Slie, Samuel
Name Entries
person
Slie, Samuel
Name Components
Surname :
Slie
Forename :
Samuel
eng
Latn
Slie, Samuel N., Rev. Dr.
Name Components
Surname :
Slie
Forename :
Samuel N.
NameAddition :
Rev. Dr.
eng
Latn
Slie, Sam
Name Components
Name :
Slie, Sam
eng
Latn
Slie, Samuel Nathaniel
Name Components
Surname :
Slie
Forename :
Samuel Nathaniel
eng
Latn
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Male
Exist Dates
Biographical History
Samuel Slie was born in Branford, Connecticut in 1925. He graduated from Springfield College and received his B.D. from the Yale Divinity School in 1952. Rev. Slie held various positions that put him at the center of the dialogue between religion and higher education and interfaith/ecumenical thought.
Reverend Samuel Slie was born in Branford, Connecticut on June 8, 1925. Since his childhood he has been affiliated with the United Church of Christ (UCC) into which he was ordained in 1952. He graduated from Hillhouse High School, was a veteran of the infantry service in World War II after which he obtained his B.S. in Group Work and Community Organization from Springfield College in Massachusetts. He also studied at Wilberforce University in Ohio and overseas in Florence, Italy. In 1952 he received his B.D. in Religion and Higher Education and in 1963 a S.T.M in Roman Catholic Ecumenical Thought from Yale Divinity School.
Befitting his education, Rev. Slie has held many positions which placed him at the center of the dialogue between religion and higher education and interfaith/ecumenical thought. He began at the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) for which he became the Southern Area Secretary of the National Student Council in 1952. In 1955 he became the Regional Director of the New England Student Christian Movement (SCM) for the United Church of Christ, a position he held for ten years until 1965. The position which led him into closer contact with Yale was the Coordinating Chaplain of the United Ministry in Higher Education in Greater New Haven, which he began in 1965. His work there was as a campus ministry liaison and resource person on an ecumenical basis among the seven colleges of Greater New Haven. His accomplishments in this position were endorsed by the New Haven Council of Churches. In January of 1966 he also became the Associate University Pastor, Yale University, Church of Christ (part-time) and a Fellow of Morse College. From 1969 through 1975 he was part-time lecturer at Yale Divinity School. He lectured on: The Church and the Black Experience, Women in Campus Ministry, and Christian Ministry in Higher Education.
As a resource person and a pastor he was required to be current on a variety of issues from religious, to social, to intellectual. He was affiliated with the Danforth Foundation and the Ministries to Blacks in Higher Education, was knowledgeable of the New Haven Pagan Council, concerned about famine in South Africa, and desired the flourishing of Christian Unity. Despite his knowledge of and frequent offers to work for secular institutions he consistently chose the institutional church. His theological grounding and faith were repeatedly praised by a variety of people. His ministry has been most appropriately described as a ministry of reconciliation where both judgment and healing can occur.
eng
Latn
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Church work with students
Universities and colleges
Universities andcolleges
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United States
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