LSTC Alumni
Graduates of the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago (LSTC) serve congregations and communities as ordained, rostered and lay leaders. We celebrate your visionary leadership and its impact throughout the world.
Congratulations 2024 DISTINGUISHED Alumni Award Winners!
A celebration of ministry, scholarship, and advocacy of four LSTC alumni was held on Tuesday, April 16th, 2024.
The 2024 Alumni Award winners represent the pinnacle of achievement and service within their respective fields. They embody the values of excellence, leadership and compassion.
You can view photos of the award ceremony here!
Meet the Alumni Board
Pastor Jesús Escamilla, 2011 LSPS TEEM graduate
Pastor, Iglesia Luterana San Gabriel, Alvarado, TX
Why did you choose to attend the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago?
I attended LSPS in Austin Texas trough the TEEM program.
How have you built your career after graduation?
I was called in 2011 to serve San Gabriel Lutheran Church in Alvarado Texas, I was there before as a synodical authorized leader serving the community as I attended LSPS.
Why did you choose to get involved with the LSTC Alumni Board?
I was asked and I felt that my view having been in the TEEM program could be of great help to the work of the seminary and its effectiveness.
What Board initiatives are you looking forward to most in the coming year(s)?
I am most looking forward to outreach from potential students.
What advice do you have for students interested in pursuing a career in ministry?
I would advise students to look deep inside of themselves to see if its just a new career they want or is a true calling from GOD to serve.
Rev. Dr. William Edward Flippin, Jr., ThM, 2005
Interim Pastor of Lutheran Church of the Redeemer, Macon, GA
Why did you choose to attend the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago?
Was accepted in the PhD program in 2003 and moved here three weeks after marriage (just celebrated 20 years) The reason I chose was the opportunity to work with church historians such as Dr. Kurt Hendel and Dr. Cynthia Jurrison. Also, the vibrant neighborhood of Hyde Park which is still one of my favorites and the Chicago ecumenical consortium.
Who were the faculty or staff who inspired you during your time at LSTC?
First of all, Ms. Irene Connor, Elmer Henderson, Kimberly Ferguson, and Mitch McCullough. The staff would be Dr. Kurt Hendel, my advisor; Dr. Richard Perry a mentor and who later became faculty but is a good friend Dr. Peter Vetha.
How have you built your career after graduation?
I have built it more as an ecumenist and social activist. The love of Church History/Reformation studies is still there but work more on shaping the questions of Christendom as it relates to advocacy and social change. I served on the ELCA Church Council from 2013-2019; the Lutheran World Federation from 2017-present; and will be reelected in 2023 to another term in Krakaw, Poland. I also served as Co-Chair of Advocacy and Public Voice for the Lutheran World Federation 2017-present and am now a member of the ELCA Foundation Board of Trustees.
In addition to this, I have pastored ELCA churches in Columbus, Georgia 2008-13, Atlanta, Georgia 2013-19; worked as the Assistant to the Bishop, Director of Evangelical Mission, Southeastern Pennsylvania Synod from 2019-21 and am presently the Interim Pastor of Lutheran Church of the Redeemer, Macon from June, 2022 to present.
Why did you choose to get involved with the LSTC Alumni Board?
I had a desire to do more formally for such a school that invested their precious resources to me and have treated my wife and I like family for two decades. Seven years ago, I was asked by another good friend Reverend Jennifer Thomas, LSTC alumnus if I would consider serving on the Alumni Board and with enthusiasm said yes.
What Board initiatives are you looking forward to most in the coming year(s)?
Currently, I serve on the Social Justice Committee chaired by Melissa James. The initiatives that I look forward to engaging in following my career trajectory and passions. How do we become a Public Church one that advocates to the world not necessarily with bull horns but contextual theologians of praxis in our unique communities. Also, since our buildings are now with the Catholic Theological Union would like to see how the Catholic and Lutheran dialogue can continue to manifest as a center of the hopes and aspirations of Vatican II and beyond.
What advice do you have for students interested in pursuing a career in ministry?
Ministry has changed considerably even in my two decades of formal ministry. The traditional view was to go to Seminary get a Parish and church and by discernment move in the ecclesiastical structure as opportunities arise. However, the state of the church and Vitality in mainstream churches are in a crisis moment in need of contextual and specialized leaders that have a genuine call to changing a world that has become more divided each day.
The task is so great that it will require more than strategy but a new awakening and impetus of the Holy Spirit to be the main agent of vitality guiding all of our programs and emphasis.
