Remembering Rev. Dr. Clyde J. Steckel, Professor Emeritus

Faculty

In June 1970, Rev. Dr. Clyde J. Steckel joined United’s faculty as associate professor of Theology and Psychology. He was also asked to provide counseling, supervise communication groups, and facilitate the North Central Career Development Center. Originally from Indiana, Clyde earned his BD at Chicago Theological Seminary and his MA and PhD from the University of Chicago Divinity School. His connection with and myriad contributions to United, however, began a few years before that formal appointment and extended far beyond his official retirement.

In the mid-1960s, while working as a campus minister at the University of Minnesota, Clyde served as an interim professor. Clyde also provided important leadership on United’s Advisory Council during the 1960s.

In 1974–75, Clyde and Rev. Dr. Don White received Lilly faculty grants through The Association of Theological Schools (ATS) to investigate the feasibility of using competency education at a theological school. After Dean Tom Campbell’s death in 1979, President Dayton Hultgren appointed Clyde as interim academic vice president. He was the inaugural director of the DMin program and director of the MDiv program at the time. In 1980, Clyde became the permanent academic vice president (dean). United Remembers Rev. Dr. Clyde J. Steckel

During the ten years he spent as dean, Clyde accomplished many things while serving as the person of continuity. In 1982, following Hultgren’s resignation, Clyde brought United through its accreditation. He also worked to relieve faculty of the burden of administrative detail and helped United make good on its commitments to women, feminism, LGBTQ+ students and faculty, and Native American students and faculty. In 1983, Clyde’s book Theology and Ethics of Behavior Modification was published.

He relinquished his position in 1989 to pursue his primary passions—teaching and writing. Many alums remember Clyde from his teaching days. As Rev. Michael Ciba (’92) asserted, Clyde “was the epitome of a pastor/scholar/teacher. I had four classes with him in my time at United. He graciously traveled to Ohio to preach at my ordination service. I am grateful that he answered God’s call throughout his whole life.” Rev. Terri Akkerman (’89) added “I’m so glad Clyde was a part of my theological education and training. And that I was able to claim him as a friend. Thanks be to God for his life and ministry.”

Others were won over by Clyde’s gentle soul, generous and curious spirit, and academic gifts. Rev. Dr. Christie Cozad Neuger (’80), Professor Emerita of Pastoral Counseling and Pastoral Theology, was Clyde’s student, colleague, and friend. As she reflected, “Clyde Steckel was a beloved teacher, scholar, musician, novelist, colleague, family man, and friend. He was a deeply spiritual person who devoted his life to the church. From a personal standpoint, Clyde was my teacher, my mentor, and my dear friend over the past almost 50 years. His stalwart encouragement gave me the confidence to pursue a life of teaching and scholarship in pastoral theology. It was an enormous personal and professional honor to become his colleague and then his successor at UTS in 1992. I, along with so many other friends, former students, colleagues, and fellow congregants, will miss him and grieve him deeply even as we experience profound gratitude for his life well-lived.”

Sue Ebbers (’78), Professor Emerita of Theological Bibliography, recalled, “Clyde was a wonderful teacher, combining his dry wit with thorough knowledge of his discipline and of the church.” Rev. Dr. Carolyn Pressler, Professor Emerita of Biblical Interpretation, noted that “Clyde embodied the best of UTS and the UCC. His death leaves a big hole…how his humor, wisdom, and brilliance enriched our lives.”

Though Clyde formally retired in 1995, he did not really leave. After a short break, he returned to teaching as an adjunct professor at United, writing, and participating in the life of the UCC. Clyde contributed chapters to various publications, including Theomusicology: A Special Issue of Black Sacred Music, Prism: A Theological Forum for the United Church of Christ, and Theology Today.

Clyde was also the interim conference minister in the UCC Minnesota Conference and an interim senior minister in local congregations. In New Ecclesiology and Polity: The United Church of Christ, published in 2009, Clyde argued that the UCC needs to reshape its ecclesiology and polity to ensure its future as a faithful and strong ministry in the post-modern world. In 2012, he completed a book about the Minnesota Conference titled Fifty Years of Covenant Keeping

After serving as a United trustee three times between 1972 and 1979, Clyde returned as a trustee in 2017. In 2018, he wrote Finding the Church: A Personal Memoir. In 2023, he turned to fiction with Therefore, We Celebrate: Igitur, and in 2024, he published the more reflective Meditations on Aging

His impact on the UCC and congregational leadership cannot be overstated. Rev. T. Michael Rock, Director of Contextual Education and Spiritual Direction, notes, “Rev. Dr. Clyde Steckel was the consummate United Church of Christ theologian and ecumenical scholar. He so believed in the experiment that began as the United Church of Christ that he always encouraged its evolution and alignment with following Jesus. Clyde loved his faith and the community gathered, and we were all blessed to witness that love.”

