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绿茶直播

Support the University that Supported Her Daughter

Donor Betty Shaw with her daughter and son-in-law receiving a water droplet for her newly established endowed scholarship at Augsburg.
Betty Shaw, with her daughter and son-in-law, receiving a water droplet for her newly established endowed scholarship at Augsburg.

Augsburg is proud to announce a new endowed scholarship has been set up by Auggie friend Betty Shaw, in honor of her daughter: The Laura Shaw-Wright Scholarship for Students with Dyslexia and Reading Disabilities

Betty Shaw and her late husband, Earl, had four daughters. Their daughter, Laura (Shaw) Wright, attended Augsburg in the early 90鈥檚, graduating with honors in 1996 with a B.A. in Studio Art, and a B.S. in Social Work.聽

Laura has lived with severe dyslexia her entire life. She credits the supportive, affirming, and encouraging faculty, staff, and learning environment that she experienced at Augsburg, along with the support services provided by the CLASS office, as being integral to her positive, successful college education and experience.

It is for this reason that Bettywith the encouragement and support of Laura and her husband Alfonzo 鈥淎l鈥 Wright 鈥97would like to establish The Laura Shaw-Wright Scholarship for Students with Dyslexia and Reading Disabilities.聽The goal of this endowed scholarship will be to help provide access to an Augsburg education for students who may be challenged with dyslexia or other reading disabilities. The scholarship will be awarded with preference given to those students with dyslexia who utilize the CLASS office to address the challenges that their reading disability may otherwise impose on their ability to successfully learn and achieve success in their academic endeavors.

Thanks to the supportive environment she found at Augsburg, Laura went on to a successful career teaching art in the Burnsville Public School District and then South Washington County in Woodbury. Laura and Al met at Augsburg their freshman year and are now married and have two daughters, Lilly and Stella.

Betty, Laura, and Al were presented with a Water Droplet in late October as a thank you establishing a new endowed scholarship. Augsburg is sharing these original Water Drop sculptures with the first 150 benefactors who choose to invest in an endowed scholarship, whether that investment is in a new endowed scholarship or a gift towards an established endowed scholarship.

Betty finds great joy in what she calls 鈥減aying it forward.”

鈥淚t makes me somewhat uncomfortable when people thank me for making a gift or supporting a cause,鈥 says Betty. 鈥淚 believe it鈥檚 a privilege to join in the work of a place like Augsburg, and it brings me great joy to know that I can help make it possible for future students to have the kind of education that Laura and Al had here at Augsburg. I truly believe that it is in giving that you receive…I have experienced that my whole life!鈥

Supporting Global Education

Lee and John Roper-Batker
Lee ’88 and John Roper-Batker

Lee 鈥88 and John planned early on in their lives to give back to a program that affected them so dramatically: Augsburg鈥檚 Center for Global Education and Experience (CGEE).

鈥淚t鈥檚 where we met and fell in love! John was a student at Pacific Lutheran and I was at Augsburg,鈥 says Lee. “Our experiences in the program allowed us to recognize our shared values and commitment to equity, while enjoying life.”

Lee and John made lifelong friends through their CGEE trip to Central America, people who are still their good friends today. Their experience had a major impact on both of their careers. Before the trip, John planned on getting his PhD in plant ecology and doing research. However, he was so drawn to what he learned in Central America that he decided to become a teacher instead.

鈥淪tudying Freire and seeing the impact of liberating education in Mexico and Nicaragua opened my eyes to what education can bring about in a person鈥檚 life. CGEE allowed me to see teaching as an impactful, inspiring career,鈥 says John.

For Lee, the experience reinforced everything she was already doing.

鈥淚 was committed to advance gender and racial equity and justice. CGEE helped me realize the importance of listening to communities and centering their wisdom as the foundation of change. I also witnessed the courage to act. I have applied these principles throughout my career,鈥 says Lee.

CGEE also impacted how Lee and John would raise their daughter.

