Thiemann, an ordained
Lutheran minister, held an
M.A. from
Concordia Senior College, a M.Div. from
Concordia Seminary, and both an
M.A. and a
Ph.D. from
Yale University. He was a professor in the Religion Department at
Haverford College, where he also served as acting provost and acting president (1985–86) before joining
Harvard University in 1986. Thiemann held the Benjamin Bussey Professorship of Theology, the oldest endowed chair in theology at Harvard. He was a faculty associate of the
Weatherhead Center for International Affairs in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and was a Faculty Fellow at the John F. Kennedy School's
Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations, where he served on the steering committee of the center's Joint Program in Religion and Public Life. He was a faculty affiliate at the
Kennedy School's Harvard Center for Public Leadership and received a fellowship from the center in support of his research project. He worked on a book-length project entitled
Prisoners of Conscience: Public Intellectuals in a Time of Crisis, which examines the courageous stance of four public figures—
Anna Akhmatova,
Albert Camus,
Langston Hughes and
George Orwell—during the tumultuous period of 1914–45. In 2006 Thiemann represented the U.S.
National Academies of Science on a lecture tour of universities and research centers in the
Islamic Republic of Iran. While acting president of
Haverford College, Thiemann officiated at the May 1986 graduation ceremonies during which honorary doctorates were to be awarded to Edwin Bronner, Robert M. Gavin Jr.,
Eleanor Holmes Norton and
Andrew L. Lewis, Jr. Lewis, head of the Union Pacific Railroad, had recently served as U.S. Secretary of Transportation in the cabinet of Ronald Reagan and overseen the lockout of striking air traffic controllers in 1981. 28 of the college's 90 faculty had signed a letter protesting the award of the honorary doctorate to Lewis. On the dais, Lewis unexpectedly declined the award citing the lack of consensus, prompting the stunned audience to rise in applause at his action which honored the college's commitment to operating by consensus. President Thiemann later praised Lewis, calling his decision "an act of great courage and integrity". == Pornography case ==