Through Clyde’s role on the board of trustees, his status as a major UCC theologian, and attendance at various events, many new students and faculty got to know the person some dubbed “Mr. UCC.” Tributes have poured in.

Dr. Mary Farrell Bednarowski, Professor Emerita, reflects, “For 25 of my cherished, nearly 50-year friendship with Clyde, we served together on the board of the Collegeville Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research. All the gifts for which we treasured him at United were put to fruitful use in the work of the Institute: the depth and breadth of his generous heart and intellect; his prodigious memory; his astonishingly broad knowledge of music, art, architecture, and literature; and, always, his kindness. He lived a deeply ecumenical life by embodying and sharing the best of his own tradition. Clyde was my guide into the history and polity (a word I learned from Clyde) of the progressive Protestantism that animates United, and he has been my guide into the mysteries and happenstances of old age. I will miss him forever.”

United faculty observed the loss as well. Dr. Demian Wheeler stated, “We have lost a true pillar of our seminary community.” Dr. Jennifer Awes Freeman added, “His wit, good humor, and warmth will be missed. May his memory be eternal!” Rev. Dr. Ry Siggelkow said, Clyde “was a wonderful man. Curious, faithful, and incisive.…And, my oh my, did he love United.” Rev. Dr. Andrew Packman asserted, “What a loss and what a witness. I’m so grateful to have known Clyde and to have caught a whiff of his supreme commitment to theological education. May his memory be a blessing.”

President Molly T. Marshall remembers Clyde, writing, “A consummate theologian, professor, and UCC ecclesiologist, Rev. Dr. Clyde Steckel was a colossus in the story of United. Bridging disciplines, understanding the intersectionality of all learning, and encouraging younger colleagues, Clyde embodied the vision of the fledgling UCC seminary throughout his long service from its first decade until the present (1970–2025). His more recent tenure as a board member bore witness to the best of that vision while embracing the necessary changes in education delivery, curricular innovation, and faculty development. We give thanks for his long presence with us and his enduring imprint on United.”

Remarking on his predecessor and colleague, Dean Kyle Roberts adds, “Dr. Clyde Steckel’s legacy and imprint upon the academic life and quality of United Seminary is profound and deep. As a faculty leader, a scholar of pastoral and practical theology and ecclesiology, a mentor to countless students, and the academic dean for a decade, Clyde helped shape United’s innovative, ecumenical, and integrative culture which continues to this day. For me personally, he offered invaluable wisdom and insight in generous conversations and through his faithful work on the Academic Committee of the Board. He will be missed, and his memory will be forever cherished.”

As we observe the passing of this transformational and stalwart United faculty member at the age of 96, we honor the blessed memory of Clyde and give thanks for all of the ways he mentored, taught, and inspired students at United and steadfastly supported the seminary. United grieves with his family for the loss of this brilliant and humble man and is truly grateful for the legacy of Rev. Dr. Clyde Steckel.


The memorial service for Clyde took place on Saturday, February 15, 2025, at First Congregational Church of Minnesota (500 8th Ave SE, Minneapolis). 

