— Friends & Donors —

Building a Legacy – Give to Southern

• • • • •

Each year, thousand of alumni and friends make outright gifts of cash or other assets to support students, faculty, and other programs at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. These gifts are fully deductible for federal income tax purposes, subject to the limitations placed on charitable gifts.

Give Online.

Give instantly, conveniently and securely. Online giving is now available through our secure server.

Give By Mail.

When making a gift with a check or money order, please follow these guidelines:

Make the check or money order payable to:
The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

Mail this check along with a donation form to the following address:

Office of Institutional Relations
The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
2825 Lexington Road
Louisville, KY 40280

Give by Phone.

You can make a credit card gift by calling the Office of Institutional Relations at (502) 897-4143. One of our staff members will be happy to help you with your gift. Our office is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 AM until 5:00 PM Eastern Time.

Supporting Southern Seminary

ANNUAL GIVING LEVELS

Distinguished Associate
$10,000 - up
Leaders Associate
$5,000 - 9,999
Founders Associate
$2,500 - 4,999
John A. Broadus Associate
$1,500 - 2,499
President’s Associate
$1,000 - 1,499
Committee of 500
$500 - 999
Century Society
$100 - 499
Friends
$99 and below

For more help, contact the Office of Institutional Relations:

1-800-626-5525
or
x4143
502-897-4143
instrel@sbts.edu


Truth. Legacy. Vision. Southern Seminary Sesquicentennial

Announcements

RSS
Christianity in Africa class

A special opportunity is available to students during the upcoming winter term. Along with George Martin, Randy Arnett (over 30 years ministry experience in West Africa) and Charles Juma (from East Africa) will be offering the course 33477, “Topics in Missions: Christianity in Africa.” The seminar format class will be offered from 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Dec. 14-18. (more…)

Church planting family banquet

On Friday, Dec. 4, the Church Planting Center will be hosting its annual church planting family banquet from 6-8 p.m. in the President’s Reception Room. You must RSVP by Nov. 24 to attend. Come hear Cincinnati-area church planter and Southern Seminary graduate Michael Clary, and his wife share about the difficulties and delights of being a church planting family. (more…)

Study break during finals

The SBTS Student Council will serve coffee and doughnuts to all students from 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Tuesday, Dec. 1. Come by the lobby of 5th and Broadway early to pick up your free Blue Book for you final exam. The event is sponsored by the Seminary Student Council.


Blogs

RSS
Render Not to Caesar What Is God’s
by Denny BurkNov 20

I just finished reading and signing The Manhattan Declaration (MD), and I urge you to do the same. The Manhattan Declaration is a document affirming the sanctity of human life, the sanctity of marriage, and the rights of conscience and religious liberty.

The Blur of Gender — Is The New York Times Trying to Tell Us Something?
by R. Albert Mohler Jr.Nov 20

Is The New York Times trying to tell us something? Just eleven days after running a story on gender-bending teenagers on the front page of its “Style” section, the paper is back with yet another front page story in the same section, this time on gender-bending young adults. The articles even cite the same psychologist as authority. What’s going on here?

When Morality Collapses — The Therapeutic Evasion
by R. Albert Mohler Jr.Nov 19

Any civilization requires a stable, rational, and consensual moral framework in order to survive. Western civilization has been built on a framework of Christian morality, with the so-called “Judeo-Christian ethic” providing the moral principles that support laws, ethical reasoning, and moral impulses.

Turning the Bible into Toilet Paper
by Denny BurkNov 18

I mentioned yesterday that I am in New Orleans this week to deliver a paper on homosexuality at the Evangelical Theological Society. Yesterday I came across an article that relates to the subject matter of that paper.