Rena Joyce Weller was born in
Bridgeport, Connecticut, the daughter of Sailsman William Weller and Rosa Lee Lowery Weller. Her Jamaican-born father was an ordained clergyman in the
AME Zion denomination; her mother was a leader in churchwork as well, as national president of the AMEZ denomination's Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary Society, and as president of the Connecticut State Union of Women. She trained as a teacher at the
Teachers College of Connecticut, where she was the youngest member of the graduating class of 1940, and played softball and volleyball. She earned a master's degree in religious education from
Drew Theological Seminary in 1942. She completed a
bachelor of divinity degree from Yale Divinity School in 1945, studying with
H. Richard Niebuhr and
Liston Pope. She earned a Doctor of Theology degree from Harvard Divinity School in 1976, the first Black woman to do so. Her Harvard thesis was titled "An analysis of representative official statements by the
World Council of Churches on the problem of race" (1976). == Career ==