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November 2008 Issue
New
Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary
Heart, Mind, and Soul
by Paul F. South
What should a seminary be doing
to prepare those called to minister in the twenty-first century?
New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary president Chuck Kelley
has challenged the seminary's administration and faculty to "reinvent
seminary for the twenty-first century."
"We believe that the seminary of the twenty-first century
needs to pay closer attention to how church is done in today's
world than how seminary was done in the past," said Kelley.
For NOBTS, the seminary of the future will offer a cafeteria of
options traditional campus-based programs, extension center
programs, online programs, and mentorship programs.
One aspect of reinventing seminary for the twenty-first century
is to accelerate online course offerings and to offer new online
certificates. The seminary currently offers six online undergraduate
certificate programs and degree completion for undergraduate students
in Christian ministry, as well as five graduate online certificate
programs.
The undergraduate online certificates offer training in Christian
ministry, biblical studies, biblical ministry, minister's wife,
and women's ministry (basic and advanced). The certificate requirements
range from eight to eighteen hours, and are fully transferable
into Leavell College's bachelor of Christian ministry program.
Leavell College, the seminary's undergraduate college, also
offers undergraduate degree completion for ministers with an associate
degree or partial college degree credit. Students can transfer
in these credit hours and complete a bachelor of arts in Christian
ministry degree online.
The six Internet-based master's-level certificates are in Greek
studies, Hebrew studies, biblical languages,
biblical studies, missions, and apologetics. These online certificates
range from seventeen to twenty-five hours course work (six to
nine courses). These Internet-based courses may be transferred
into one of the seminary's master's degree programs. The missions
certificate offers the minimum training necessary for a missionary
to serve with the SBC's International Mission Board.
Cutting-edge technology helps forge a bond between practical
ministry and academic scholarship at NOBTS. Through an ever-expanding
technological network, students from across the globe can pursue
a degree from NOBTS without leaving home. This allows students
to continue in ministry while concurrently working toward a degree.
Through use of the Internet and other distance learning tools,
the seminary is on the leading edge of education delivery systems.
NOBTS has also made theological education accessible to many
students with its network of eighteen extension centers across
the Southeast, featuring regional learning hubs in Atlanta and
Orlando. These extension centers are strategically located so
that receiving quality theological education is a short drive
away for God-called men and women anywhere in the Southeast. In
the past, extension center students were required to complete
thirty hours of academic work at the New Orleans campus. Now,
all but twelve of those hours can be completed at the Atlanta
and Orlando hubs.
"Our great concern is making theological education as
accessible as possible to as many people as possible," Kelley
said. "This is filling in the gaps for people for whom traditional
theological education is not available. You don't have to choose
between outstanding traditional programs and innovative accessible
programs. We are committed to providing both."
Throughout its ninety-one years, the "School of Providence
and Prayer" has blended practical training with faithful
scholarship, featuring a faculty committed not only to academic
excellence but to servant leadership in the local church.
An example of the powerful combination of pulpit and classroom
is found in these numbers: The seminary faculty ranked twelfth
among North American schools of theology in academic research
in an index of faculty scholarly productivity done by Academic
Analytics and reported in the January 12, 2007 issue of the Chronicle
of Higher Education. At the same time, even with the high
demands of the classroom, each NOBTS faculty member averages ten
years of practical experience in ministry positions such as pastor,
minister of music, minister of education, counselor, and missionary.
Many serve in a variety of capacities in churches throughout the
region.
Following the example of the faculty, many New Orleans Seminary
students serve local churches and ministries while pursuing theological
education applying what they have learned in the classroom
in real-world ministry experiences. This melding of ministry with
academia is a high priority for the seminary, according to seminary
provost Steve Lemke: "I'm very concerned that we be a student-friendly
institution that offers both academic excellence and close ties
to the local church as we prepare students for ministry."
A pastor-graduate student may find himself studying Greek one
moment, and then shepherding his flock the next. Garland Reed,
a student at NOBTS, also serves as pastor of Christ Baptist Church
in Houma, Louisiana. When swelling floodwaters from Hurricane
Ike ravaged his community, he turned to one of his seminary professors,
Ken Taylor, for help.
"I only had to call once," Reed said. Since then
teams of NOBTS faculty and students have traveled to the storm-battered
Terrebonne Parish, helping remove the mud Ike left behind, while
also sharing the life-changing message of Jesus Christ with persons
in the area.
The heart for the local church and long-standing commitment
to academic excellence extends to the school's on-campus ministry
and research centers. The centers are designed to assist and extend
the ministry of the local church and Gospel proclamation around
the world.
The Leavell Center for Evangelism and Church Health, one of
the seminary's ministry-focused research centers, seeks to develop
evangelism strategies to revitalize churches in which growth has
either peaked or declined. Other ministry-focused research centers
include the Perry R. Sanders Center for Ministry Excellence, the
Youth Ministry Institute, the Women's Ministry Program, the Day
Center for Church Planting, and the Global Missions Center.
The seminary's academic-focused research centers include the
Baptist Center for Theology and Ministry, the Haggard Center for
Textual Studies, the Center for Archaeological Research, and the
recently-created Institute for Christian Apologetics, which teaches
Christians to effectively communicate and defend their Christian
faith to people from differing worldviews.
