Biography
Early life
Letty Mandeville Russell was born in Westfield, New Jersey on September 20, 1929. She was the second of three daughters born to Miriam (née Towl) and Ricketson B. Russell. Her mother gave up a professional career as a bacteriologist to care for her children; before her children were born, she worked on a floating hospital in New York duringParish Ministry, Harvard Divinity School and Ordination
In 1955, Russell was admitted to Harvard Divinity School after appealing their male-only admission policy. She was one of eight women admitted to the school that year, in a reversal of long-standing opposition to women's inclusion in the ministry preparatory program. Russell graduated summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Sacred Theology (S.T.B.) in 1958. In 1958, Russell was the first women ordained in her presbytery in the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Only three years prior, the denomination had voted in their General Assembly to allow the ordination of women to the Word and Sacrament. Following her ordination, Russell returned to the East Harlem Protestant Parish (EHPP) in 1958, to serve as pastor at Mount Morris-Ascension Church, where she served for the next ten years. Russell's ministry focused on leadership development with the mostly Black and Hispanic members of the congregation to become leaders in the parish and the community. Her experiences in Harlem contributed to her personal and professional commitments to marginalized communities.Academic Career and Yale Divinity School
Returning to graduate school, Russell earned a Master of Sacred Theology (S.T.M.) from Union Theological Seminary in New York in Christian education and theology in 1967. Two years later, Russell completed her Doctor of Theology (Th.D.) in mission theology and ecumenics from Union. In the fall of 1969, Russell began her academic career as assistant professor of Religious Studies at Manhattan College, Bronx, New York where she taught Protestant theology. She began teaching atEcumenism
Russell was a leader in the ecumenical movement and she served on several units of the World Council of Churches, including the Faith and Order Commission from 1975 to 1983 and was one of the drafters of the document "Giving Account of the Hope Together" (Bangalore, India, 1978). She also worked with theDeath
Russell died of cancer on July 12, 2007, in her home in Guilford, CT. She was survived by her spouse, Shannon Clarkson, an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ.Contribution to the field
Theology
Ecclesiology
In an introduction to a ''Feminist Pedagogy
At Yale Divinity School, Russell's influence extended far beyond the confines of classrooms on Sterling Divinity Quadrangle. She was the inspiration behind creation of the school's international travel seminar program—now known as "The Letty Russell Travel Seminar"— under which Yale Divinity School students have traveled to countries around the globe for direct encounters with the realities of religion on the world stage, frequently in impoverished countries. Yale Divinity School Dean Harold Attridge said that, through the travel seminar, Russell's “legacy of commitment to a universal vision of engaged theology will continue as a vital part of Yale Divinity School.” Farley said about Russell, "She leaves a legacy of wisdom, integrity, and indomitable hope. Voices will rise from women and men throughout the world to bear witness to her gifts to them, not the least of which is her gift of faithful friendship... There is perhaps no other feminist theologian who has been more dedicated to ecumenical, interfaith, and international theological dialogue. Hers has been the influence not of imposition but of partnership. Yet her work has challenged everyone, not only because of its substance but because of her own commitment to making the world both more just and more hospitable."International Feminist Scholarship
Throughout her career, Russell developed multiple initiatives to facilitate dialogue among feminist scholars, particularly scholars from traditionally under-represented communities. She was on the World Council of Churches steering group that developed the program ''Being Church: Women's Voices and Visions,'' which held a series of regional discussions on feminist ecclesiology between 2000 and 2005. She was instrumental in establishing the Doctor of Ministries in Feminist Theologies Programme, which is a joint theological education programme between the World Council of Churches and San Francisco Theological Seminary, USA. Russell described the goal of this program as empowering women "from countries of the South as they become leaders in their communities and therefore subjects of their own theology and history." A global advocate for women, Russell was a member of the Yale Divinity School Women's Initiative on Gender, Faith, and Responses to HIV/AIDS in Africa and was co-coordinator of the International Feminist Doctor of Ministry Program at San Francisco Theological Seminary. M. Shawn Copeland, an American scholar and associate professor of systematic theology at Boston College, said, "Letty Russell has been the towering feminist theologian of her generation. She devoted her theological career to making it possible for women in various parts of the world to do theology, to dialogue and to collaborate with one another, and with all women and men of good will in mending creation. The seeds she has sown have flowered and will bear fruit for years to come.”The Letty Russell and Shannon Clarkson '78 M.Div. Endowed Divinity Scholarship Fund
In March 2022, Yale Divinity School announced the establishment of The Letty Russell and Shannon Clarkson '78 M.Div. Endowed Divinity Scholarship Fund by donor Wilma Reichard. The scholarship constitutes "an expression of eichard'sgratitude for the contributions of Letty Russell, Professor of Liberation Theology at YDS, and her wife, Shannon Clarkson." Reflecting on the scholarship, Clarkson shared, "“Letty would be thrilled to know that funds were being raised for student scholarships. When she was in seminary at Harvard, she had a small apartment with two other friends. She had a board she used in the bathtub for her typewriter as they had so little space.”Awards
* Emmavail Luce Severinghaus Award, Wellesley College, 1986 (for Work in Religion) * Rabbi Martin Katzenstein Award, Harvard Divinity School, 1998 (distinguished alumna award) * Woman of Faith Award, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), 1999' * Unitas Distinguished Alumnae, Union Theological Seminary (New York City), 1999Works
* ''Human Liberation in a Feminist Perspective - A Theology'' (1974) * ''The Liberating Word: A Guide to Nonsexist Interpretation of the Bible'' (1977) * ''The Future of Partnership'' (1979) * ''Growth in Partnership'' (1981) * ''Becoming Human'' (1982) * ''Changing Contexts of Our Faith'' (1985) * ''Feminist Interpretation of the Bible'' (1985) * ''Household of Freedom: Authority in Feminist Theology'' (1987) * ''Inheriting Our Mothers' Gardens: Feminist Theology in Third World Perspective'' (1988) * ''The Church with AIDS: Renewal in the Midst of Crisis'' (1990) * ''Church in the Round: Feminist Interpretation of the Church'' (1993) * ''Dictionary of Feminist Theologies'' (1996) * ''Hagar, Sarah and Their Children: Jewish, Christian and Muslim Perspectives'' (2006) * ''Just Hospitality: God's Welcome in a World of Difference'' (2009)References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Russell, Letty M. 1929 births 2007 deaths 20th-century American Presbyterian ministers 20th-century Calvinist and Reformed ministers 20th-century Calvinist and Reformed theologians American Calvinist and Reformed theologians American feminists Christian feminist theologians Harvard Divinity School alumni People from Westfield, New Jersey Presbyterian Church (USA) teaching elders Union Theological Seminary alumni Wellesley College alumni Women Christian theologians Yale Divinity School faculty