Theological University of the Reformed Churches
The Theological University of the Reformed Churches (Template:Lang-nl) is a theological seminary in the Dutch city of Kampen. It was founded in 1944, but its history goes back to 1854.
The Theological University of the Reformed Churches primarily caters to ministerial education. In order to be an ordained minister in the Reformed Churches a six-year training including a Bachelor of Theology (BA) and Master of Divinity (MA) are required. Next to these programs the Seminary offers one-year Master programs (MA) in several disciplines. Especially the MA in 21st Century Mission under the supervision of Stefan Paas is a popular program. Additionally, academic research is carried out by the faculty, several post-doctoral fellows, and PhD-students. The doctoral course offered by the University is typically a four-year program.
History
In 1854, a Theological School ("Theologische School") was founded by the Christian Reformed Church in the Netherlands, a church resulting from a schism in 1834 from the mainline Reformed Church in the Netherlands (Hervormde Kerk), to provide for education for its ministers. The name was changed to Theological College ("Theologische Hogeschool") in 1939.
In 1892, a large part of the Christian Reformed Church in the Netherlands merged with another group split from the mainstream Dutch Reformed Church to form the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands, which founded a new Calvinist university in Amsterdam: the Free University. This university also has a theological faculty, but the Theological School at Kampen remained a separate institution.
In 1944, another schism within the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands occurred, called the Liberation ("Vrijmaking"), which resulted in the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Liberated). This new church also had a need for its own ministerial education institute, and so a new Theological College of the Reformed Churches (Liberated) was founded from parts of the Theological College. In 1986, both Colleges became Universities when a change in the Dutch university/polytechnic system was carried out. The term university is somewhat misleading, for it suggests several faculties. Since this Theological University only has one faculty, it could probably best be referred to as a theological seminary.
Notable faculty of the seminary in the past include systematic theologians Herman Bavinck (1854-1921) and Klaas Schilder(1890-1952), and more recently the new testament scholar Jakob van Bruggen (1936).
Notable people
- Rikko Voorberg, theologian and minister[1]
References
- ^ "Rikko Voorberg over de vluchtkerk - Knevel en Van den Brink" (in Dutch). Evangelische Omroep. 30 May 2013. Retrieved 4 September 2014.
External links