Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary Advanced Master of Arts Chrsitian Education

SWBTS, OBU partnership shortens
path to master'south degree

Past Alex Sibley

FORT WORTH, Texas (BP) — Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and Oklahoma Baptist University have established a pathway for OBU bachelor's students to enter Southwestern Seminary's primary's programs with advanced continuing, expediting their theological education, the two schools announced November. 11.

"I'yard delighted with this new partnership with OBU, further strengthening the strong human relationship between Seminary Hill and Bison Hill," said Adam W. Greenway, president of Southwestern Seminary. "It'south a win-win-win — for Southwestern Seminary, for OBU, and, near of all, for students."

The relationship between the two institutions provides an accelerated pathway from a bachelor's degree at OBU to a master'south degree at Southwestern Seminary. OBU students will be able to receive chief's credit at Southwestern Seminary for piece of work done at OBU. Thus, upon enrollment at Southwestern Seminary, OBU graduates will already be well downwardly the road toward a chief'south degree.

Through this collaboration, bachelor'south graduates from OBU who have already taken courses in Old Testament, New Attestation, biblical languages, and church history may demonstrate their proficiency in these subjects through advanced standing tests at Southwestern Seminary. If graduates pass these tests, and then they volition receive credit for these courses at the master's level, and they will not be required to echo them during their studies at the seminary.

"In short," explained Mark Leeds, registrar at Southwestern Seminary, "this partnership provides a more efficient manner for students to train for their calling."

Randy L. Stinson, provost and vice president for academic administration at Southwestern Seminary, said the human relationship is beneficial for both institutions and serves every bit an example of cooperation between like-minded institutions.

"We are excited about the partnership, which will provide a pathway for OBU students to enter master'south programs at Southwestern ahead of the game," Stinson said. "We look frontwards to a healthy and prosperous relationship between OBU and Southwestern for many years into the future."

"For over 100 years, Oklahoma Baptist University has transformed lives through a distinctively Christian liberal arts instruction," said Heath A. Thomas, newly elected president of OBU. "We are discerning in our partnerships — we partner with agreeing institutions in our Baptist family that are committed to biblical, orthodox, and practical ministry grooming. Southwestern Seminary has been committed to this vision for decades.

"OBU has worked with Southwestern Seminary for a B.A. to 1000.Div. pathway through extension centers in the past, merely we believe this new pathway will serve our students strategically for the futurity, saving them time and coin every bit they move from a world-form undergraduate education to a globe-grade graduate education."

Thomas added that, as both an OBU and Southwestern Seminary alum, he is delighted to encounter this fellowship sally between the two institutions. "It is truthful that we can practice more together than we tin can do lone," he said.

For more than data, contact the Southwestern registrar's office at [e-mail protected] or 817-923-1921, ext. 2000.

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Spurgeon College adds soccer
to intercollegiate sports

Past T. Patrick Hudson

KANSAS Metropolis, Mo. (BP) — Less than six months afterwards announcing its foray into intercollegiate athletics through a basketball game programme, Spurgeon College unveiled plans on Nov. xi to field men'southward and women'southward soccer teams at the school.

With collegiate facilities now in place on campus and with the hiring of a head coach, the procedure of forming men'south and women'south soccer teams is fully underway.

In October of 2018, Midwestern Seminary'due south trustees received plans from the assistants to field sports teams at Spurgeon College through the NCCAA, commencement with basketball. This October, the school hired Matt Risher every bit caput charabanc and informed the NCCAA of the schoolhouse's intent to field men'due south and women'southward soccer teams.

"We are thrilled to announce the addition of men's and women's soccer to the athletic plan at Spurgeon College," said president Jason Allen. "Several factors, including the initial success and strong community interest in our Knights basketball program, take weighed heavily in our decision to add together these new teams to our sports programs. Each will bring a unique and valuable contribution to our campus community.

"I am also very pleased to introduce Matt Risher as the programme'south head coach. After conducting a thorough search for the right human being for this position, it was clear that Passenger vehicle Risher possessed all the attributes we desired in leading these teams. He is a young man with great personal experience at the Segmentation I college-level. He as well possesses free energy, knowledge of the game, and excellent leadership abilities. Nearly importantly, he seeks to lead a group of young men and women to get passionate and effective followers of Christ. He sees soccer equally an environment that's conducive for discipleship."

