Kim
Estate of Lee and Grace Kliewer
Estate of Jane A. Luchies
Estate of William Lester McClelland
Estate of Jerres Jane P.M. Morrison
Estate of Richard B. Pursel
Estate of Robert Royal
Estate of Gideon W. Schaeffer
Estate of Robert J. Schuster
Estate of Theodore Voelker
GIFTS MADE IN HONOR & IN MEMORY
Princeton Theological Seminary is pleased to recognize those gifts which were given as a tribute to others.
In Honor of:
Class of 1960
Class of 1965
Class of 1970
Class of 1975, 50th Reunion
Class of 1980
Class of 1985
Class of 1990
Class of 1995
Class of 1999
Class of 2000, 25th Reunion
Class of 2005
Class of 2010
Class of 2015
Class of 2020
The Rev. Janice S. Ammon ‘90
Amy Ballard
The Rev. Dr. M. Craig Barnes ‘81 and Dawne Barnes
The Rev. Jon A. Black ‘72
The Rev. Roger Lee Brown
Professor Heath Carter
The Rev. William G. Carter ‘85
Caryl E. Chambers
The Rev. Dr. Andrew Berby Chaney ‘98
Megan Sarah DeWald ‘09
The Rev. George R. Doering Jr. ‘65
The Rev. Dr. Elizabeth G. Edwards ‘62, ‘65, ‘72
Tom Evans
10th Anniversary of the Farminary
The Rev. Dr. Harry Austin Freebairn ‘62, ‘84
Dr. Karlfried Froehlich
The Rev. Dr. Nancy Lammers Gross ‘81, ‘92
Heather Sturt Haaga and Paul Haaga
The Rev. Dr. Charles Bryant Hardwick ‘07, ‘99
The Red. Dr. Thomas Hastings ‘04 and Carol Hastings ‘08
The Rev. Dr. Camille Cook Howe ‘06
IYM and the Forum on Youth Ministry
Cho Ye Ji
Reggie Christy Joseph
Dr. Nicole Cheri Kirk ‘07, ‘12
The Rev. Dr. J. Thomas Kort ‘73, ‘90
Jung Min Kyung
Cheon Kyunghee
Quinn Lockhart and Ryan Martindale-George
The Rev. Dr. A. Roy Medley ‘74 and
The Rev. Dr. Patricia S. Medley ‘76, ‘98
The Rev. Dr. Gordon Stanley Mikoski ‘88, ‘89
The Rev. Dr. James D. Miller ‘77
The Rev. Dr. Jonathan E. Miller ‘93, ‘77
Paul H. Moessner ‘76 and Donna Moessner
The Rev. Jeffrey V. O’Grady ‘88
Professor Dennis Olson
The Rev. Ray Anthony Owens ‘05, ‘98
The Rev. Joicy R. Becker-Richards ‘90
The Rev. Dr. J. J. M. Roberts
The Rev. Dr. Katharine Doob Sakenfeld
The Rev. Robert A. Sams ‘97 and Susan Sams
Adolfo L. Santos
Mashudu Sekowe
The Rev. Dr. Chandra Shekar Soans ‘90, ‘99
The Rev. Roshan Shubhakar Soans ‘16
Dr. Martin Tel
The Rev. Dr. Jonathan Lee Walton ‘02, ‘06
George B. Wirth ‘73
The Rev. Dr. Steven Toshio Yamaguchi ‘88
Peter John Young
Dr. Robert D. Young and Louisa G. Young
Lorelei L. Zupp
In Memory of:
Archibald S. Alexander
Dr. James F. Armstrong ‘54
The Rev. Dr. Richard S. Armstrong ‘58
The Rev. James D. Brassard ‘84
Osmond Philip (Buck) Breland III
William Brower
The Rev. J. Raymond Brubaker ‘60
The Rev. Milton Pierre Burns ‘61
James R. Carey
The Rev. Dr. W. Edmund Carver ‘53
The Rev. Dr. William E. Chapman ‘58, ‘62, ‘69
The Rev. Dr. James H. Chesnutt ‘54
Professor Edgar William Conrad ‘69, ‘74
The Rev. Daniel L. Consla ‘72
The Rev. Dr. David L. Crawford ‘47
The. Rev. Charles Cureton ‘60 and Mary Cureton ‘63, ‘96
Norman J. Deac
The Rev. Dr. Judith Duke Dean ‘84
John R. Donelik and Isabel Hyde Donelik
The Rev. Dr. Arlo D. Duba ‘60, ‘55
The Good work in Erdman Center
The Rev. Paul F. Everett ‘64
The Rev. Augustus Scott Feather III ‘63
Glenn F. Fields ‘70, ‘82
The Rev. Jerry E. Flanigan ‘56
Carol Judy Vollmer Freebairn
The Rev. Dr. Philip Wolcott Furst ‘35
Kenneth Shannon Gallagher
The Rev. Dr. John T.