鈥淲e have a family mission statement! It鈥檚 written on a cocktail napkin somewhere鈥 but basically it鈥檚: create a family that is supportive and provides agency, love, kindness, joy, and growth as we move through the world and do our part to create change,鈥 says Lee.

Lee and John enrolled their daughter in a global exchange program in Guatemala when she was in high school, where she helped with the local community and learned Spanish. Their daughter, Astia, had such a good experience that she went on to do a semester in Ecuador during college. Both of these experiences impacted her life and career in much the same way as her parents. Lee and John are proud that today Astia provides bilingual medical care as a doctor.

鈥淢y parents raised me with the practice of tithing. I think that鈥檚 part of the reason I have a very comfortable relationship with using money as a resource for change. Philanthropy is just tithing on a macro level,鈥 says Lee.

Financially, Lee and John barely made their trip to Central America work. Lee was working full time and going to school full time. The reason they are giving back to Augsburg鈥檚 CGEE program today is to make the same experience available to students who might not otherwise be able to go.聽

鈥淭here are scholarships and grants that help with tuition, but things like living expenses, incidental money, airline tickets, and lost income from not working are generally not covered and can present a big barrier. We鈥檙e delighted to make this gift in the hope that it will help remove barriers. And we hope others will join us in supporting CGEE,鈥 says Lee.

The Roper-Batker family wants to use their resources to create more equitable outcomes in this world.聽

鈥淭o me, the question is how do you align your values with your philanthropy. It鈥檚 important to John and me that our legacy changes systems in order to multiply opportunities for many people; our wealth is not for family inheritance. It feels great to know that we will have a small part in creating a more level playing field so that any student can enjoy the transformative experience of immersion study abroad.”

If you are interested in giving back to Augsburg, please visit our giving page: /giving/how-to-give/.

鈥淲e鈥檙e all interconnected. We all need each other to survive and to create a world that鈥檚 free of violence, with equal opportunities, and full of love and kindness.鈥

Supporting Future Nurses at Augsburg

Lloyd and Barbara AmundsonAt the end of 2020, Lloyd Amundson decided to start a nursing scholarship at Augsburg. But this wasn鈥檛 the first nursing scholarship he鈥檇 established. It wasn鈥檛 even the second. Lloyd and his late wife, Barbara, have multiple nursing scholarships set up around the country, from Maui to Sioux Falls and now at Augsburg.

鈥淣ursing scholarships have been our pride. My wife and I were sold on the nursing profession because we feel like they鈥檙e the masters of the health care industry. Doctors are good, of course, but when the doctor walks into a room, the nurses have everything ready for them to go,鈥 says Lloyd.

One of Lloyd鈥檚 passions is a nursing program at Mayo Clinic in Rochester he and his wife helped launch years ago, which helps nurses continue their education.

鈥淚 have a good friend named Leeann Johnson who has really been a good pusher for these things, so now we鈥檙e doing more to urge nurses to go on to higher education to earn a master鈥檚 degree in nursing.鈥

Lloyd graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1951. While in school, he didn鈥檛 know much about Augsburg other than it was a smaller school near the U of M and had a good athletics program. Lloyd followed Auggie Jeroy Carlson’s career. Also known as “Mr. Augsburg,” Jeroy played baseball, basketball, and football as a student and was part of four MIAC championship teams. Years later, Lloyd and his wife started going to Mayo Clinic and met Dr. Paul Mueller ’84. Paul is a Regent Emeriti of 绿茶直播, is a past chair of Augsburg鈥檚 Board of Regents, and currently serves as Chair of Augsburg鈥檚 Great Returns campaign.

鈥淲e鈥檙e nuts for Mayo since they鈥檝e taken care of us over the years. My wife had pancreatic cancer, it was a routine checkup and Dr. Mueller caught it. He is a really, really good guy, a good doctor. He was such a supporter of my wife.鈥

So when Lloyd was looking to establish another scholarship, he thought of the university that Dr. Mueller loves so much and started the Lloyd A. and Barbara A. Amundson Nursing Scholarship Honoring Dr. Paul Mueller ’84.

