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Marsh Chapel, the Soul of Boston University, Kicks Off Its 75th Anniversary Celebration This Weekend

Highlights include a sermon by US Senator Raphael Warnock in November

University News

Marsh Chapel, the Soul of Boston University, Kicks Off Its 75th Anniversary Celebration

Highlights include a sermon by Rev. Raphael Warnock in November

September 24, 2025
  • Rich Barlow
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Kimberly Macdonald joined the Marsh Chapel Choir at Boston University during her freshman year, in 2001. Macdonald (CFA’04, COM’23) is still singing in the choir 24 years later, as the chapel, opened in 1950, celebrates its 75th anniversary. 

“The chapel choir is a spiritual home for me and many of my fellow singers and alumni,” says Macdonald, the BU School of Theology marketing and communications director. “I’ve grown up with this choir. It is the intergenerational community that has been the most steadfast and solid throughout my entire adult life. We’ve seen each other through job changes, moves across the globe, getting married and having children, loves and losses, successes and failures.” Macdonald’s choir mates sang at her wedding in 2013.

In the video above, the Rev. Robert Allan Hill, dean of Boston University’s Marsh Chapel, describes the chapel’s role in campus life. Video by Sheila Barrett

Marsh Chapel, BU’s religious center, will spend this academic year observing its diamond anniversary, having evoked the glory of God architecturally, with its vaulted ceiling, stained glass, and buttresses, for those 75 years. But in Macdonald and the generations of people who have gathered here—to pray, sing, marry, bury loved ones, bid graduates farewell at the annual Baccalaureate, and mark historic national events like 9/11 on Marsh Plaza—the chapel incarnates St. Irenaeus’ definition of God’s glory: human beings “fully alive.”

“Personal holiness and social holiness both converge here,” says the Rev. Robert Allan Hill, the chapel’s dean since 2006 and the sixth person to hold that position; he is also a School of Theology professor. “We express a deep personal faith and an active social involvement [that are] mutually enriching.”

As Marsh Chapel’s sixth dean, the Rev. Robert Allan Hill guides a dual mission of promoting “deep personal faith and an active social involvement.” Photo by Jake Belcher
Rev. Raphael Warnock will preach the November 16 Sunday service in honor of Marsh’s 75th anniversary. Photo courtesy of Warnock

The marquee anniversary event will be a Service of Celebration on November 16 featuring the Rev. Raphael Warnock, senior pastor of Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church—once copastored by Boston University’s most illustrious alum, Martin Luther King, Jr. (GRS’55, Hon.’59)–and Georgia’s junior US senator. The year of observances, which includes a fundraising effort to endow the chapel deanship, begins this Alumni Weekend (September 25 to 28), when Marsh’s Sunday service will reunite 35 alumni members of the chapel choir to sing, Macdonald says.

(Check below for other anniversary-related events.)

Commemorative events for Marsh Chapel’s 75th anniversary will span the temporal to the spiritual. 

Key among the former is a $4.5 million fund drive to endow the chapel deanship. Towards that effort, all offerings at chapel services during the 2025-2026 fiscal year will be earmarked for the endowment. 

“We really need a fund about five times [the chapel’s current resources] to sustain everything that we’re doing,” says the Rev. Robert Allan Hill, Marsh dean, with “‘everything’ including both the building’s upkeep and the chapel’s programming.”  

In the spiritual category, music will feature prominently at a chapel whose choir has recorded CDs and performed at iconic off-campus locales like Trinity Church Wall Street. In addition to the September 28 service reuniting former choir members to sing, on another, to-be-determined, Sunday, an organ-and-choir anthem that was composed for Marsh’s 1950 dedication, “Behold, I Build an House,” will be performed by the choir. The hymn recounts King Solomon’s construction of the First Temple in Jerusalem.

The chapel also is collecting stories from those whose lives it has touched—students, faculty, staff, alumni, musicians, congregants, audiences of the chapel’s worship podcast and livestream, couples married here—via a dedicated website that invites video, audio, and written submissions about Marsh’s meaning for them. 

On October 19, a private Marsh Chapel Women’s Gathering will be held from 12:30 to 2 pm on the 17th floor of the Duan Family Center for Computing & Data Sciences, says event organizer Jan Hill, Dean Hill’s wife. During that event, Robin Mosgrove, granddaughter of the late Daniel Marsh (STH 1908, Hon.’53), BU’s fourth president and chapel namesake, will talk about her grandfather and share stories of her mother’s time growing up in the BU Castle.

In addition, says Hill, an exhibition at the chapel to honor the 75th Anniversary will display some memorabilia for this Alumni Weekend, September 25-28, and also on November 16 for the 75th anniversary’s marquis event: a sermon at Marsh’s 11 am Sunday worship by US Senator Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), senior pastor of Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, the church once copastored by Martin Luther King, Jr. (GRS’55, Hon.’59).

Hill describes Marsh as “the leading pulpit in Methodism globally and nationally.” That status owes in large part to the storied figures who have presided inside these limestone walls and the adjacent School of Theology. They include the Rev. Howard Thurman (Hon.’67), Marsh Chapel dean from 1953 to 1965 and the first Black dean at any mostly white US university; King, who during his BU studies found in Thurman a crucial mentor; and the man from whom Hill got his middle name, Allan Knight Chalmers, a BU School of Theology professor and a prominent civil rights leader.

