— Professional Doctoral Degrees —

Korean Church Leadership

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Korean Church Leadership

Have you been looking for a seminary that understands your unique situation? Struggling to apply your classical seminary education to the realities of serving in the Korean community? Whether you are serving in a large Korean church or ministering in a small community, Southern Seminary’s Korean Church Leadership program can improve your effectiveness. Taught primarily in the Korean language, this degree program is designed to support the work of Korean language churches in the United States and around the world. To help students learn to apply their education in the church setting, students participate in eight credit hours of applied ministry.

32 Hours

  • Foundational Seminars (16 hours)
    • Christian Scripture and the Practice of Ministry
    • Christian Heritage and the Practice of Ministry
    • Practical Theology and the Practice of Ministry
    • Christian Leadership and Missions
  • Applied Ministry Experience (8 hours)
  • Research Project and Methodology (8 hours)


Truth. Legacy. Vision. Southern Seminary Sesquicentennial

Announcements

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Volunteers needed at SBTS March 10-15 for Buckets of Hope initiative

In response to the earthquake in Haiti, Southern Baptists are joining hands to help the people of Haiti through the Buckets of Hope initiative. The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary is the final collection point for the Buckets of Hope in Kentucky. The Southern Seminary and Boyce College communities have the unique privilege of serving as volunteers in this initiative from March 10-15. Volunteers are needed to be available on short notice to unload trucks, label buckets and place them on pallets for shipment to Haiti. (more…)

Lunch with IMB vice president

Gordon Fort, vice president of global strategy for the International Mission Board, will be hosting a lunch from 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Thursday, March 25 in Heritage Hall. Fort will be speaking on the future vision of the IMB. Tickets are $2 for individuals and $3 for couples. Tickets can be purchased at the Great Commission Center (Norton 108).

Brunch for potential church planters with North American Mission Board representatives

If you are a church planter or are interested in becoming one, the North American Mission Board will be hosting a free brunch during Great Commission Week from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Tuesday, March 23 in Honeycutt Room 246. Those interested in attending must RSVP by March 15. (more…)


Blogs

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Brian McLaren’s New Kind of Whole Foods Store: A Parable
by Jim HamiltonMar 10

Note: Tomorrow (Thursday, March 10, 2010), Lord willing, it will be my privilege to participate in a panel discussion at SBTS chapel moderated by Dr. Mohler with my esteemed colleagues, Drs. Ware, Wellum, and Wills. We will be discussing Brian McLaren’s book, A New Kind of Christianity. I am posting this parable in the hopes that many of you will either show up for or tune into chapel, or later watch or listen to the recording.

Brian McLaren decided to open his own Whole Foods store. He started small, and the business grew. After a struggle through the early years, he had his own storefront with the sign in the parking lot and everything: Whole Foods.

Women and Children First? A Tale of Two Ships
by R. Albert Mohler Jr.Mar 5

The scenario is well known, and the story still haunts the modern mind. The great ocean liner that was built as unsinkable struck an iceberg on April 14, 1912 and sank early the next morning, taking 1,517 of 2,223 lives on board. The RMS Titanic became a parable of modernity — of the limits of technology and the hubris of humanity.

Abortion and Healthcare Reform
by Denny BurkMar 5

Don’t miss Charmaine Yoest’s column in today’s Wall Street Journal. She argues that the Senate’s healthcare reform bill would be the greatest expansion of abortion since the passage of Roe v. Wade in 1973. It would mandate tax-payers to fund abortions in the following ways:

Reflections on Adopting for Life 2010
by Russell D. MooreMar 4

Now that I’m pulling myself out of the post-conference coma, I thought I’d give a few words of reflection on this past weekend’s “Adopting for Life” conference. If I had to give a theme to the weekend, the theme would be “freedom,” a concept that is increasingly important to me. Where the Spirit of the Lord is, the Apostle Paul tells us, there is freedom (1 Cor. 3), and there was a sense of gospel freedom everywhere here, and in all sorts of ways.