Lloyd hopes this scholarship will inspire more students to go into nursing.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a good job, it鈥檚 a responsible job, and we need more people in there. I would like to see this nursing program get a lot bigger. We鈥檙e working our way into a bad problem of not having enough nurses. As the population is getting older, like I am, we need to be careful to graduate enough qualified nurses.鈥

Lloyd also hopes his gift will encourage others to create their own scholarships for students.

The purpose of this scholarship is to provide financial support to Augsburg nursing students, prioritizing students who demonstrate academic achievement and financial need, and are passionate about nursing.

Nancy Mueller, President Paul Pribbenow and Paul Mueller
Nancy Mueller, President Paul Pribbenow, and Paul Mueller ’84. Photo courtesy of Coppersmith Photography.

鈥淚 have had the pleasure of knowing Lloyd Amundson for many years. I also knew his wife, Barbara. Their love for each other and their communities was obvious. After his wife died several years ago, Lloyd has expressed his enduring love for her and compassion for others through generous philanthropy. Lloyd is a strong advocate for education, especially of future nurses. Lloyd appreciates the student-centric values of 绿茶直播 and the outstanding nurses that graduate from Augsburg鈥攎any of whom now work at Mayo Clinic. Lloyd鈥檚 generous gift will support the training of many future Augsburg nursing students.鈥

鈥 Paul Mueller 鈥84

Chair of Augsburg鈥檚 Great Returns campaign

 

Donors who give annually to academic scholarships or create permanent scholarship endowments reduce student debt and provide financial support to those who may not otherwise be able to afford college. These gifts encourage students in highly valued academic disciplines, reward students for high achievement, and inspire students to pay it forward.

If you are interested in supporting an existing scholarship or creating a new scholarship, please visit Giving To 绿茶直播.

Life Lessons Through Study Abroad

Dennis and Anita King
Dennis and Anita King

Dennis King 鈥70 credits Augsburg with helping him develop the tools and mind-set needed to succeed in life.

鈥淚 did not fully realize this during my professional career. It hit me when I retired and looked at my life in retrospect.鈥

His career, first in Spanish Language Education and then International Business in Latin America, stretched his mind to work successfully in other cultures, languages, and with divergent points of view.

Dennis studied at Augsburg in the late 60鈥檚 when the Canadian Philosopher, Marshall McLuhan, was widely read regarding media. He coined the phrase 鈥淕lobal Village鈥 and in many respects predicted the World Wide Web and the inevitable move toward globalization.

鈥淎ll of this transformed me along the way.鈥

Dennis established the Dennis and Anita King Endowed Fund to honor his wife, Anita. Dennis met Anita at Augsburg before she transferred to the University of Minnesota. Anita supported and participated in Dennis鈥檚 professional journey throughout their 42 years of marriage. Dennis hopes that this gift will help other Auggies on their path to find the same kind of fulfillment that he found.

鈥淚 believe the Study Abroad Program at 绿茶直播 is the vehicle to do this.鈥

Inspiration That Lasts a Lifetime: Naomi ’81 and Steve Staruch

Naomi (Christensen) '81 and Steve Staruch with an Augsburg Water Droplet
Naomi (Christensen) ’81 and Steve Staruch with an Augsburg Water Droplet

When alumna Naomi 鈥81 and her husband, Steve, updated their will this past April, they knew 绿茶直播 would be part of their legacy.

鈥淎ugsburg and the people who have become my lifelong friends 鈥 both fellow students, alumni colleagues, and faculty 鈥 have been a large part of how my life continues to be molded and shaped.”

Naomi grew up in a family dedicated to faith. When she was a child, her father would often speak about stewardship and using what God gives us to continue God鈥檚 purposes here on earth.

