Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

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The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

Motto: For the truth. For the church. For the world. For the glory of God
Established 1859
Type: Private, Baptist
President: R. Albert Mohler, Jr.
Location Louisville, Kentucky, USA
Affiliations: Southern Baptist Convention;Kentuckiana Metroversity
Website: www.sbts.edu

The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary is located in Louisville, Kentucky and is the flagship seminary of the Southern Baptist Convention, or SBC. Southern Seminary or SBTS is the oldest of the seminaries in the SBC and was founded in Greenville, South Carolina in 1859 by James Petigru Boyce who served as its first president. The end of the Civil War found the seminary holding worthless Confederate war bonds, located in newly impoverished South Carolina during Reconstruction. With the financial help of baptist John D. Rockefeller, the seminary relocated to Louisville in 1877. Southern Seminary upholds the SBC Baptist Faith and Message, and its own Abstract of Principles.

The seminary is accredited by the Association of Theological Schools [1] and the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools[2].

The ninth and current president of the seminary is R. Albert Mohler, Jr., whose tenure began in 1993.

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Southern Baptists

Background

Christianity
Protestantism
Anabaptists
General Baptists & Particular Baptists
Landmarkism
Conservative/Fundamentalist Ascendance


Baptist theology

London Confession, 1689
New Hampshire Confession, 1833
Baptist Faith & Message


Doctrinal distinctives

Biblical inerrancy
Autonomy of the local church
Priesthood of believers
Two ordinances
Individual soul liberty
Separation of church and state
Two offices


People
Deceased

John SpilsburyLottie MoonB. H. Carroll
W.A. CriswellAdrian RogersJerry Falwell, Sr.

Living

Billy GrahamFranklin GrahamDuke K. McCall
Richard LandPaige PattersonAlbert Mohler
Mark DeverJonathan Falwell
Mike HuckabeeRick Warren


Related organizations

Cooperative Program
North American Mission Board
International Mission Board
LifeWay Christian Resources
Women's Missionary Union
Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission
Baptist Press
Canadian Convention


Seminaries

Golden Gate
Midwestern
New Orleans
Southeastern
Southern
Southwestern

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Contents

Southern Baptist Theological Seminary primarily practices "traditional" or "evangelical" apologetic religious training combined with practical ministerial experience. According to Wikipedia, "Apologetics is the field of study concerned with the systematic defense of a position. Someone who engages in apologetics is called an apologist or an "apologete". The term comes from the Greek word apologia (απολογία), meaning defense of a position against an attack."

In this method students are taught about Baptist theology and other religions so that future ministers, missionaries, and church workers can most effectively communicate and defend their faith to non-Christians. This method of teaching involves evaluating, with a purpose in validating, the Christian Bible to be the inspired word of the Christian God and infallible. This must not be confused with non-faith-based religious education, which is an academic discipline of the liberal arts. Methods of Biblical inquiry accepted by secular scholars are usually significantly different, generally involving an inherent view of the Bible as non-inspired.

This understanding of religious education also differs from the critical method of religious training, which is commonly taught in many modern seminaries and universities. In the critical method, the Christian Bible is seen as non-authoritative, and religion is seen as a pure humanity. Religion as an academic discipline occupies itself with the purely objective and non-faith-based study of world religions and religion (all religions, including non-Christian) as a timeless aspect of the human condition.

According to the Southern Baptist Convention, the Seminary has been an innovator in theological education since its founding in 1859 in Greenville, South Carolina as the first seminary of the SBC. The school's pioneering legacy began in the visionary mind of James Petigru Boyce, the school's first president. Boyce dreamed of a school that would accept all God-called individuals for study regardless of their educational background.

Though disrupted briefly by the Civil War, Southern Seminary has continued to pursue Boyce's initial vision for nearly 150 years. Southern was one of the first seminaries in the nation to offer a Ph. D. Its department of missions is one of the oldest in the world. It was the first in the nation to offer courses in religious education and in church social work. In 1994, Southern Seminary opened the Billy Graham School of Missions, Evangelism and Church Growth, the first program in the Southern Baptist Convention dedicated solely to training missionaries and evangelists. In 1997, Southern again made changes to advance theological education with the formation of an undergraduate program, The James P. Boyce College of the Bible, now simply Boyce College.

See also Category:Southern Baptist Theological Seminary alumni
See also Category:Southern Baptist Theological Seminary alumni

Southern is currently structured under five schools:

Noted current faculty members include Thomas Schreiner, Bruce Ware, Thomas Nettles, Gregory Wills, Chad Owen Brand, Timothy Paul Jones, Joel Drinkard, Kenneth Mathews, Eugene Merrill, Michael A.G. Haykin, Russell Moore, Donald Whitney, and Charles Lawless.

Under the lordship of Jesus Christ, the mission of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary is

to be totally committed to the Bible as the Word of God,
to the Great Commission as our mandate,
and to be a servant of the churches
of the Southern Baptist Convention
by training, educating, and preparing ministers
of the gospel for more faithful service.


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