Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary is the result of the interweaving of three institutions:
What has remained consistent through the histories of Garrett Biblical Institute, Evangelical Theological Seminary, and the Chicago Training School has been an unwavering, core commitment to the formation of Christian leaders. These institutional histories live on in our core values of critical and creative reason, evangelical commitment, and prophetic participation in society.
Garrett Biblical Institute, the first Methodist seminary in the Midwest, was founded in 1853 thanks to an inheritance left by Eliza Clark Garrett. Eliza was a Methodist laywoman who was convinced of the need for better training for Methodist preachers. Garrett’s founders hoped that the new school would shape both mind and spirit toward an educated ministry.
Evangelical Theological Seminary was founded in 1873 in Naperville, IL, as a seminary of the Evangelical Church (later the Evangelical United Brethren Church). The seminary was organized as an adjunct to what is now known as North Central College and held its first classes in 1876.
Chicago in the late 1800s was a city of hope and despair. It was in this context that a Methodist laywoman, Lucy Rider Meyer, called for a new vision of Christian leadership: a ministry of women who were eventually recognized as deaconesses, ministering to the needs of the city. In 1885, she, her husband, and a group of Chicago Methodists founded The Chicago Training School for City, Home and Foreign Missions.
In 1934, Chicago Training School merged with Garrett Biblical Institute. The integration of the Chicago Training School meant that the scope of Garrett’s vision for training Christian leaders had expanded to include leaders of church-based institutions for the betterment of social conditions and significant numbers of women.
The 1972 General Conference of The United Methodist Church mandated the merger of Garrett Theological Seminary (formerly Garrett Biblical Institute) and Evangelical Theological Seminary. The two institutions agreed on a plan to form a merged seminary using the Evanston, Illinois, campus, and in the fall of 1974, Garrett- Evangelical Theological Seminary opened as a newly-merged seminary.
While we celebrate our extraordinary legacy, we have a keen eye on the future. Today, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary prepares students to thrive as creative, innovation, and spiritually centered leaders who bring the resources of their faith to the seminary, the sanctuary, and the streets.