Pentecostal Theological Seminary
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The Pentecostal Theological Seminary is a private Christian seminary in
Cleveland, Tennessee Cleveland is the county seat of and largest city in Bradley County, Tennessee, United States. The population was 47,356 at the 2020 census. It is the principal city of the Cleveland metropolitan area, Tennessee (consisting of Bradley and neigh ...
. While part of the educational ministry of the Church of God, the school accepts students of other denominations, particularly those interested in its emphasis on Wesleyan/Holiness theology and Pentecostal spirituality. It has trained ministers since 1975. The school offers the M.Div, M.T.S., and M.A, degrees with concentrations in Church Ministries, Discipleship and Christian Formation, Theological studies and Counseling. Some courses and degrees are offered online. It also offers the D.Min. degree for ministerial leaders seeking to expand their study.


History

Interest in a denomination seminary began in the 1960s and Charles W. Conn instituted a denominational Board of Education in 1968. This board appointed a committee (H.D. Williams, James M. Beaty, and R. Hollis Gause) to look at the possibility of such a seminary. During the early 1970s the denomination decided to pursue a graduation school for ministerial training and work began to launch such a school. The Seminary was granted a charter for graduate education by the state of Tennessee in 1975 as the Church of God Graduate School of Christian Ministries. When it opened in the Fall of 1975, the school offered 2 degrees: the Master of Science in Religion and the Master of Arts in Religion. The offices and classrooms were in a renovated apartment building in Cleveland, Tennessee. It had two full-time faculty members, with one of those serving as Dean and Director. Opening with an enrollment of eighteen students, the graduate school increased to twenty-eight students the second term. At the first commencement on July 27, 1976, three students received the Master of Arts in Religion and two students received the Master of Science degree in Religion under the one-year curriculum. Eight more students graduated on July 26, 1977. In 1979, the seminary Board of Directors authorized the purchase of property and the building of a new facility. Subsequently, property was acquired at the corner of 8th and Walker Streets near the Church of God Publishing House, North Cleveland Church of God and Lee University. On November 10, 1979, ground was broken for the erection of a facility to house the Seminary. In the Fall of 1980, the Seminary moved into a new building constructed to house offices, classrooms, and a chapel. The Squires Library and Dixon Pentecostal Research Center would be shared by the seminary and Lee University. In the late 1980s, Hamilton Court was built as a dormitory for students. In 1995, the addition of the Curtsinger Ministry Center doubled the size of the academic space. Today several small buildings and houses are also owned by the seminary to serve as housing for various students, ministries and departments, including the Centre for Pentecostal Theology.


Name

The seminary has undergone several name changes in its history. It began in 1975 as the Church of God Graduate School of Christian Ministries. The name was changed to the Church of God School of Theology in 1978, and then became the Church of God Theological Seminary in 1997. These name changes were made to reflect the changing level of accreditation received by
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and SACS. In 2004-2005 the name was changed again to Pentecostal Theological Seminary. This was done with the hope of extending a broader invitation to other Pentecostals.


Presidents

Until 1988, the President of the denominational seminary was the person elected as the General Overseer of the Church of God. Since 1988, the president has been appointed by the denomination but serves no other official position. *Wade H. Horton 1975-1976 *Cecil B Knight 1976-1982 *Lewis J. Willis 1982-1984 *Ray H. Hughes Sr. 1984-1986 *Robert White 1986-1988 *J. Herbert Walker Jr. 1988-1988 (died during his tenure) *Cecil B. Knight 1989-1998 *Donald Walker 1998-2002 * Steven J. Land 2002-2014 *R. Lamar Vest 2014–2016 *Michael Baker 2016–Present


Deans

*R. Hollis Gause, 1975-1980 *James Beaty, 1980-1992 *Steven J. Land, 1992-2002 *James P. Bowers, 2004-2011 *David S. Han, 2011–Present


Centre for Pentecostal Theology

The Centre for Pentecostal Theology (CPT) is a residential library dedicated to facilitating the conception, birth, and maturation of constructive Pentecostal Theology across the theological disciplines. Several PhD students are currently working with the centre to produce academic work in the area of Pentecostal Theology under the supervision of John Christopher Thomas and Lee Roy Martin. Many of the students are working with Bangor University, Wales and the
University of South Africa The University of South Africa (UNISA), known colloquially as Unisa, is the largest university system in South Africa by enrollment. It attracts a third of all higher education students in South Africa. Through various colleges and affiliates, U ...
. The ''
Journal of Pentecostal Theology The ''Journal of Pentecostal Theology'' is a peer-reviewed academic journal covering theological research from a Pentecostal perspective. It was established at the Pentecostal Theological Seminary and is maintained by the Center for Pentecostal ...
'' (''JPT'') was also birthed at the Pentecostal Theological Seminary. It is maintained by the CPT and published by
Brill Publishers Brill Academic Publishers (known as E. J. Brill, Koninklijke Brill, Brill ()) is a Dutch international academic publisher founded in 1683 in Leiden, Netherlands. With offices in Leiden, Boston, Paderborn and Singapore, Brill today publishes 27 ...
. The founding editors (Steven J. Land, John Christopher Thomas and Rickie D. Moore) were all faculty at the seminary.


Notable faculty

The seminary has been a center of Pentecostal Theology led by scholars in the field. * R. Hollis Gause - New Testament Theology, first dean of the seminary *Cheryl Bridges Johns - Discipleship and Christian Formation * Steven J. Land - Theology *
Rickie D. Moore Rickie D. Moore, Ph.D., is a noted renewal theologian within the Pentecostal movement. He is now the Associate Dean of the Lee University School of Religion. Moore received a B.A. from Lee College in 1976, his M.A. from Vanderbilt University in ...
- Old Testament *
John Christopher Thomas John Christopher Thomas (born c. 1955) is a theologian within the Pentecostal movement and the Clarence J. Abbott Professor of Biblical Studies at the Pentecostal Theological Seminary. Thomas received the B.A. degree from Lee College in 1976, hi ...
- New Testament


References


External links

* {{authority control Cleveland, Tennessee Evangelicalism in Tennessee Pentecostalism in Tennessee Seminaries and theological colleges in Tennessee Universities and colleges affiliated with the Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee) Universities and colleges accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Education in Bradley County, Tennessee