鈥淚 recall a small white church coin bank that I received as a child. I collected my coins in that bank until it was time to make the gift to the church. Emptying the whole thing was exciting. I can see it as cathartic now, liberating in a way.”

Naomi graduated from Augsburg in 1981 with a degree in Elementary Education. As a student, she was captivated by Leland B. Sateren鈥檚 dedication to all things Augsburg music, especially in the context of sacred texts.

She reflects that, “singing for Lee made the scriptures come alive!” That experience, as well as 40+ more years of singing in several metro area choirs, is the reason she and Steve made a significant gift to the Leland B. Sateren Choral Music Scholarship.

Naomi also fondly remembers working for both President Oscar Anderson and President Chuck Anderson. “Despite their leadership responsibilities, both presidents made a point to have a working relationship with me as a student.” In addition, she was spellbound learning from and about Bernhard and Gracia Christensen through their devotion to the institution. These examples of leadership are inspiration to Naomi, enlightening how to best approach relationships of all sorts and informing the legacy gift to the Bernhard Christensen Center for Vocation.

The Staruch鈥檚 are photographed here with an Augsburg Water Droplet. Benefactors who choose to invest in an endowed scholarship receive a handmade glass water droplet crafted by Anchor Bend Glassworks.

Donors Seek to Remove Cost as a Barrier to Education with the Paul ’84 and Nancy Mackey ’85 Mueller Presidential Scholarship

Nancy Mueller, President Paul Pribbenow, and Paul Mueller. Photo courtesy of Coppersmith Photography.

Ask Nancy Mackey Mueller 鈥85 about her family鈥檚 planned giving history and philosophy, and her answer will be succinct: 鈥淲e鈥檙e all in.鈥

Indeed they are, for reasons that both she and her husband, Paul Mueller 鈥84 articulate clearly. Their commitment goes deep. Paul served on the Augsburg Board of Regents for 12 years and currently chairs Great Returns: Augsburg鈥檚 Sesquicentennial Campaign. Nancy was named to the Board in 2018. They have donated often over many years, including a previous bequest to support the Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion, and most recently designated a planned gift to create the Paul ’84 and Nancy Mackey ’85 Mueller Presidential Scholarship, valued at $1,000,000.

鈥淲e both felt that our experience at Augsburg gave us the keys to success for our future,鈥 explains Nancy. Their college experience was not only positive but also rigorous, preparing them for challenging graduate work and distinguished careers. 鈥淲e were both encouraged in different ways. As the only woman in the physics department at the time, I was always very much supported. I never felt I had to prove myself any more than the guys in my major, and that gave me the confidence to stretch myself.鈥

Coming to Augsburg

Nancy became a structural engineer, earning a master鈥檚 degree in aerospace engineering at the University of Maryland and helping the U.S. Navy design submarines before eventually becoming a physics and chemistry teacher at Mayo High School in Rochester. She had followed her father and her aunts to Augsburg, where she first met her future husband when she was a nervous sophomore tutoring juniors and seniors in physics. He remembers being smitten; she remembers just trying to get through the intimidating hour. Dating came later, but the scene had been set.

鈥淲e have a deep affection for Augsburg. It鈥檚 where we met,鈥 Paul says. 鈥淲e also appreciate the values of the institution鈥攊ts academic rigor, its vision, its commitment to the Cedar-Riverside community. Augsburg transforms lives.鈥

Paul had already won a scholarship to the University of Minnesota when a visit to Augsburg鈥檚 campus altered his trajectory. Impressed by the warmth, welcome, and undivided attention he received that day, especially from chemistry professors, he chose Augsburg. Now-retired chemistry professor John Holum became his mentor and inspiration. Paul went on to earn his MD and MPH at Johns Hopkins University and is now an internist and professor of medicine and biomedical ethics at Mayo Clinic and the regional vice president of the Mayo Clinic Health System鈥擲outhwest Wisconsin.

