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Pages in category "Seminaries and theological colleges in North Carolina" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Sewanee University of the South, School of Theology: Sewanee, Tennessee: J. Neil Alexander (Dean of the School) 1958: Episcopal Church Shaw University Divinity School: Raleigh, North Carolina: Bruce T. Grady (Dean) 1997: General Baptist State Convention of North Carolina Shepherds Theological Seminary: Cary, North Carolina: Tim Sigler (Dean) 2011
Gordon-Conwell is part of the Boston Theological Institute (BTI), a consortium of nine theological schools in the Greater Boston area and the Carolina Theological Consortium, a consortium of four theological schools in North and South Carolina. Gordon-Conwell is overseen by the main administration at the Hamilton campus.
The Pentecostal Theological Seminary is a private Christian seminary in Cleveland, Tennessee, United States. While part of the educational ministry of the Church of God, the school accepts students of other denominations, particularly those interested in its emphasis on Wesleyan/Holiness theology and Pentecostal spirituality. It has trained ...
Claremont School of Theology: 1885 [7] Claremont, California Duke Divinity School: Duke University: 1926 [8] Durham, North Carolina Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary: 1853 [9] Evanston, Illinois Iliff School of Theology: 1892 [10] Denver Methodist Theological School in Ohio: 1956 [11] Delaware, Ohio Perkins School of Theology: Southern ...
Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary (LTSS) is a seminary of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) and located in Hickory, North Carolina. It offers theological degrees. In 2012, it merged with Lenoir-Rhyne University, also affiliated with the ELCA. [2] Until January 2025, LTSS operated on its pre-merger campus in Columbia, South ...
Newly unsealed federal documents revealed that a private college based in North Carolina was possibly running a fraudulent scheme to make money from taking out fake student loans.
Modern free grace theology is typically, but not necessarily, dispensational in its assumptions regarding the philosophy of history and in terms of its networks and affiliations. Some theologians have attempted to suggest that free grace theology is a natural consequence of dispensationalism.