Issue
In new five-year programs, students earn bachelor's and master's degrees and get into ministry, all before they turn 25
In new five-year programs, students earn bachelor’s and master’s degrees and get into ministry, all before they turn 25
A growing number of seminaries are adding courses or programs in Islamic studies using a variety of models, depending on the school’s particular needs and situations
The special section in this issue examines eight mergers or partnerships.
A review of How Youth Ministry Can Change Theological Education – If We Let It. ed. by Kenda Creasy Dean and Christy Lang Hearlson.
Franciscan School of Theology exited the Graduate Theological Union, moved to a historic mission complex, and entered into a resource-sharing agreement with the University of San Diego.
When Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary and Lenoir-Rhyne University merged, the seminary gained financial stability and the university acquired a new campus.
A quick merger between Mennonite Brethren Biblical Seminary and Fresno Pacific University left a few details to be worked out afterwards.
Milligan College and Emmanuel Christian Seminary had complementary missions and were next-door neighbors in eastern Tennessee. It just made sense to marry.
The Lutheran seminaries at Gettysburg and Philadelphia are in the process of consolidating, and their leaders are learning valuable lessons.
St. Mary’s Ecumenical Institute and Ashland Theological Seminary are in the first semester of a new joint D.Min. program.
Alliance University College and Nazarene University College combined forces, building a new home for undergraduates and seminarians alike in booming Calgary.
An interview with Tom Ingram, president emeritus of the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges.
An interview with Aimée A. Laramore.
Union Theological Seminary and The Presbyterian School of Christian Education merged in 1995, but in some ways the process took 20 years.
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