What Sets Augsburg Apart

Both Muellers have fond recollections of Augsburg support and inclusion. 鈥淚t felt like family. Somebody was always looking out for you. If you missed class, the professor would see you later and ask where you were. That was one of the things that set Augsburg apart, then and now. No matter who you were, or what interests or inclinations you had, you felt very welcomed,鈥 Nancy says.

That Augsburg 鈥渧igorously retained its Lutheran heritage while at the same time welcoming everyone is very important and appealing to us. It鈥檚 the idea that we are called to love and serve each other, without regard to personal characteristics such as race, religion, or sexual orientation,鈥 adds Paul. 鈥淚n today鈥檚 world, it seems like the focus is more on what separates us than what brings us together.鈥

He also notes that these days, more than half of the student population are people of color. 鈥淚t didn鈥檛 look that way when we were there, and I love that about it,鈥 he says.

Nancy points to the unusual number of programs designed to help students with special needs and talents, from StepUP to URGO. 鈥淎s parents, we鈥檝e been on many college campus tours, and nowhere else offers the programs that Augsburg does,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a unique place, and we so believe in their mission.鈥

Their oldest son, Luke, majored in math and history at Augsburg before pursuing a graduate degree in statistics from Harvard. His mother notes that his presidential scholarship made a big difference to him, both financially and by providing opportunities he may not otherwise have had. Endowing such a scholarship for future generations made perfect sense.

鈥淩emoving cost as a barrier to education鈥攖hat was our intent,鈥 Paul says. 鈥淲e very much wanted Augsburg to be able to attract top-notch students without regard to expense. To have brilliant, talented, gifted students be able to come to Augsburg without having to worry about how to pay for their college education? Now that is changing lives.鈥

Bruce Olson ’71 Pays it Forward with Olson Peterson Wiggins Scholarship

Bruce Olson ’71 (center), his brother Brad Olson ’73 (left), and scholarship recipient Nick Thompson (right).

When Bruce Olson 鈥71 was a youngster in Brooklyn Center, he was not sure what he wanted to be when he grew up. He was sure of a couple of things, though. Active in the Lutheran church, he knew he wanted to attend a Lutheran college, and he preferred being in the city, where 鈥60s activism meant things were happening. He also knew that his rural extended family would support him fully, although they could provide little more than love and encouragement.

鈥淚 came from a family of modest means. I needed a lot of help,鈥 says Olson. He was grateful to receive an Augsburg legacy scholarship but wished he could have met his benefactors. 鈥淚 wondered about the history of it, but I never really knew,鈥 he recalls.

The financial cushion served him well. He participated in student government and played all four years on the golf team, which won both conference and state championships. He changed majors four times, abandoning religion after nearly flunking his first theology class, contemplating a future as a high school math teacher, succumbing to the inverse multiple-choice question challenges in his sociology exams, and, finally, plugging a gap one semester with an accounting class.

鈥淚 loved it,鈥 he says.

Accounting became his major and business his forte. Right out of college, he worked for a small mobile home finance company, then Josten鈥檚, then a series of successful entrepreneurial ventures in various fields, from insurance and computer services to light manufacturing and retail. He retired at 45 and moved to Florida to play golf, including with such luminaries as Arnie Palmer, but 10 years of retirement sufficed. Now a Kansas City resident, he is back at it, officially the owner and president of the HRS Group.

鈥淚 love the challenge of taking a new idea or a new product and making it work,鈥 he says.

Olson also loves the idea of establishing the Olson Peterson Wiggins Scholarship. It is named for his family, including his grandfather Olson, who owned the five-and-dime back in Afton, Iowa; his grandfather Peterson, the town mechanic and truck and tractor repair whiz in Tracy, Minnesota, where he was born; and his near and dear great uncle Walt Wiggins, Walnut Grove鈥檚 town barber, who offered shaves and haircuts there along the banks of Plum Creek. And it will grant $25,000 to someone like him.

