Sandra Schneiders was born in Chicago, the second of seven children. Her father, a professor of psychology, and her mother, a homemaker and academic secretary, fostered an environment that valued both intellectual work and faith. After completing her first year of college at St. Joseph’s in Maryland, she entered the
I.H.M. congregation in 1955, fulfilling what she describes as a lifelong certainty about her vocation. She continued her undergraduate studies at
Marygrove College, majoring in sociology and social sciences. While already teaching, she completed her graduate studies at the
University of Detroit. In 1968, her congregation sent her to Paris to complete her education with a Licentiate in Theology from the
Institut catholique. Upon her return, she resumed her teaching at Marygrove College, this time as a professor of theology, before traveling to Rome to pursue a doctorate in Sacred Theology at the
Gregorian University. Specializing in biblical studies, she developed a particular expertise in the Gospel of John and biblical hermeneutics. Her research interests also expanded to spirituality, with a focus on the history and theology of religious life. With her theological training complete, Dr. Schneiders moved to California, where she has served since 1976 as a professor of New Testament Studies and Spirituality at the
Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley (now part of
Santa Clara University and member of the
Graduate Theological Union). There, she has played a key role in advancing the study of Christian spirituality as an academic field. In 1990, Schneiders was among the signatories of the pastoral letter "A Call for Reform in the Catholic Church," which advocated for structural evolutions within the Church. In 2006, a volume of essays was published in her honor. ==Theological Views==