Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
Type | Private |
---|---|
Established | 1897 |
Affiliation | Evangelical Free Church of America |
President | David S. Dockery |
Students | 1,231 |
Address | 2065 Half Day Road Deerfield, IL 60015, Deerfield, Illinois, United States |
Campus | Suburban |
Website | teds.edu |
Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (TEDS) is an academic divinity school founded in 1897 and located north of Chicago, Illinois. TEDS is one of the largest seminaries in the world, enrolling more than 1,200 graduate students in professional and academic programs, including more than 150 in its PhD programs. The most popular degree at the school (the Master of Divinity degree or MDiv) prepares pastors, educators, and missionaries for many kinds of service. The school also offers a range of more focused Master of Arts programs in counseling ministries, Christian thought, New Testament, Old Testament, and other disciplines.
TEDS is affiliated with the Evangelical Free Church of America and is accredited by the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. It publishes the Trinity Journal.
Contents
1 History
2 Notable faculty
3 Notable alumni
4 References
5 External links
History
Trinity International University traces its roots to 1897 when the Swedish Evangelical Free Church began a ten-week Bible course in the basement of a Chicago church. From those humble origins, the school grew significantly in the early 20th century. Then, during the 1960s, the seminary moved to its present Deerfield campus (just north of Chicago). In 1995, Trinity College (located on the same campus), Trinity College at Miami, Trinity Law School in Santa Ana, Calif., and Trinity Evangelical Divinity School were united to form Trinity International University. TEDS also offers degrees through the University's south Chicago regional center as well as extension sites around the U.S.
Notable faculty
Douglas Sweeney - Professor of Church History and the History of Christian Thought, Director, Jonathan Edwards Center
Gleason Archer - Former Professor of Old Testament and Semitics (1965-1986)- Barry J. Beitzel - Professor Emeritus of Old Testament and Semitic Languages (1976-2016)
- Constantine R. Campbell - Associate Professor of New Testament
D. A. Carson - New Testament Scholar and Research Professor of New Testament- Peter T. Cha - Associate Professor of Pastoral Theology
John S. Feinberg - Chair of the Department of Biblical and Systematic Theology
Paul D. Feinberg - Professor of Systematic Theology and Philosophy of Religion
Norman Geisler - Former Chair, Department of Philosophy of Religion (1970-1979)
Murray J. Harris - now Professor Emeritus of New Testament Exegesis and Theology
James K. Hoffmeier - Egyptologist and professor of Old Testament and ancient near eastern history
S. Lewis Johnson, Jr. - Professor of Biblical and Systematic Theology (1980-1985)
John Warwick Montgomery - Professor of Church History (1964-1974)
Harold A. Netland - Professor of Philosophy of Religion and Intercultural Studies and the Naomi A. Fausch Chair of Missions
Grant R. Osborne - Professor of New Testament and author of The Hermeneutical Spiral
- David W. Pao - Chair of the New Testament Department and Professor of New Testament
Clark H. Pinnock - Late Professor of Systematic Theology- Tite Tiénou - The Tite Tiénou Chair of Mission and Global Theology, Research Professor of Theology of Mission
Kevin J. Vanhoozer - Research Professor of Systematic Theology- John Woodbridge - Research Professor of Church History and the History of Christian Thought
Keith E. Yandell - Affiliate Professor of Philosophy
Wayne Grudem - Former Chair of Biblical and Systematic Theology department- Willem A. VanGemeren
Notable alumni
Ravi Zacharias, Christian apologist, Founder of Ravi Zacharias International Ministries
Mark Noll, noted Christian historian, professor of history at The University of Notre Dame*
John F. Ankerberg, host of the "John Ankerberg Show"
Mark Batterson, lead pastor of National Community Church in Washington, D.C.
Craig Blomberg, New Testament scholar at Denver Seminary
Elie Buconyori, founder and President of Hope Africa University and Bishop of the free Methodist church in Burundi and Kenya.
William Lane Craig, apologist and professor of philosophy at Biola University's Talbot School of Theology
- Wilfredo “Choco” de Jesús, pastor of New Life Covenant Church, Chicago, and one of TIME’s 2013 100 Most Influential People.[1]
W. Kent Fuchs, provost of Cornell University and president of the University of Florida
Leonard G. Goss, book publisher, author, and editor
Bill Hybels, founding and senior pastor of Willow Creek Community Church in South Barrington, Illinois, one of the most attended churches in North America
Walter C. Kaiser, retired president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
Douglas J. Moo, New Testament scholar and theologian
James MacDonald, popular pastor and speaker
Dan McConchie, member of the Illinois Senate
Scot McKnight, noted blogger, author, and New Testament scholar at Northern Seminary
James Moore, historian of science at the British Open University and the University of Cambridge, and visiting scholar at Harvard University
Michael Young-Suk Oh, Executive Director/CEO of the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization
Cecil R. Richardson, former Chief of Chaplains of the United States Air Force
John D. Robb, chairman of the International Prayer Council
Maher Samuel, Egyptian psychiatrist and intellectual[2]
- Lal Senanayake, president, Lanka Bible College, Sri Lanka
John Senyonyi, vice chancellor, Uganda Christian University
Jeffrey Neil Steenson, coordinator for Episcopalian priests seeking reception into the Roman Catholic Church
David Falconer Wells, Distinguished Professor of Historical and Systematic Theology at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
Jim Wallis, author, activist, founder and editor of Sojourners Magazine
Edmund Chan, author,former senior pastor of Covenant Evangelical Free Church and current leadership mentor of Global Discipleship Congress
References
^ http://time100.time.com/2013/04/18/time-100/slide/wilfredo-de-jesus/
^ http://mahersamuel.org/
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. |
- Official website
Coordinates: 42°11′52.5″N 87°52′51.8″W / 42.197917°N 87.881056°W / 42.197917; -87.881056