Explore More Articles

Alum Rev. Todd Lippert (’03): Living a Public Ministry

As Rev. Todd Lippert was growing up, his life was dominated by two constants: music and church. Both of his parents were music teachers. His dad was the high school choir director, and his mom was the elementary school music teacher. Though his family had been Baptist for generations, they ended up attending a United Church of Christ (UCC) church where his mom was hired to play the organ. It was also much closer to home than the nearest Baptist church.  “I always took Christian faith very seriously,” Todd asserts. “The church was a sacred and holy place to me.” In seventh grade, Todd remembers talking to his father. “I was at the bottom of the stairs talking to my dad at the top of the stairs. And that was when I said for the first time, ‘I wonder if I might want to be a pastor someday.’”  But, Todd adds, “the idea was really terrifying to me,” so he put it out of his mind. At the University of Iowa, he pursued a music degree. During a philosophy class toward the end of college, a professed atheist professor began asking some of the same questions about faith that Todd was confronting. “I was wrestling with whether I was a Christian or not.”   Deciding on Seminary The turning point came one Sunday morning after graduation when Todd and his wife were at church. At the time, he was selling Yellow Pages ads and contemplating an MBA. “I hated it,” Todd confesses. “I was miserable.” Watching the preacher at First United Methodist Church in Iowa City, he thought, “Maybe I could do that, and maybe I need to pay attention to this call to ministry that keeps bubbling up.” United was the first UCC seminary that came up on the computer, and when Todd visited, “it felt like home for me as soon as I arrived.” Since his wife was doing graduate work at the University of Minnesota, they moved to the Twin Cities.  “At United,” Todd recalls, “I had the space to figure out how Christianity was meaningful and how this faith fit together for me.” Professors who welcomed and encouraged his questions were key to his faith formation, and the “liberation theology that moved through the curriculum, with its focus on justice, was extremely appealing to me.”  Todd was also inspired by his classmates. “I saw the student body deeply engaged in the political and social questions of the day.” At United from 2000 to 2003, Todd experienced the Bush v. Gore lawsuit, 9/11 terror attacks, Minnesota senator Paul Wellstone’s tragic death, and the Iraq war launch as he was earning his MDiv.    Public Theology Justice-seeking activism, Todd asserts, “really cemented my understanding that the body of Christ is about bringing the realm of God into being wherever it is. And that was something that would have to make my life better and make my community better.” Since graduating, Todd has worked as a UCC pastor, a Minnesota state legislator (2018–2022), a community organizer with ISAIAH, and a community minister with Creekside Church. The clergy organizing work during Operation Metro Surge was especially impactful and reconnected him with United. Todd went through “nonviolent direct action training with Dr. Rita Nakashima Brock, one of the authors I read.” He also worked with Rev. Dr. Carolyn Pressler, his former Hebrew scripture professor.  United, notes Todd, equipped him “to be able to understand what is going on in our world, and in our communities, and I had the tools to get better and better at that, reading the present through a biblical and theological lens.” He is extraordinarily proud of the way the church showed up in Minnesota and grateful for United. “I really want,” Todd concludes, “the love-your-neighbor values of the church to be a force in our public life, not an afterthought. I want it to be a force in our political life.”

Rev. Dr. Andrew Packman Promoted to Associate Professor of Christian Ethics, supported by the McVay Endowment

Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States, June 24, 2026 —United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities is delighted to announce that, effective July 1, 2026, Rev. Dr. Andrew Packman will become the Associate Professor of Christian Ethics, supported by the McVay Endowment, and Director for Formation. This promotion to an endowed chair follows Rev. Dr. Justin Sabis-Tanis’ appointment as the inaugural Wilson Yates Chair in Theology and the Arts. Announced during Commencement in April, the McVay chairship reflects the esteem with which United’s board and faculty members regard Professor Packman. In February, Dean Kyle Roberts proudly reported that Dr. Packman was being promoted from assistant to associate professor and transitioning from a three-year contract into a tenure-track position. Dr. Packman joined United in July 2021 as a Louisville Institute Postdoctoral Fellow and Visiting Assistant Professor of Theological Ethics and Practical Theology. At the Spring 2022 Convocation to welcome and bless our new faculty member, Dr. Packman—who holds an MDiv and PhD from the University of Chicago—presented on “The Atmospherics of Theological Education.” By December 2022, Dr. Packman’s “teaching, mentoring, and other stellar capabilities” prompted United to offer him a contract to continue teaching past the terms of his Louisville Fellowship. Since then, he has co-authored an article in The Oxford Handbook of Friedrich Schleiermacher, had a paper (“The Consolation of Studying Theology”) published in the Christian Century, and presented at the September 2025 Schleiermacher Kongress in Kiel, Germany. Spiritual and personal formation is a vital component of Packman’s work with students, and he will continue in his role as the director for Formation. In May of 2025, he began a new initiative, the Formation Pilot Program, to gauge the foundational axis points of students’ formation at United. “This is a remarkable moment in theological education,” Dr. Packman explained this spring, “where what it means to be a theological learning community is being reimagined in real time. This pilot program is designed to interrogate this question from across the life of the seminary, and to build up our community in the process.” “Dr. Packman’s doctoral studies,” observed Dean Roberts in his April announcement, “focused on Christian theology and ethics, and his current research explores questions about racism, intransigent evil, and Friedrich Schleiermacher’s philosophical and theological ethics. Combined with his MDiv studies in pastoral formation, these make Dr. Packman well-suited to occupy this chair while he continues…serving as the Director for Formation.” President Molly T. Marshall reflects, “Dr. Packman brings academic excellence and pastoral sensitivity to his teaching, collegial relationships, and community involvement. His theological depth suffuses his courses in ethics and formation, seeking to form good human beings as transformative agents for a world in travail. I am delighted by this appointment.” As Dr. Packman shared when he was offered a chance to continue teaching at United past his Louisville Fellowship, “It’s such an immense gift to get to do this work, and it’s an honor to get to do it with folks like you. I’m so eager to see what we build together!” Now, as a new chapter begins with his elevation to the McVay Chair, we are overjoyed that such a prodigiously talented scholar and teacher can continue to journey with our dedicated and curious students. About United Founded by the United Church of Christ (UCC) as a welcoming, ecumenical school that embraces all denominations and faith traditions, United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities has been on the creative edge of progressive theological thought and leadership since it was established in 1962. Today, United continues to educate leaders who, through the eyes of faith, engage in the dismantling of systems of oppression, exploring multi-faith spirituality, and pushing the boundaries of knowledge. Contact Nathanial Green (he/him) Director of Marketing and Communications press@unitedseminary.edu • 651.255.6138 Admissions and Enrollment admissions@unitedseminary.edu

