The Chaplain's Office is located in Johnson Hall, Room 110. The office is open from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The Rev. Dr. Lloyd Steffen, University Chaplain, is an ordained Protestant minister and a religion scholar who teaches in the Department of Religion Studies. Mrs. Sally Schray is the Chaplain's Office Secretary and Wedding Coordinator. Appointments with the Chaplain may be scheduled by calling x83877.
The University Chaplain:
The University Chaplain provides a ministry of service and hospitality to the religiously diverse community at Lehigh University. The Chaplain responds to a variety of needs that arise in the university, working with students, faculty and staff to build up a positive sense of community. The Chaplain provides a community resource for raising values issues and addressing moral concerns in a variety of forums, both on and off campus; and the Chaplain's Office provides a focal point for religious activities on campus.
The University Chaplain supports the mission of the modern university and endorses a model of ministry that emphasizes teaching, that encourages respectful engagement between religious traditions, that seeks to help persons in the university extend hospitality to the stranger, and that urges people to develop critical social awareness as a way to express spiritual concern.
The University Chaplain participates in both the academic and co-curricular life of the University, being responsible for worship, programming, and regular teaching. By encouraging and promoting an atmosphere where moral and spiritual issues can be acknowledged as central to a meaningful, balanced, and well-rounded education, the University Chaplain seeks to enhance the educational experience of those working and studying at Lehigh. The mission of the Chaplain's Office is organized around four distinct functions:
1. Organization
The Chaplain's Office seeks to support activities and initiate programs that provide occasions for reflecting on personal and community values while challenging individuals to grow and mature as moral and spiritual persons. To that end, the Office seeks through its support of religious groups to make opportunities for meaningful religious community available to students on campus. In addition, the Chaplain's Office assists persons seeking access to opportunities for involvement in community service, while supporting programs that are designed to broaden students' cultural horizons. Among programs and activities sponsored by the Chaplain's Office are the following:
University Chapel Services. Chapel services conducted by the University Chaplain are broadly-based ecumenical Christian services open to the entire University Community. The Chaplain leads from 30 to 45 worship services a year, including special services of University interest, such as Freshman Parents Weekend, Upperclass Parents Weekend, Christmas Vespers, and Baccalaureate. Special services are organized around particular issues (e.g., AIDS vigil, "Take Back the Night"); and the Chaplain participates in ecumenical, interreligious and community worship throughout the academic years. Religious groups on campus occasionally hold worship services in Packer Memorial Church with assistance from the Chaplain's Office. All services held in Packer Memorial Church are advertised in The Brown and White.
The Chaplain's Office may be contacted for information about worship
services in the area and possible rides from campus. The Office also has
information about religious organizations on campus students might be interested
in joining, and persons to contact.
3. Nurture
The University Chaplain is available to students--and others in the University community--for conversation and personal counseling, or to help make a referral for counseling. All counseling is confidential.
Ecumenical Charities. The Chaplain's Office supervises a small fund to help students with emergency financial needs. This charity is supported by voluntary contributions, including offerings taken at the Parents Weekend services. For more information, contact the Chaplain's Office.
4. Teaching
The history of Lehigh's Chaplaincy has been marked by an institutional commitment to fostering a visible and active teaching ministry. Rev. Dr. Lloyd Steffen has maintained this distinctive emphasis by his faculty appointment to the Religious Studies Department, where he teaches two course a year and pursues an active scholarly career, particularly in the area of ethics. He is the author of six booksd, including Life/Choice: The Theory of Just Abortion, published in 1994; Abortion: A Reader, published in 1996; the award winning Executing Justice: The Moral Meaning of the Death Penalty, published in 1999, and the 2003 publication, The Demonic Turn: The Power of Religion to Inspire and Restrain Violence. His most recent book is Holy War, Just War: Exploring the Moral Meaning of Religous Violence. Dr. Steffen is a frequent visitor to classes on campus, a speaker in various academic, public and church settings; wrote a "Spiritual Journeys" column for the Express-Times for many years, and is currently a "Faith and Values" columnist for the Morning Call.
Document updated August 2007.
Address questions to sas2@lehigh.edu or incha@lehigh.edu