Being a shepherd is unnatural to what the Bible speaks because a shepherd in the Bible is there from the moment of birth and delivers the sheep, nurturing it from the attacks of wolves. We as Pastors and practitioners acquire the position of Pastors when we are given the red stole by our Bishop but that is in position only. To be productive we must get permission only given by optimum Pastoral care, funerals, and neutered in prophetic praxis. Productivity takes years and leads to frustration, that’s why it’s crucial that we are called to such a time as this.
If you are call or discerning ministry, I am a living witness that LSTC is a great place to learn in one of the best cities in the world full of ecumenical and enriching possibilities that will last a lifetime.
Dr. Melissa James, Deacon, MA 2004
UUA Congregational Life Field Staff, La Mesa, CA
Why did you choose to attend the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago?
When looking at seminaries, I was looking for a place where I could deepen my commitment to and knowledge of the intersection between faith, values, and social justice. As soon as I came to campus and saw the courses offered, the flyers [advertising] student activities, and talked to students involved directly in worker justice movements, I knew LSTC was the right place to pursue my call.
Who were the faculty or staff who inspired you during your time at LSTC?
Among many inspiring faculty, one who made a significant impact on my trajectory during and beyond seminary was Dr. Richard Perry. Dr. Perry was more than my ethics professor. He was an advocate of faith in the public sphere and the reason I was interested in and able to attend community organizing training.
How have you built your career after graduation?
After LSTC I served my first call at Wartburg College as the Associate for Discernment and Mentoring. This was an incredible opportunity to work with students, think creatively about what interfaith engagement could be, and further discern my call to teaching. I then moved to California to earn my PhD in Ethics and Social theory. I worked many jobs as I made my way through graduate school including serving at the Unitarian Universalist congregation in Oakland. I graduated with my PhD in 2012 and spent several years doing ministry in nontraditional settings such as [working as an adjunct professor] at universities, running farm education programs, and teaching afterschool science classes.
I found my way more back into more formal ministry when I took a position of Director of Lifespan and Family Ministry at a UU church in San Diego and serving part time in campus ministry at the Agape House at San Diego State University. From there I began teaching Gender Studies and Sociology at the University of San Diego and serving full-time with the Unitarian Universalist Association as Pacific Western Region Congregational Life Field Staff. My current ministry allows me and my team to provide support, training, and pastoral care to nearly 200 Unitarian Universalist congregations in the Western half of the United States. I continue to be connected to the Lutheran clergy and my Synod and often teach or provide supply preaching to stay connected to and serve the Lutheran Church.
Why did you choose to get involved with the LSTC Alumni Board?
I chose to get involved with the LSTC Alumni Board because I am adamant about having the Word and Service roster at every table–especially ones that shape the formation and education of ministers and theologically trained lay leaders.
What Board initiatives are you looking forward to most in the coming year(s)?
I am excited about the work we are doing to live into a structure that is intentionally based in shared ministry and anti-White Supremacy Culture. Engaging with the wider community, I’m particularly excited about our partnership with those planning the Seminex Reunion/Homecoming in spring 2024.
What advice do you have for students interested in pursuing a career in ministry?
Keep your mind and heart open to what ministry is and includes. We live in liminal times, where the needs of our communities, within and outside church walls, are continuously changing. Use your time in seminary to fill your toolbox with as varied of set of tools as you can yet know it can never be everything you need for ministry. Learn to deeply listen to, connect, and love people and your ministry will be an invaluable part of our shared call to create Beloved Community.
Rev. Liz Christensen Kocher, MDiv 2017
Campus Pastor, Lutheran Center at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Campus, Lincoln, NE
Why did you choose to attend the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago?
I attended LSTC because of the innovative theological education, the top-notch faculty, and the setting in Chicago. I knew this school would challenge me to be a stronger, more open-minded leader.
Who were the faculty or staff who inspired you during your time at LSTC?
I was most inspired by Rev. Dr. Gordon Straw, and the way he combined academic excellence with a deeply grounded and personal theological experience with the divine in a way that broadened my understanding of the church and world. My favorite class with him was “Theology of Vine Deloria Jr. and Native Christian Thought,” and I regularly draw on experiences from this class in my everyday ministry.
How have you built your career after graduation?
I have been ordained as a pastor since 2017 and am currently serving as Campus Pastor at the Lutheran Center on the University of Nebraska-Lincoln campus.
Why did you choose to get involved with the LSTC Alumni Board?
I am involved in the LSTC alumni board because LSTC is a broad-reaching institution, and many alumni and friends of the community are across the country and world. Being part of the board means helping build and foster these connections.
What Board initiatives are you looking forward to most in the coming year(s)?