Traditional ministry, adapting to the times

While anchoring BU’s religious life and traditions, Marsh Chapel has evolved with the country’s and the University’s expanding religious diversity. Hill works with nine BU chaplains, serving various denominations and student cohorts (the Muslim chaplaincy expanded last year). These chaplains and a half dozen staffers oversee a wide range of functions within these limestone walls that extend beyond Sunday worship. 

Just a few examples: weekly community dinners open to all students; weekly arts and crafts sessions, to help leaven academic pressures; twice-weekly tai chi classes; a Wednesday Eucharist service cum casual dinner; the Inner Strength Gospel Choir; the University’s Catholic masses; and hosting various BU-affiliated gatherings and Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.

Marsh Chapel by the Numbers

220-250

average in-person Sunday worshipers

350-400

average livestream viewers of Sunday worship services

877, and counting,

services uploaded as podcasts, beginning in 2008

3,010

weddings celebrated, the first on April 15, 1950, by the Rev. Walter G. Muelder (STH’30,’33), dean of the School of Theology

700-plus

student workers or trainees while attending BU since 1950

950-plus

events hosted by the Chapel each year, including on- and off-campus groups

Photo by Cydney Scott

As Hill prepares to mark his 20th anniversary at Marsh, he carries emotionally deep-hued memories, one involving a national tragedy that touched BU. In 2013, the Boston Marathon bombings killed BU student Lu Lingzi (GRS’13). A packed, livestreamed memorial service at the George Sherman Union included 18 grieving members of Lingzi’s family from China. Hill sat in the second row, “watching to make sure everything that we hoped to plan out was going through.” All went according to script until the end. The family, who were to process out, didn’t move. 

“There was this long silence,” Hill says. “I thought, did we forget something? The family—they were all dressed in black—walked up on stage and looked out at the global audience and at those present, and then—it could only occur in the moment—bowed, and held the bow for a long time,” in gratitude to the community that was helping them mourn. 

But Marsh’s religious mission has also encompassed lighter moments, including one year’s Easter Vigil service, where baptisms were being performed. “We had a student from Canada,” Hill recalls, “who said, ‘I want to be immersed. I want it to be not just water on the head, but underwater, bodily.’” A brief consideration of immersion in the Charles River was dismissed, so instead a chapel assistant got a small pool and filled it outside, with the temperature hovering around 40 degrees. 

“We went out in the middle of the service on the side lawn and put this young fellow under water,” Hill says. “He was chilly, but baptized.”

Marsh Chapel, the center of religious life at BU, was built to welcome students and staff of all faiths, not just the historic Methodism of its founding. Photo by Bob O’Connor

Built to withstand an earthquake

During construction in the late 1940s, builders assured BU President Daniel Marsh (STH 1908, Hon.’53) that his namesake $1 million chapel would stand for a millennium. The University’s trustees christened the chapel in recognition of Marsh’s dual role as a man of learning and of faith: the president was also a Methodist minister who viewed a campus chapel “not as a luxury, but as a necessity.” The cornerstone contains devotional books—Protestant, Catholic, Jewish—placed there by Marsh. The stained glass windows include references to each of those faiths. The ecumenism honors BU’s rejection of quotas for Jewish and other minority students, with Marsh pointing out that BU had “more Jews than Brandeis and more Catholics than Boston College.”

Three years after its opening, Thurman became chapel dean, his groundbreaking appointment drawing media attention, which, along with his dynamic sermons, filled Marsh’s pews each Sunday. 

The Rev. Howard Thurman (Hon.’67), Marsh Chapel dean and the first black dean at a mostly white US university, in 1953. Photo by Boston University Photography

In 1949, BU President Daniel Marsh (STH 1908, Hon.’53) laid the cornerstone for the chapel that would bear his name. Photo by Boston University Photography

Over ensuing decades, BU made Marsh Chapel and Marsh Plaza the communal gathering place to grieve tragedies and exult over triumphs. The day after King’s 1968 assassination, a huge crowd mourned him at a memorial outside the chapel. And Marsh Chapel would become the sinew connecting that era’s Vietnam War turmoil with healing decades later. In 1970, the National Guard killing of four students at Kent State University protesting the Vietnam War, and the resulting unrest at BU and nationwide, led the University to cancel Commencement. Exactly 40 years later, BU gave the Class of 1970 a belated ceremony, including a chapel memorial service for deceased classmates. 

A soloist led the crowd in Let It Be, unleashing class members’ tears over their missed graduation, which Hill—looking back in 2020—called “a 40-year grief that finally got healed.”

Last year, the chapel was the site of a service of prayer and thanksgiving on the occasion of Melissa Gilliam’s inauguration as BU’s 11th president. 

As for the future—Marsh was built for a millennium—Hill puts his faith in the students and worshipers inspired by this place, who will undertake “the preaching of the Gospel, broadly construed…not just Christian traditions only, but in the full panoply of religious life.”

Find a photo gallery here highlighting
Marsh Chapel through the decades.

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