Olson was delighted to meet the first recipient, Nick Thompson, when the initial $5,000 installment was awarded. 鈥淗e鈥檚 real nice, an athlete who plays baseball and a reasonably good student who aspires to become a physical therapist. But who knows? I told him I hoped he would be lucky enough to hold onto that dream but reminded him that it would be crazy to guarantee it.鈥

Olson hopes, too, that Thompson will enjoy the same Augsburg benefits he found: a good education, both academic and social, and important lessons about how to conduct one鈥檚 life. He also points to Augsburg鈥檚 growth and progress, demonstrated in part by the much-expanded economics and business department in the impressive Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a pay-it-forward sort of story,鈥 Olson says. 鈥淚 was lucky to come from a great family, get a good education, and have some success in life. Now I鈥檓 finding a way to honor my family by honoring somebody else in the same situation.鈥

A Foundation for Future Educators

Doug and Deb Wagman
Doug and Deb Wagman

Call them stepping stones or building blocks鈥擠eb Wagman’s foundation for life began at 绿茶直播.

“Augsburg gave me the foundation to build on, for what I have today,” Deb says. “I owe them so much for helping me get started.”

Perhaps “paying it forward,” as Deb says, more aptly describes how she and her husband, Doug, think of their聽聽to Augsburg. With a聽, also known as a bequest, the couple has not only returned that sense of gratitude, but they also are helping pave the way for tomorrow’s educational leaders through the Deborah K. and Douglas R. Wagman Education Scholarship.

“It was an inspiration to witness how excited the Wagmans were to create a scholarship to help train future educators,” says Ann Ulring, director of leadership gifts.

Graduating in 1978 as an elementary education major with a minor in library science, Deb worked in the teaching profession for 34 years; 25 of those were as a media specialist at an elementary school in Chaska, Minnesota. She saw firsthand the need for good, dedicated teachers.

“I definitely believe in education. Education is power,” she says.

As Deb sees it, the couple’s scholarship can bolster future educators and provide the stepping stones of success by easing students’ financial concerns. That way they can focus on learning the profession.

“If I can help someone at Augsburg and continue to grow the profession,” says Deb, “that’s my legacy.”

 

This article was reposted from聽

A Legacy Augsburg Family Creates a Lasting Gift: The Reverend John Hjelmeland Scholarship Fund Continues to Grow

Hjelmeland family in the mid 1920s with Rev. John Hjelmeland pictured far right.

No college student ever completes their education without assistance鈥攁ssistance that is tangible, real, visible, and often unseen. Most students make it through their educational experience with financial support鈥攁nd scholarship support can make all the difference in a student鈥檚 experience. More than 23 Augsburg students have received scholarship support through the Reverend John Hjelmeland Scholarship endowment and know this first hand.

Aware of the essential need for scholarship support for students, the Hjelmeland family created an endowed scholarship fund in 1986 to honor its patriarch, Reverend John Hjelmeland.

Reverend John Hjelmeland was the first of the Hjelmeland family to arrive in Minnesota. He left Norway to follow the call of the Lutheran Free Church and the promise of the Augsburg seal: Through Truth to Freedom. He became a student at what was then known as Augsburg Theological Seminary from which he was graduated in 1911. As a Lutheran minister, John went on to serve congregations in the Midwest and West. His influence infused the whole family with a love of the Lutheran traditions of service and stewardship.

John鈥檚 son, Sigvald Hjelmeland, was the next family member to graduate from Augsburg, class of 鈥41. In 1952, he was invited by then president Bernhard Christensen to return to Augsburg and raise money for the building of a library. Through his efforts and the generosity of many donors, Augsburg exceeded its goals for the library fund drive in 1955. Sig played a role in establishing the first development office at Augsburg. Over the next 30 years he worked to raise funds for the college. Major campaigns he led included the completion of the George Sverdrup Library, Christensen Center, Urness Hall, and Foss Center.聽 He retired in 1982 and remained engaged with the college. He was awarded the Spirit of Augsburg Award in 2003. He died at age 90 having lived a full life in the spirit of the call.