I am most looking forward to our Fall Alumni Gathering and beginning to introduce the broader community to the new building space.
What advice do you have for students interested in pursuing a career in ministry?
Seminary is when we practice experiencing theological understandings beyond our own. Understand this practice as preparation to continue this experience after graduation, and into professional ministry. We are always learners.
The Rev. Dr. Carrie Lewis La Plante, MDiv 2004; DMIN 2015
Senior Pastor, Evangelical Lutheran Church, Eldridge, IA
Why did you choose to attend the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago?
Honestly, the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago was the only seminary that I ever thought about attending. While I felt a call leave my first career as an actuary to attend seminary, I was not yet convinced what this was a fit for me or that being a pastor was really what God was calling me to do. I had friends in the Chicago area, as that was where I was living at the time, and I could easily travel home to my parents’ in Nebraska, so I knew that I would have support as I discerned what was next if I remained in Chicago.
Once I was a student, it was clear to me that LSTC was the right seminary for me. The ability to study not only at LSTC but at the other ACTS seminaries helped to broaden my exposure to other Christian traditions. The social justice emphasis within the community helped me to hone some of my skills in standing up for others in helpful ways. The community that was built among students and faculty was also an important part of what made LSTC the place where I could best be formed to serve as a pastor in this ever-changing world.
Who were the faculty or staff who inspired you during your time at LSTC?
There are so many faculty who inspired me during my time at LSTC, but these are four who stand out to me. Craig Satterlee was my advisor, and we began at LSTC together in the fall of 2000. He was also my advisor for my DMin program. Craig is an inspiring preacher, and his passion for inclusion of people of all abilities has helped me to look at the world and the spaces around me in a different way. Preaching was the primary reason that I did not want to go to seminary, and Craig helped me to find the importance of and the joy in proclaiming Jesus in the world. He was also intent on inviting me to return to LSTC for the DMin program, which was the primary reason I sought out that degree.
Audrey West, who also began at LSTC in 2000, made learning Greek fun, and she helped me to come to appreciate Paul’s letters. Exegesis was a challenge for me at first, and Audrey helped me to find my process for digging into the text. She is also a compassionate soul who helped me in the face of many personal struggles that I faced during my seminary career.
Kadi Billman not only taught pastoral care classes, but she exemplified pastoral care in everything she did. I learned as much from the way that she taught and the way that she lived her life among us as I did from the classwork that I did for her classes. I am grateful that we have continued to stay connected over all of these years, and she continues to inspire me in all that she is doing in her retirement.
Finally, Kurt Hendel was an amazing church history professor. Anyone who knows me, knows that history is not a subject in which I excel, nor a topic I particularly care for. However, Kurt helped me to make connections between the church of the past and the church of the present, as well as teaching me the importance of knowing the history in order to help the church move forward into the future. I especially enjoyed the Footsteps of Luther trip that I made with Kurt in the fall of 2021, especially when the tenor of trip changed when we found ourselves in Germany as the terrorist attacks were happening in America on September 11. We have remained connected all these years, and I am honored to co-chairing the current Capital Campaign with Kurt.
How have you built your career after graduation?
My first call was to serve as a solo pastor at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Newton, Iowa. I served that small congregation from January 2005 through November of 2007. I was then called to serve as Associate Pastor for Youth and Family Ministry at Redeemer Lutheran Church in Indianola, Iowa. I served this congregation from November 2007 to June 2016 during which I created a Confirmation program that invited the youth to not only learn theology and Bible, but also cooking, woodworking, gardening, art, and other skills that were taught as robustly in school using experts in these fields who were members of the congregation. In July of 2017, I began serving as the Senior Pastor at Faith Evangelical Lutheran Church in Eldridge, Iowa, where I continue to serve.
Throughout my career, I have found ways to serve the larger church. I believe that it is important to serve the community in which I am serving as a pastor, to encourage cooperation among the various religious communities, and to serve the ELCA in ways that are beyond the congregation. I currently serve on both the Alumni Board (since 2021) and the Foundation Board of Trustees (since 2023) for LSTC, and I am serving as a co-chair for the current Capital Campaign for LSTC. I have been serving on the Board of Directors of Lutheran Lakeside Camp in Spirit Lake, Iowa, since 2017, serving as Treasurer from 2017 to 2021, and serving as Vice President for the 2023-2024 year. I am currently the President of the North Scott Clergy Group, the ecumenical ministerial association in our area, and I served as President of the Indianola Ministerial Association in 2013 and 2014. I served on the Board of Directors of the Indianola Hope Foundation from 2014 to 2016. I served on the Candidacy Committee of the Southeastern Iowa Synod from 2009 to 2019. I was also a voting member to the 2011 and 2022 Churchwide Assemblies.
