In January, 2002, I took the train out from New York to visit Pittsburgh Theological Seminary as a prospective student. I had already applied to Princeton Seminary and been turned down. It surprises most people to learn that Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, founded in 1794, is actually older than Princeton Seminary, though both institutions started out in log cabins. Our original campus was in the countryside all the way out by Aliquippa. (For an old post about that location, click on this
LINK.) The current campus was built in the 1950s on the grounds of the old Lockhart estate, from which many of the beautiful trees remain, especially the grand copper beeches and gingkoes--which the Lockharts brought to Highland Park from China in the late 19th century. Mr. Rogers graduated from this school and was actually an ordained Presbyterian minister.

Much has changed here since that January day two and a half decades ago, when I first laid eyes on this place. But these snowy scenes are almost exactly as I found them on that day...at the so-called "Epiphany Event," which was an open house for people considering enrollment in a divinity school. Pictured here is the library, which is a first rate research facility with archeological specimens, scrolls, and shards of Phoenician pottery, and ancient texts in a labyrinth of climate-controlled rooms in the basement...most of which are off limits without special permission. It also has stacks and stacks full of arcane journals in German and French that no one ever, ever touches, not to mention less academic magazines and books.

Today, business called me back to the old alma mater, though I felt strangely ill-at-ease there. I have wonderful memories of my three years in seminary, but revisiting the campus today did not cause me to feel nostalgic. I just wanted to do my thing and go. For that reason, I didn't get a lot of photos.
It's a beautiful atmosphere, very conducive to pondering the big questions of life, meaning, faith, death, mystery, wonder...all the stuff you do at divinity school, while learning ancient Hebrew and how to baptize a slippery baby without dropping it. (I've never lost a baby, but don't ask me about the divorce rate of the couples I've united in holy wedlock....)
In fact, I was supposed to return here for a Chatham Baroque concert last Saturday, but I lingered too long in the North Country and missed it. I see that they rearranged the otherwise attractive chapel for that concert and still haven't put it back together--leaving the altar and pulpit and baptismal font all pushed into corners, as if they didn't belong there...
This is a master's level institution; you need a bachelor's degree to enroll. I graduated in 2005 at the age of 35. It was common in those days (and may still be) for "second career" people to go to seminary. We had 350 students back then, and there are fewer than half that number today. In fact, a lot of rooms that once hummed with life and activity now sit silent, heated, and unused--like this place, which used to be the campus bookstore and convenience store, where they also sold clerical vestments and parish registers--the dorkiest general store of all time.
I don't worry about this school's fate; it's endowed to the tippy-top of its tallest spire, which bears a rooster, not a cross. It doesn't need many students to keep on doing what it's always done. This horrific mosaic is still standing right where it's always stood, a good example of late 20th century liberal Protestant art. There's a lot more to photograph--parlors with fireplaces, lecture halls, rotundas with marble floors. It's a cool place, and most people never get to see the inside. I'm glad they've started hosting Chatham Baroque; at least the public gets to see inside the chapel.