Rev. Dr. Tim McGregor (’26) Finds Hope for Healing in Exploratory Theology

Rev. Dr. Tim McGregor (’26) has been a chaplain, pastor, and church planter for years. How did he find this well-trodden path? Tim says his mother introduced him to Christ. “She was very devout,” he explains. Unfortunately, she was also very sick, so Tim spent more time in hospitals than in church as a child. Still, he recalls one incident during communion when he was 11. Tim shares that he “had a very out-of-body experience with the divine while I was in church, and it touched my soul.”  Tim grew up and pursued a BA at Tuskegee University. While there, he experienced another out-of-body experience when he was robbed at gunpoint and stabbed. “At that point,” he reflects, “I decided to rethink some of my living and some of my decisions. It reignited my spiritual walk.”  As he changed the way he lived, Tim felt a spiritual nudge. Others observed that they “saw the calling” on his life. And dreams about preaching began to recur. “Before I ever preached a sermon, I dreamed I was preaching…in the same church where I ended up preaching later on.”   Christian Theological Seminary Though Tim identified as National Baptist, he decided to attend Christian Theological Seminary (CTS) in Indiana—a progressive school aligned with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). It helped that Dr. Edward Wheeler, an ordained Baptist minister whom Tim knew when Wheeler worked at Tuskegee, was CTS’s president. During a United chapel service this March, Tim described his experience at CTS as “quite grueling,” but also that he “learned a lot.” As he clarified more recently, he had to “let go of a very fundamentalist perspective,” and that sort of deconstruction was difficult. “It was a crucible situation,” Tim asserts.    Chaplaining and Church Planting After earning his MDiv in 2003, Tim spent years in Mississippi and Texas planting churches and working as a hospital chaplain. Since returning to Minnesota, he’s been a chaplain at Regions Hospital, Abbott Northwestern, and the Minneapolis VA Medical Center, and pastored at Family Bible Church. He suspects that the time he spent with his mother in hospitals likely inclined him toward hospital chaplaincy.  When he decided to pursue a DMin, Tim reviewed his options. Only United, he found, had the interreligious chaplaincy program and liberal ethos that made his MDiv work transformational. Plus, he could attend onsite or online as his schedule allowed. “It was a great benefit,” Tim attests, “to do both.”   United and Nat Turner  Tim credits Dr. Jessica Chapman Lape, former director of the Interreligious Chaplaincy program, with positively shaping his education. Her theological knowledge and emphasis on her African American heritage impressed him. Dr. Munjed Murad’s Comparative Theology course elevated Tim’s intercultural acuity. Munjed is an assistant professor of World Religions and Intercultural Studies, supported by the Johnson-Fry Endowment.  Tim describes his dissertation, “The Exploratory Theology of Nat Turner and Its Effects on African and African American PTSD,” as “a labor of love.” Why Nat Turner? “I appreciate his passion and his desire to live and fight for the rights of his people,” Tim explains, “and his willingness to do so in the name of his religious beliefs.” In addition, “I’m always interested in people that…have been misunderstood or written off as villains.”  Shepherded with vital support from Rev. Dr. Andrew Packman (assistant professor of Theological Ethics and Formation), Tim’s dissertation studies Nat Turner, his traumatic experiences as a slave, and his burgeoning theology. It also traces links to the moral injury, trauma, and PTSD endemic to military service, especially for African American veterans.  Tim wants to “understand more about…how to be an asset to my community.” He feels that “United was a really good place for that” and is a rich resource for “clergy…and spiritual caregivers” who are going to help us “keep pressing toward better understandings.” Tim is grateful for United’s role in honing his academic and spiritual voice.