I also continue to learn and grow in my ministry as the church and the world are always changing. Because ministry to and with youth and young adults has been centered in so much of my ministry, I have done much training on the Growing Young initiative through the Fuller Youth Institute, and I am helping to lead conversations within and among congregations in the Southeastern Iowa Synod who are seeking to grow young. I have also been trained as a Level 1 Coach through the ELCA Coaching Network, and I am helping to shape a coaching ministry in the Southeastern Iowa Synod as well.
Why did you choose to get involved with the LSTC Alumni Board?
My time at LSTC was a time of significant growth as much of my life and ministry was shaped there. I also believe that LSTC has a unique voice among the seminaries in the ELCA, and I feel that it is important for that voice to continue to speak loudly and clearly into both the church and the world. As a member of the LSTC Alumni Board, I am hopeful that the work that I will do with my colleagues will help to connect LSTC alumni in significant ways as we seek to serve the larger church together. In these days when so much is changing in the church and the world, I think it is important for alumni to support the seminary that helped to shape them so that others can be shaped in similar ways into the future.
What Board initiatives are you looking forward to most in the coming year(s)?
I am excited about the ways in which we are seeking to redefine the role of the Alumni Board in order to take on a more advisory role to the seminary. I am also excited about the ways in which we are hoping to create opportunities for alumni to rebuild and build new relationships with the seminary through events that will draw alumni and others back to the seminary, especially as we move into a new space and seek to make it our own for the future that lies ahead.
What advice do you have for students interested in pursuing a career in ministry?
One piece of advice that I have for students pursuing a career in ministry is that flexibility is of utmost importance. There has rarely been a day in my ministry that has played out the way that I had planned it, and the need to pivot is a regular reality. Also, being self-differentiated and self-aware is important both to protect you in the face of challenge and to help you to be the leader that is needed both in the joys and challenges of ministry. Finally, no matter what is going on around you, continue to remain centered in Christ. Jesus is the only savior we and the members of our congregations have, and keeping that promise at the center of everything, while not always easy, is the one truth that will always hold true.
Rev. Charles Newman, MDiv 2004
Tempe, AZ
Why did you choose to attend the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago?
I wanted a diverse Lutheran theological education rooted in the city with access to the ACTS [consortium] for a rich ecumenical theological experience.
Who were the faculty or staff who inspired you during your time at LSTC?
Dr. Richard Perry, Dr. James Echols, Dr. Pete Pero, Dr. Audrey West, Dr. Katie Billman, Dr. Morris Niedenthal
How have you built your career after graduation?
[I’ve] served as pastor for mission development, redevelopment, Assistant to the Bishop and Senior Pastor.
Why did you choose to get involved with the LSTC Alumni Board?
I was asked to serve. I wanted to contribute back to the seminary who provided so much for me in my time of formation and learning.
What advice do you have for students interested in pursuing a career in ministry?
Make sure God is calling you and it’s not something you merely think [is] a good idea.
Pastor Jason WaHLstrom, MDiv, 2001
Pastor, Holy Nativity Lutheran Church, New Hope, MN
Why did you choose to attend the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago?
When I was looking for a seminary, I was finishing my undergraduate degree at the University of Chicago (in political science). LSTC was, of course, the most convenient ELCA seminary for me. But more important than that, I found that LSTC was a seminary with a deep sense of community. Living together in community was what I was looking for, and LSTC offered that.
Who were the faculty or staff who inspired you during your time at LSTC?
Ralph Klein and Ed Krentz were particular inspirations. Their stories of Seminex as well as their biblical knowledge were phenomenal.
How have you built your career after graduation?
I have served as a parish pastor since my graduation in 2001. I am in my 16th year at Holy Nativity Lutheran Church in New Hope, MN.
Why did you choose to get involved with the LSTC Alumni Board?
LSTC was essential to my formation as a pastor and a leader. I hope that it can be the same for current and future students.
What Board initiatives are you looking forward to most in the coming year(s)?
I am excited about the Homecoming event in spring, 2024. We are planning a conference to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Concordia Seminary walkout as well as thinking about how that event impacted LSTC and what it means for our future.
What advice do you have for students interested in pursuing a career in ministry?
Commit yourself to a community, always seek collegiality, and make sure you have a solid foundation in theology and biblical knowledge.
Alumni Stories
Alumni Information and Resources
Have a question?
Contact Jessica Houston, Alumni and Congregational Engagement Officer phone: 773.256.0697; email: jhouston@lstc.edu or a member of the Advancement team.