Galloway Jr. ‘66 and Susan Hall Galloway ‘66
Dr. Freda Ann Gardner
The Rev. Dr. Thomas W. Gillespie ‘54
Jeannine Greenwell, pearl above price
Leticia Aida Guardiola-Saenz
Joanne F. Hackett
The Rev. Dr. Geddes W. Hanson ‘72
The Rev. Charles Grant Harris ‘58
Brenda Hermanson
The Rev. Richard C. Hughes ‘61
Lillie Ford Jackson
Dr. Thomas C. Jackson ‘52
The Rev. Amy Keiter Jelensperger ‘96
Our parents, Walter W. Kort and Pauline Thomas Kort
Mr. H. Robert Lanchester
The Rev. Dr. Sang Hyun Lee
Dr. Martin E. Lehmann ‘48
The Rev. Joseph J. Lemen ‘50
The Rev. Dr. James E. Loder ‘57
Don MacDougall
The Rev. George S. Maxwell ‘29
The Rev. Dr. David B. McDowell ‘60, ‘64
The Rev. Martin L. McKelleb ‘87
The Rev. Dr. Bruce M. Metzger ‘38, ‘39
The Rev. Salvatore Migliore and Mrs. Clara Migliore
Samuel Miller
The Rev. Dr. Parick D. Miller
Mission Department 1953–54
Lucie Moore
James J. Murphy
The Rev. Barbara A. Ndovie ‘84
Dr. Alan Preston Neely
Janice E. Payton
Richard V. Pierard
The Rev. George Pomeroy ‘63
Breland E-J Porter, grandson
The Rev. Richard B. Pusel ‘43 and Ann Pursel
Dr. Halford R. Ryan
Dr. Charles A. Ryerson III
Lamin Sanneh
The Rev. Dr. Jack G. Schutte ‘65
Scott A. Schuller, ‘06
The Rev. James L. Seawood ‘73
The Rev. John S. Shew ‘54
Dr. Vahe H. Simonian ‘53
Dr. Cullen I K Story ‘64
The Rev. Dr. Laird J. Stuart ‘68, ‘81
The Rev. Irene L. Stuart ‘82
The Rev. Dr. Daniel C. Thomas ‘44
Dr. Kenneth R. Timken ‘52
The Rev. Dr. G. Hall Todd ‘38
Kurt K. Ulmer and Edith Ulmer
The Rev. Dr. Ansley G. Van Dyke ‘42, ‘44 and Jane R. Van Dyke
The Rev. Dr. Robert P. Vande Kappelle Sr. ‘77, ‘70
Dr. Kenneth Vaux ‘63
Douglas Wallace Sr.
The Rev. Stanley D. Walters ‘60
The Rev. Dr. David B. Watermulder ’48, ‘45
Dr. David A. Weadon
Beverly Kay Weatherly ‘84
The Rev. Dr. Victor M. Wilson ‘79
The Rev. Gerald F. Witter
Dr. D. Campbell Wyckoff
Post-trip extension to Peloponnese Peninsula available!
ESSENTIAL GREECE BY LAND & SEA
Led by Dr. Jonathan Lee Walton, President, Princeton Theological Seminary Morning biblical devotions as you sail the Aegean Sea on a four-night cruise to Delos-Mykonos-Ephesus-Crete September 22–30, 2026
Witness amazing nighttime views of the Acropolis during a private rooftop welcome reception
Visit four UNESCO World Heritage sites with expert local guides Delight in the antiquities and iconic sites in Athens from climbing the Acropolis to visiting the iconic National Archaeological Museum Cruise for four nights aboard the luxurious Emerald Azzurra Swim in azure waters surrounding the beautiful island of Mykonos Wander the impressive ruins at Knossos in Crete Venture to Turkey to walk the path of the Apostle Paul in Ephesus
Visit: ptsem.edu/expeditions OR scan QR code for more information