Robert Scott Ellwood Jr. was born in
Normal, Illinois July 17, 1933, the son of Robert Sr. and Knola Ellwood. Robert Sr. was a teacher in the high school affiliated with
Illinois State Normal University, and a pioneer in the development of
sociology as a high school subject. In 1945 the family moved to
Chadron, Nebraska, where Robert Sr. became chair of the Education Department at the
Nebraska State Teachers College located there. He graduated from Chadron Preparatory School in 1951, and from the
University of Colorado in 1954. He then attended
Berkeley Divinity School in New Haven, CT, an Episcopal seminary now affiliated with Yale Divinity School. He graduated and was ordained a priest in the
Episcopal Church in 1957. He pastored Christ Church, Central City, NE 1957-1960. In 1961-62 Ellwood served as a chaplain in the U.S. Navy. While stationed in Okinawa and Japan he became interested in Japanese religion, and world religions generally. Reading the works of
Mircea Eliade led to an interest in Eliade's structuralist and phenomenological approach to religion as a way of understanding similarities and differences in religions. As a consequence, in 1963 he entered the University of
Chicago Divinity School's history of religion program led by Eliade, receiving the Ph.D. in 1967 after a final year of study in Japan. In 1967 Ellwood became a professor of religion at the
University of Southern California, Los Angeles, serving there until retirement in 1997. In 1988 he received a Fulbright Research Grant to study new religious movements in New Zealand, and spent six months there working in the
national library in Wellington. He also taught briefly in the Universities of
Cape Town and
Natal in South Africa, and after retirement at
Auburn University in Alabama. He was named Distinguished Emeritus Professor by U.S.C. in 2002, and Alumnus of the Year by the University of Chicago Divinity School in 2009. ==Work==