Many other family members have attended and graduated from Augsburg including Sig and his wife Helen鈥檚 daughter, Laurene Hjelmeland Clarke 鈥64; son John 鈥70 and his wife Lynn Benson Hjelmeland 鈥69; and granddaughter, Jennifer Hjelmeland 鈥00.

Hjelmeland family in 2018.

The scholarship fund was established with two kinds of students in mind. It gives awards to immigrant students who continue the long tradition and value of the college to serve the immigrant; it also funds students from legacy families like theirs.

The family continues to add to the scholarship endowment and expand the impact and legacy of the first Hjelmeland who came to America so long ago to combine faith and freedom through an Augsburg education.

Chilstrom Scholarship Inspires Lives of Courage

Bishop Herb Chilstrom鈥檚 journey from poor, small-town boy to first presiding bishop of the ELCA began with a spiritual awakening at age 14. By the time Bishop Chilstrom 鈥54 reached college age his goal to become an ordained minister was clear, but the source of funds to pay for college was less certain. 鈥淭here weren鈥檛 many scholarships at the time I attended Augsburg,鈥 he remembers. Knowing that his parents wouldn鈥檛 be able to give him more than a five dollar bill every once in a while, he chose to attend the Lutheran college located in the heart of the job-rich Twin Cities: Augsburg. There, he knew, he鈥檇 be able to find a job 鈥 or two or three jobs (at the same time), as it turned out. That experience and a desire to help today鈥檚 students led the bishop and his wife, the Reverend E. Corinne Chilstrom, to establish the Corinne and Herbert Chilstrom Scholarship for students interested in social work or the ordained ministry. If you give a student some kind of financial support, he says, 鈥淚t means you鈥檙e doing well, and we want to help you.鈥

A social conscience emerges

When Bishop Chilstrom arrived at Augsburg he began to realize that both his spiritual journey and his view of the world had been too narrow-minded. 鈥淚 had too many pat answers,鈥 he remembers. Augsburg professors like Joel Torstenson, sociology, challenged him to open windows to the world. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 wealthy, but I realized I had the privilege of simply being white, and that opened doors that weren鈥檛 open for others. Joel impressed on us that we have a profound responsibility to those who did not have the advantages we had.鈥 At Augsburg, says Bishop Chilstrom, he learned about Christianity鈥檚 call to fight injustice and how to live a courageous life. He began to develop the radical social conscience for which he later became known.

Those who do not learn from history 鈥

鈥淭o be an effective pastor you really have to study the Bible and theology and church history, but you also have to have a much broader perspective,鈥 says Bishop Chilstrom. 鈥淪ociology really broadened my world, and I fell in love with history, thanks to Professor Carl Chrislock.鈥 He recalls Anne Pedersen, 鈥渢he best English teacher in the world,鈥 who opened his mind to literature and instilled respect for the English language. He was amazed by President Bernhard Christensen鈥檚 intellect. 鈥淚t was awesome to hear him reach into the depths of his mind and spirit and pull poetry and prose and Biblical understanding together.鈥 He remembers sitting in chapel and thinking, 鈥淗e鈥檚 the kind of person I would like to be.鈥

Augsburg also provided opportunities to stretch his leadership wings. He became president of the campus youth group his sophomore year, and as student body president his junior year, he led the student campaign to raise funds for Memorial Library. He went on to earn degrees from Augustana Theologial Seminary and Princeton Theological Seminary and his doctorate from New York University. He became a parish minister, professor and church leader, serving as the first bishop of the fledgling ELCA from 1987 to 1995.

Tither turned philanthropist

鈥淎fter I had an enlightening experience as a teenager, one of the first things I discovered is that people who believe put their faith on the line by giving,鈥 says Chilstrom. While still in high school he began tithing 10 percent. 鈥淚 gave at least 10 percent all through my life,鈥 he explains. 鈥淣ow Corinne and I are able to give much more than that, and it鈥檚 a lot of fun.鈥