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Denver Seminary

Coordinates:39°36′2.18″N105°1′20.56″W / 39.6006056°N 105.0223778°W /39.6006056; -105.0223778
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American Evangelical Christian seminary

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Denver Seminary
TypePrivateseminary
Established1950
Religious affiliation
EvangelicalChristian
Endowment$12.2 million[1]
PresidentMark Husbands[2]
Academic staff
31 (Spring 2021)[3]
Location,,
United States
Websitewww.denverseminary.edu
Map
The sign at the seminary entrance.

Denver Seminary is aprivate,evangelicalChristianseminary with its main campus inLittleton, Colorado.[4]

It includes a campus in Colorado, an extension campus inWashington, DC, and an online campus. It offers Masters programs in Arts, Divinity, and Theology, as well as a Doctorate in Ministry, along with counseling courses. In 2021, it enrolled over 1200 students from over 35 denominations.[5]

History

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In 1950, Denver Seminary was founded by members of the newly foundedConservative Baptist Association.[6] This is a group of churches that separated from theNorthern Baptist Convention over theological differences stemming from thefundamentalist–modernist controversy conflict earlier in the 20th century.[citation needed] The school was originally known as the Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary and was based inEnglewood, Colorado.[citation needed] Carey Thomas became the Seminary's first president.[citation needed]

In 1956,Vernon Grounds was appointed as the second president and remained so until 1979.

In June 1962, the seminary was granted associate membership in the American Association of Theological Schools (now the Association of Theological Schools). Full ATS accreditation was achieved in 1971.[citation needed]

In 1972, full accreditation to the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools was achieved.[citation needed]

In 1982, the seminary changed its name to Denver Conservative Baptist Seminary.[citation needed]

In 1996, Clyde McDowell, the fifth president, introduced a program of training and mentoring for which Denver Seminary has become well known. During his time, the institute became the first seminary ever to receive accreditation by the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Education Programs (CACREP) for its counseling degree program. The institute is also accredited by the Association for Clinical Pastoral Education.[citation needed]

In 1998, the seminary changed its name to Denver Seminary. This was a reflection of its growing appeal to a wide-spectrum of evangelical students.[citation needed]

In 2002, Bruce Shelly, the Senior Professor of Church History, authored a biography on Grounds titledTransformed by Love:The Vernon Grounds Story. This book gives a comprehensive overview of Denver Seminary's history as it developed from a small denominational school to a major evangelical seminary under Grounds' leadership.[citation needed]

In 2005, under the leadership of President Craig Williford, the seminary moved to a new campus inLittleton, Colorado, where the school currently resides. Built from the ground up specifically for the Seminary, the campus includes teaching and leadership facilities and nearly 100 student apartments. The campus is situated next to theSouth Platte River.[citation needed]

The seminary had[when?] a campus in West Texas for a time, but this has now closed.[clarification needed][7]

Presidents

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No.NameTermTenure
1Carey S. Thomas1950–19566 yrs
2Vernon C. Grounds1956–197923 yrs
3Haddon Robinson1979–199112 yrs
[a]1991–19932 yrs
4Edward L. Hayes1993–19963 yrs
5Clyde McDowell1996–19993 yrs
[b]Leith Anderson1999–20012 yrs
6G. Craig Williford2001–20087 yrs
[c]2008–20091 yr
7Mark Young2009–202415 yrs
8Mark Husbands[2]2025–present(incumbent)

Accreditation

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Denver Seminary is accredited byAssociation of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada,Higher Learning Commission, the Association for Clinical Pastoral Education, and the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Education Programs (CACREP).

The seminary adheres to theNational Association of Evangelicals Statement of Faith; students are required to sign the NAE statement of faith.

Theological stance

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The evangelical theological stance of Denver Seminary is demonstrated by the words of the late chancellor Vernon Grounds:

Here is no unanchored liberalism, freedom to think without commitment. Here is no encrusted dogmatism, commitment without freedom to think. Here is a vibrant evangelicalism, commitment with freedom to think within the limits laid down in Scripture.[8]

This statement was first used by Grounds to stake out Denver Seminary's theological position in the midst of conflict between moderately conservative and ultra-conservative factions of theConservative Baptist Association that eventually led the ultra-conservative faction to withdraw from the CBA and found the Conservative Baptist Fellowship (CBF). Grounds, formerly the academic dean of fundamentalist Baptist seminary in New York state affiliated with theGeneral Association of Regular Baptist Churches, eventually became a key spokesperson for theevangelical movement that attributes its roots to the writings ofCarl F. H. Henry. Under his leadership, Denver Seminary became firmly rooted in this theological camp.

Publications

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Since 1998, Old Testament professorRichard Hess has edited theDenver Journal: An Online Review of Current Biblical and Theological Studies. This is primarily an electronic journal that provides Denver Seminary faculty an opportunity to publish book reviews on the latest theological scholarship.

Engage Magazine is published biannually since 2013. The magazine features articles written by faculty addressing current topics in the church and ministry as well as stories of students and alumni. It is distributed to Denver Seminary alumni, students, staff, faculty, donors, and friends.

Library

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The Carey S. Thomas library is the largest evangelical Protestant library between Chicago and Los Angeles. It is composed of carefully selected volumes of the best in theological and scholarly literature to support the school's curriculum. The present collection totals approximately 185,000 volumes, both in print and electronic format, and is located in the main library in Littleton, Colorado and in the extension campus libraries in Washington DC.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Position vacant
  2. ^Served as interim president
  3. ^Position vacant

References

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  1. ^As of June 2014. Taken fromhttp://www.denverseminary.edu/alumni-donors/ Annual Report.
  2. ^ab"Denver Seminary appoints Mark Husbands as eighth president, effective Jan. 1".Your Hub / The Denver Post. 2024-11-29.Archived from the original on 2024-12-14. Retrieved2025-02-14.
  3. ^Official Website, Retrieved 2023-04-21 statistical information.
  4. ^Van Buskirk, Beverly (2019-05-21)."Meredith celebrates 20 years".Le Mars Daily Sentinel. Retrieved2023-01-18.
  5. ^"Who We Are".Denver Seminary. April 2021.
  6. ^Rabey, Steve (2023-01-15)."Higher education: Colorado's theology schools train clergy, counselors and more".Colorado Springs Gazette. Retrieved2023-01-18.
  7. ^"Denver Seminary Closed Campus".College Evaluator. Retrieved2023-04-21.[dead link]
  8. ^Mekonnen, Alemayehu (2015-11-13).The West and China in Africa: Civilization without Justice. Wipf and Stock Publishers.ISBN 978-1-4982-2019-4.

Bibliography

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External links

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