Risher has been a student at Midwestern Seminary for the past 2 years — graduating with a master of divinity degree and currently pursuing a Ph.D. in systematic theology. All the same, prior to his fourth dimension in Kanas Urban center, he played higher soccer at Marshall University in Westward Virginia and Littoral Carolina University in Due south Carolina. During his college career, Risher scored nine goals and helped pb Coastal Carolina to two Big South Conference championships. While a pupil at Marvin Ridge High School in Waxhaw, N.C., he was a three-time all-state player, scoring more than lxx career goals.

"It is a tremendous honor to exist named the caput autobus of the men's and women's soccer teams. I am excited about the ability to impact Christ's Kingdom through the world's nearly popular game," Risher said. "My goal for the Knights is three-fold: Primarily, I am viewing this as a discipleship program. Soccer will exist the instrument used to help mold and shape these immature men and women into what God has called them to be in the future — namely faithful church members, husbands, wives, fathers and mothers.

"Secondly, we aim to be a competitive plan. The difference betwixt high school and college soccer is huge. I look frontward to the claiming of having a squad that tin can successfully compete at this level. Finally, we aim to advance the Kingdom of God. Soccer can exist used equally a platform to spread the Gospel of Jesus Christ across the world."

Risher added that he's encouraged by the excitement and energy about the program that's edifice around campus and said he senses that the program will provide the campus community an enhanced feel for students, faculty, and staff alike.

During its initial campaign, the ii teams will play at the inferior varsity level with a majority of the team'southward competition existence local and regional NAIA and Segmentation 2 squads.

Risher noted that program planning, development, and recruiting are underway but in their earliest stages. He besides has been spending time formulating the values and framework for the team, so that the players and assistants will know why they do what they practice, and exactly how they are going to do it. This includes developing his coaching philosophy, the vision, the teams' mission, likewise as the offensive and defensive schemes.

From a recruiting standpoint, Risher said the process is underway with several prospective players visiting campus in the days ahead. He added there's a specific type of player that he's interested in joining the team.

"I am looking for high character immature men and women," he said. "We are trying to create a civilisation of excellence, and that will require people who come in ready to work. My coaching style is one that attracts players who enjoy a possession style of soccer. Nosotros want highly-technical players who can play speedily and want to score goals."

The Knights will begin play in the fall of 2020 with matches potentially being lined for a September commencement. Matches volition be played on Midwestern Seminary'southward campus on the newly established pitch to the north of the Mathena Student Center. Risher hopes to have 12 matches for the inaugural get-go season.

To learn more about the Spurgeon Higher Knights men's and women's soccer teams, visit www.spurgeoncollege.com/athletics or contact coach Risher directly at [email protected]

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International Brotherhood for Christian
Educational activity to launch in January 2020

By Staff

FORT WORTH, Texas (BP) — Leaders of the International Alliance for Christian Pedagogy announced today that the organization would launch operations in January 2020, seeking to unite Christian educators in every global region around their common commitments to Christ-centeredness and confessional solidarity.

The IACE will seek to provide strong connections and collaborative opportunities for a growing list of Christian education programs on every continent.

IACE president David S. Dockery said the new brotherhood would not seek to compete with nor supercede existing organizations doing similar work. But he said a network is needed to correspond all sectors of Christian education, complementing and partnering with the existing organizations whenever possible.

"The IACE will be more than focused than another Christian education networks, in lite of its exclusive confessional composition," Dockery said.

The core criteria for membership include a Christ-centered mission and employment policies, cooperative and collaborative spirit, confessional commitments rooted in the truthfulness of Holy Scripture, and a cultural witness that reflects biblical orthodoxy and historic Christian teachings.

"For several years, our association'due south board and senior leadership have been convinced God is calling us to seek to ally ourselves and actively collaborate with a larger circle of confessionally congruent fellow Christian educators from around the globe," said Ralph Enlow, IACE board chair and president of the Clan for Biblical Higher Education. "That divine prompting has plant expression and embrace in the emergence of IACE."

