Cherry Hill Seminary Awards First-Ever Pagan Master of Divinity Degree

For Immediate Release, August 16, 2012
Contact: Holli Emore, 888.503.4131, CHS@cherryhillseminary.org

COLUMBIA, SC — Cherry Hill Seminary today announced the graduation of Sandra Lee Harris, awarding her the Master of Divinity in Pagan Pastoral Counseling. Harris is the first student to complete her master’s degree since Cherry Hill Seminary first opened its graduate program in 2009.

Sandra L. Harris, M.Div., Pagan Pastoral Counseling

“When I started in 2002, Cherry Hill Seminary was the first and best opportunity I found for inexpensive and trustworthy Pagan education beyond the training I received in the Fellowship of the Sacred Grove,” said Harris in an interview. “By the time the masters program was introduced in 2009, I had committed myself to becoming a board-certified chaplain. I embraced the Cherry Hill Seminary program as a way to add the necessary qualification of an M.Div. or equivalent.”

Harris served her internship at St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington, D.C., and prior to that was for several years a volunteer pastoral caregiver and on-call interfaith chaplain at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Falls Church, Virginia. She has been accepted into the Fairfax County Community Chaplain Corps, beginning service following November Corps training.

Executive Director Holli Emore notes that the needs of students like Harris have helped shape the seminary program, and the needs of local and regional communities have shaped the educational choices of Cherry Hill Seminary students. Academic Dean, Wendy Griffin, Ph.D., comments on the unique assets of Cherry Hill Seminary: “Our Masters classes are multi-disciplinary and taught by leading scholars in their fields. A major advantage of an online seminary is that our instructors come from all over the United States, as well as Canada, Britain, France and Australia, and are scholars with whom students would never come into contact except through their writings. Ms. Harris has taken full advantage of the opportunities that Cherry Hill Seminary can offer and we know she will make us proud as she takes up her calling.”

Harris’ department chair and advisor has been Dr. David Oringderff, also founder of Sacred Well Congregation. Oringderff says, “On behalf of the Pagan Pastoral Counseling Department, I would like to extend our congratulations to Sandra L. Harris, M.Div., for an outstanding job well done. Having worked with Sandra as a professor and academic advisor for much of her academic career, I can attest to her diligence, dedication and academic excellence. I am both proud and gratified that she wishes, as an alumnus, to continue her close association with and contributions to Cherry Hill Seminary. Conferral of the Master of Divinity, Pagan Pastoral Counseling, was both a personal milestone for Sandra, and an institutional milestone for the Seminary. As our first Master of Divinity in Pastoral Counseling, she helped set the high standards of excellence for all of our students who follow. We wish her all the best, and pledge our continued support in her endeavors to become a Board-Certified Chaplain through the Association of Professional Chaplains.”

Cherry Hill Seminary is the leader in providing education and practical training for Pagan and Nature-Based spiritualities, leadership, ministry, and personal growth.. Incorporated in the state of South Carolina, all studies are through online distance education, with occasional retreats and conferences. For more information, visit www.cherryhillseminary.org or write CHS@cherryhillseminary.org.

Cherry Hill Seminary Honors Judy Harrow by Library Naming

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 16, 2009
Contact: Holli Emore
(888) 503-4131 chs@cherryhillseminary.org

Cherry Hill Seminary Honors Judy Harrow by Library Naming

Columbia, S.C. – The Board of Directors of Cherry Hill Seminary has approved the naming of its online library, the Judy Harrow Library & Information Center. Harrow, recently retired as Chair of the Pastoral Care and Counseling Department, has served the Seminary as faculty since 2000, and for the past year as a board member.

The first Wiccan to be legally registered as clergy in New York City in 1985, after a five-year effort requiring the assistance of New York Civil Liberties Union, Harrow has a long record of public service, including:

  • Association for Humanistic Psychology and of the American Counseling Association;
  • Association for Specialists in Group Work (ASGW)
  • International Association of Marriage and Family Counselors (IAMFC);
  • Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice;
  • Book Review Board of the Family Journal, a publication of IAMFC;
  • National Advisory Board of the Consultation on Multifaith Education;
  • Steering committee of the Interfaith Council of Greater New York
  • Former President of the Association for Spiritual, Ethical and Religious Values in Counseling (ASERVIC);

A Wiccan priestess since 1977, Harrow founded Proteus Coven in 1981, and held several leadership offices for Covenant of the Goddess, on both national and regional levels, including National First Officer in 1984. She founded the Pagan Pastoral Counseling Network in 1982, and served as the first editor of the Network’s publication. Harrow co-created a successful workshop series, “Basic Counseling Skills for Coven Leaders,” which grew into a series of intensive workshops for Pagan elders on a range of topics. She also founded the New York Area Coven Leaders’ Peer Support Group, and served as Program Coordinator for the first Mid-Atlantic Pan-Pagan Conference and Festival, as well as several other Pagan gatherings.

“I’m surprised, thrilled, and honored by this recognition,” says Ms. Harrow. “I’m also excited by the continuing growth and development of Cherry Hill Seminary, which is a real sign of the maturation of contemporary Paganism. So much has changed for Pagans during the many years of my involvement. I am so proud to have been a small part of it.”

Currently, Cherry Hill Seminary is working towards future accreditation, in part because of Harrow’s work as a liaison to Pagans in the U.S. military, which requires its chaplains to hold a Master of Divinity degree from an accredited institution.

“Since the Seminary is primarily a distance education program, the Judy Harrow Library & Information Center will be an online library,” said Caroline Dechert, Seminary Librarian. “When opened, we will be able to meet the specific information requests of professors for their courses and students, and serve as a repository for faculty and student work. This approach will greatly complement our current relationship with the New Alexandrian Library, a project of the Assembly of the Sacred Wheel.”

Harrow is the author of two books, Wicca Covens (1999), Spiritual Mentoring, (2002), and edited and contributed to Devoted to You: Honoring Deity in Wiccan Practice, (2004). She has contributed to Modern Rites of Passage (1993), Magical Religion and Modern Witchcraft, (1996). Her articles have been published in journals such as AHP Perspective (the newsletter of the Association for Humanistic Psychology), Counseling and Values (the Journal of the Association for Spiritual, Ethical and Religious Values in Counseling), Gnosis, and PanGaia.

Cherry Hill Seminary is a 501(c)3 organization, offering graduate education for Pagan ministry and scholarship, as well as adult education and training in Pagan ministry. Contributions to the general fund, in honor of Judy Harrow, may be sent to Cherry Hill Seminary, P.O. Box 5405, Columbia, SC 29250-5405, or online at https://www.justgive.org/nonprofits/donate.jsp?ein=20-4542690.

For more information, contact Holli Emore, Executive Director, at 888.503.4131, or CHS@cherryhillseminary.org.