Issue
Disruption is all around as Fuller Theological Seminary prepares to move from its longtime home
Disruption is all around as Fuller Theological Seminary prepares to move from its longtime home.
As online education has proliferated, the need for regional or branch campuses has decreased, but the demand for these campuses may never entirely go away.
The Seminary Formation Council is addressing the need to teach formation, as a discipline, to the people who actually do that formation.
There is a gender pay gap in theological education, but before jumping to conclusions, it’s important to disaggregate the data. Not all sectors are alike.
Some seminaries sponsor continuing education programs that not only reflect the priorities of that particular institution, but that also prepare church leaders for challenges down the road.
Maybe it’s time to change our perspective from “managing change” to “creating a culture where change is part of the ethos,” writes In Trust Center president Amy L. Kardash.
A report on the work of the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship’s Vital Worship Grants program.
Data compiled from the Graduating Student Questionnaires (GSQ) is helping the Association of Theological Schools (ATS) understand the vocational goals of graduates and the implication of these goals for theological education.
Edwin R. Woodruff Tait reviews Disruption and Hope: Religious Traditions and the Future of Theological Education.
Craig Williford reviews The Council: A Biblical Perspective on Board Governance.
Christa R. Klein reviews Word, Liturgy, Charity: The Diaconate in the U.S. Catholic Church, 1968-2018.
Professors want to help their schools to thrive, writes a professor of New Testament. But if faculty are going to contribute to the health of their institution, they need to be included in meaningful ways.
A gracious, expectant, and somewhat demanding relationship
Dean K. Thompson and D. Cameron Murchison reflect on their edited volume Mentoring: Biblical, Theological, and Practical Perspectives.
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