FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The Boston Theological Institute (BTI) announces new partnership with Hartford Seminary.
The Board of Trustees of the Boston Theological Institute (BTI) is pleased to announce that Hartford Seminary will officially join the BTI on January 1, 2018. Hartford Seminary was unanimously elected to membership by the Trustees at their September 4, 2017 meeting. The BTI is the largest and most diverse theological consortium in the world and will celebrate its 50 th anniversary in 2018.

BTI Board Chair and President of Hebrew College, Rabbi Daniel L. Lehmann, spoke on behalf of the Trustees: “ As we approach the 50 th  of the BTI, we are excited to welcome the Hartford Seminary, a pioneer in inter-religious learning, to our consortium of theological schools. Hartford will enhance the BTI’s diversity geographically, religiously, and academically while expanding our shared resources for students and faculty. We look forward to the many contributions the Hartford Seminary will make to our collaborative community of distinguished institutions. “ 

Dr. Heidi Hadsell, President of Hartford Seminary, also sees tremendous opportunity for interactions among the students and faculty of member schools. “Hartford Seminary is honored to be part of such a prestigious and diverse group of theological institutions,” she said. “We look forward to contributing some of our academic expertise to the BTI and also to having the academic possibilities for our Hartsem students widened and enriched. We see this cooperation as a gift to us all.”

Hartford Seminary, founded in 1834, is a non-denominational graduate school for religious and theological studies in Hartford, CT. The Seminary has long been known nationally and internationally for its work in interfaith dialogue, for the study of Islam and Christian-Muslim relations, and for research on congregations in the United States.

Degree programs include Islamic Chaplaincy, Cooperative Master of Divinity, Doctor of Ministry, Master of Arts in Religious Studies, Master of Arts in Transformative Leadership and Spirituality, and a new Ph.D. in Islamic Studies and Christian-Muslim Relations. Hartford Seminary is the home of the Hartford Institute for Religion Research and the Duncan Black Macdonald Center for the Study of Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations.

The BTI was founded in 1968 by seven graduate schools of theology and divinity: Andover Newton Theological School, Boston College Department of Theology, Boston University School of Theology, Episcopal Theological School (later Episcopal Divinity School), Harvard Divinity School, Saint John’s Seminary, and Weston College (now Boston College School of Theology and Ministry). Since its founding, the BTI has expanded through the membership of Gordon-Conwell Theological School (1972) and Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology (1975). In 2012, Hebrew College joined, expanding the BTI’s original ecumenical mission to a broader interreligious orientation. Hartford Seminary becomes the eleventh member in BTI history.
Media Contact:

Ann McClenahan
Executive Director
617-527-4880