The seminary seeks to instill critical thinking skills to help
students reach a doubting world through events such as the Greer-Heard
Point-Counterpoint Forum. Thinkers from across the theological
and philosophical spectrum have come to the Greer-Heard Forum
to dialogue on the compelling issues of today. Past participants
have included N.T. Wright, Alister McGrath, and William Lane Craig.
"Truth is objective and real. Anyone who is searching
for truth, we believe, will ultimately end up at the feet of Jesus
Christ," Kelley said about Greer-Heard. "The forum shows
us how to engage non-Christian worldviews and how to be seekers
after truth."
"We want to show our students how to engage a secular,
liberal world without worrying about their presuppositions, because
we have confidence in the power of our God to demonstrate His
own truthfulness," he said.
Another tool to help Christians engage the culture is the Institute
for Christian Apologetics, approved by NOBTS trustees earlier
this year. In January, "Defend the Faith: A School of Christian
Apologetics" will equip believers to take on an increasingly
secular society. Professors Robert Stewart and Michael Edens direct
the institute.
The institute will offer apologetics training through conferences
and events, develop resources for churches and ministers, produce
an online apologetics journal, and coordinate evangelism trips
involving apologetics.
"The fundamental purpose why we do this is not to build
an institute," Stewart said, "but to train people to
be more effective in carrying out the Great Commission."
Effective worship ministry is another focal point of training
at NOBTS. The music program at NOBTS provides cutting-edge pedagogy,
not only in musical performance, but in the theological basis
for worship as well.
The program includes training in traditional and contemporary
worship styles. Students are challenged to consider the theology
and philosophy of worship, and the study of worship weaves together
the mind and heart. Again, the combination of practical ministry
and academic excellence is always at work.
A recently-added M.A. in worship ministry at the main campus
and at the North Georgia Hub blends training in musical performance
with study of the theological foundations for worship.
One of the newest academic offerings at NOBTS is the master
of divinity in women's studies. This new offering is distinct
from the seminary's other women's ministry specializations because
of its emphasis on biblical languages, biblical exegesis, theological
and historical reflection, and exploration of biblical gender
roles. An internship program is also included in the curriculum.
The ninety-five-hour program is also designed to help women
address the needs and concerns of women from a biblical basis.
Again, it's a simple case of academic excellence and practical
ministry coming together, a meeting of mind, heart, and spirit.
"This specialized focus in women's studies will provide
our female students an excellent blend of both classical theological
disciplines and practical experience," Lemke said. "Not
only will it afford focused training in theology and the biblical
languages, but it also has a practicum for mentored experience
in women's ministry leadership."
New Orleans and Southern Louisiana have always been ripe mission
fields, with people thirsting for the kind of practical and personal
ministry offered to students at New Orleans Baptist Theological
Seminary. At NOBTS, students have a unique opportunity to be challenged
to develop intellectually and spiritually while moving beyond
the seminary gates to offer the amazing grace of Jesus to a lost
and dying world.
Paul F. South is a member of Edgewater Baptist
Church in New Orleans and is staff writer in the public relations
department at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.
NOBTS Fast Facts
President: Chuck Kelley
Year founded: 1917
Current Enrollment: 3,605
Faculty members: 70
Degrees offered: ACM, BACM, MA, MACE, MMCM, MDiv,
DMin, DEdMin, ThM PhD
Web site: www.nobts.edu
Mission: To equip leaders to fulfill the Great
Commission and the Great Commandments through the local church
and its ministries.
Beyond Hurricane Katrina
When the eye of Hurricane Katrina
passed to the east of New Orleans on August 29, 2005, it appeared
as though the city and New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary
had dodged a bullet. However, just hours after the storm passed,
the levees holding back the rising waters failed, leaving the
city and the seminary under water for weeks.
Almost immediately, God began a work of redemption in the life
of the NOBTS family. The seminary administration quickly formed
a plan to meet the needs of student families and to continue teaching
classes.
Many years before the storm, seminary President Chuck Kelley
led NOBTS to invest in educational technology and to experiment
with new delivery systems. Numerous online learning tools and
courses had been developed. The innovations played a key role
in the seminary's survival following Hurricane Katrina. Without
the online learning tools and the know-how to restructure courses
for the Internet, classes could not have continued during the
Fall 2005 semester.
NOBTS continued all of the scheduled fall classes in some form
using a combination of online courses, extension center
work, and special workshops. Eighty-five percent of NOBTS students
continued taking courses throughout the 2005-2006 school year.
Southern Baptists rushed to the aid of the hurting seminary
family. The SBC Executive Committee provided $6.2 million in Cooperative
Program giving that exceeded 2004-2005 SBC budget requirements.
SBC entities, churches, and individuals also gave sacrificially
to help the seminary. Churches quickly offered to come to New
Orleans to help clean and restore the campus. Volunteer labor
amounting to more than $3 million helped restore the campus.
After a massive reconstruction effort, the campus is now even
more beautiful than before the storm. The facilities have been
improved rather than simply restored. Student enrollment numbers
are climbing again, and the seminary is poised for growth. God
has truly blessed the "School of Providence and Prayer."
Copyright
© 2012 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
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Nashville, Tennessee 37203
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