3 membership categories volition serve educational and academic organizations, degree-granting institutions, and partners who exhibit commitment to intellectual discipleship while encouraging the work of Christian education.

By the cease of 2020, IACE leaders plan to class a fellowship grouping intended to connect the shared interests of confessional Christian colleges and universities, gap-year programs, and seminaries/divinity schools.

"We're always encouraged by new initiatives that provide increased attending and conversation around the value and life-changing work of Christian higher pedagogy," Council for Christian Colleges & Universities president Shirley Hoogstra said. "We expect forward to opportunities to partner with IACE leadership to continue to accelerate the cause of Christ-centered higher education."

"A decade from now, I think we will all look dorsum and see the significance of this organization and prophetic foresight and leadership exercised by David Dockery and others," Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary provost Bruce Ashford said.

The IACE currently has commitments from 50 charter institutions and seven organizations, with more expected to join prior the January launch. Leaders are considering a separate affiliate membership status for institutions that meet some but non all of the criteria for full membership.

In addition to Dockery, other IACE officers include Enlow; Carl Zylstra (vice chair), by president, Dordt College and executive director, Association of Reformed Colleges and Universities; Gene Fant (treasurer), president, North Greenville University; and Barbara McMillin (secretary), president, Bluish Mountain Higher. Other Lath members include: Robert Sloan, president, Houston Baptist University, Mark Bailey, president, Dallas Theological Seminary, and Peter Teague, president, Lancaster Bible College/Capital Seminary, among others.

In improver to the governing board, more than 20 key Christian leaders will serve as Board of Reference members and/or Senior Fellows, including:

— Robert C. Andringa, managing partner of the Andringa Group and former president of the Quango for Christian Colleges and Universities

— D. A. Carson, president, The Gospel Coalition

— Graham Cole, dean and vice president for pedagogy, Trinity Evangelical Divinity Schoolhouse

— Yoon Hee Kim, president, Torch Trinity Graduate Academy, Seoul, S Korea

— Josh Moody, senior pastor, The College Church, Wheaton, Illinois

— Russell Moore, president, Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission

— Michael Oh, president, Lausanne Fellowship

— Karen Consume Prior, professor of English, Liberty University

— Thom Rainer, president, Church Answers and past president, LifeWay Christian Resources

— Luder Whitlock, president emeritus, Reformed Theological Seminary and one-time president, Trinity Forum

Because fundamental leaders, institutions, and alliances are involved, IACE can exist thought of as a network of networks and organizations. The launch has prompted enthusiastic responses from key leaders in Christian higher education.

"Through IACE, Christian education'due south many separate networks can discover and model what it ways to affirm and live out 'in essentials unity, in non-essentials liberty, in all things honey,'" Andringa said. "IACE is a visionary initiative with an adventurous promise."

"Having our various Christian education sectors linked together through IACE as an ongoing network holds hope for making our united movement and each sector much more than effective equally we collectively or individually face challenges," said Paul R. Corts, the former president of the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities, Palm Embankment Atlantic University, and Wingate Academy."

"It is a wonderful new initiative with an impressive array of opportunities for Christian institutions," Sloan said. "It enables us to expand our academic and professional relationships, enrich our opportunities for academic networking, and also deepen the missional commitments of our institution."

"I am excited near the work of IACE because it is a great cloud of similar-minded educators and organizations, encouraging and reminding me that equally we are about Kingdom work, including the work of education, we take many partners effectually the world and in all levels of learning," Fant said. "The IACE is an alliance of encouragement and professional edification for our shared work."

Dockery said IACE plans an initial membership gathering for February 12-14, 2020 at the Rosen Plaza Hotel in Orlando, Florida. Every bit IACE develops, he said it is possible the alliance would schedule larger biennial or triennial meetings.

For a more detailed introduction to IACE, please visit the organization's new website at iace.educational activity.

    Almost the Author

  • SBC Seminaries and IACE Staff

    Alex Sibley is associate manager of news and information at SWBTS. T. Patrick Hudson is assistant professor of communications and history at Spurgeon College.Read All by SBC Seminaries and IACE Staff ›

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Source: https://www.baptistpress.com/resource-library/news/from-the-seminaries-swbts-obu-partnership-spurgeon-soccer-new-christian-ed-group/

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