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Old 01-30-2007, 09:58 AM
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Davidius Davidius is offline.
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Questions concerning Christian academic careers

This thread is a bit of a spin-off from Scott's (PB handle: Theoretical) recent post about which seminary a student who may or may not be going into pastoral ministry should consider. A few of the men who responded made the argument that seminary is a place where pastors should be trained and that therefore only those who are going into pastoral ministry should attend. Scott and I both tried to specify that we were interested in knowing what a person who is looking into a more academic career should consider but I don't think the question was really answered. I thought that it might be helpful to split off and make my own thread to ask some of the questions that the other discussion brought up in my mind.

1. Should students who may not feel called to pastoral ministry consider seminary as an option? On this track, seminary would be the place to get an MA (e.g. an MA in Historical Theology at WSC) before going on to get a PhD in something like Church History from a secular university. This is the track I have personally been considering.

2. If the answer to question 1 is "no," what should a person do who is interested in teaching something like Church History either at seminary or at a Christian undergraduate institution (like Wheaton, Calvin, or my denomination's university, Geneva)?

3. Should all seminary professors be current or former pastors?

4. If I don't feel called to pastoral ministry, should I begin to plan my graduate studies around teaching something other than Church History/Systematic Theology? For instance, I am also very interested in teaching German and Latin. If the path toward a PhD in Church History isn't the right one for me, should I pursue graduate studies in Classics instead of whatever else I might do?

I think I've covered all of the things that were on my mind. If anything else comes up I'll just add it later. I've been thinking about making Classics my second major anyway. My reason for doing so would be to become a master of Latin and get my foot in the door with Greek so that I could either pursue Church History/Historical Theology if that seems acceptable or go on to do whatever would be necessary to teach German and Latin at the high school or university level. This would require me to graduate in May '09 instead of May '08 but I think the benefits would be worth it.
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DAVIDIVS DOCTVS VTRIVSQVE LINGVAE
Husband of Emilia
Member: First Reformed Presbyterian Church of Durham (RPCNA) - Durham, NC
Currently in the process of transferring membership to an as-yet-undecided church in Chapel Hill
Student: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, German Literature and Classics