Lutheran
Heritage
Many private colleges identify themselves as church-affiliated or
church-related, but the extent and meaning of affiliation or relatedness
varies greatly among institutions. The following statements seek to
explain how Gustavus Adolphus College interprets and exemplifies its
Lutheran tradition, church-relatedness, and values.
Gustavus Adolphus College affirms its church-related identity and
Swedish background not merely because that is its heritage - though its
heritage is important - but because it finds in the Lutheran tradition
strong support for the liberal arts and the kind of college it aspires
to be.
The Lutheran tradition
- Insists upon freedom of inquiry and criticism in the pursuit of
knowledge and truth;
- Values intellectual rigor and cautions against both premature
judgments and overreaching conclusions;
- Prefers paradoxes to dogmatism or ideological
"certainties";
- Supports interfaith understanding and welcomes those of other
denominations and religions as partners in the search for wisdom;
- Views justice informed by compassion as the goal of all political
and social structures;
- Encourages a sense of vocation- discerning one’s
responsibility to benefit the larger community in every area of
one’s life;
- Seeks to understand the nature and vital importance of community
community that is constituted by quality relationships with each other,
with the natural world, and with God;
- Supports music and the arts as integral to what it means to be
human;
- Regards the purpose of education to be human freedom: freedom from
ignorance, prejudice, and coercion, and freedom for service and
leadership within the larger community;
- Takes human limitations seriously and therefore regards a
deliberative community and ongoing dialog as essential for
education;
Gustavus Adolphus College
- Is Lutheran, not sectarian;it favors the Lutheran tradition and
Lutheran values, including religious services, but does not seek
religious uniformity (all members of the campus community are invited
to daily chapel and other religious observances, but participation is
voluntary);
- Has as its goal combining a mature understanding of faith with
intellectual rigor to the benefit of society, believing faith and
education inform each other;
- Purposely explores moral development;
- Honors individuals, but believes that individuals find fulfillment
in community;
- Values diversity and welcomes students, faculty, staff, and
administrators of other faiths or no religious tradition, yet expects
all faculty, staff and administrators to support the mission of the
college;
- Appreciates humor, including directing some of that humor toward
itself.