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Written by liberatingstrategies@gmail.comJune 3, 2025

Seminaries innovate and adapt to changing landscape – Baptist Standard

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  |  Source: Religion News Service
Participants of the Polaris Leadership Summit for young Christian leaders work on projects together at Princeton Theological Seminary in early April 2025, in Princeton, N.J. (RNS photo/Kathryn Post)
Kathryn Post / Religion News Service
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PRINCETON, N.J. (RNS)—An audience sat enraptured in Princeton Theological Seminary’s dining hall as, one by one, adults in their 20s walked up to a platform, took the microphone and shared a story.
“I realized that if God made our bodies this intricate, shouldn’t the care we give others be just as intricate?” Jewel Koshy asked.
“I allowed Jesus to look at me, and I looked at him, and my life was completely transformed,” Betty Freymann said.
“How can we stay inquisitive in a world where excellence is expected and assimilation is often rewarded?” Ray’Chel Wilson asked. “For me, I take my questions to God.”
Despite the setting, the young adults speaking weren’t seminarians. They were entrepreneurs, nonprofit leaders, health care workers and other professionals.
The summit they attended was part of the Polaris Young Adult Leadership Network, a new initiative from Princeton Theological Seminary that aims to equip young Christian leaders to find their calling beyond parish ministry.
“If you lead in the public sector, if you are an artist or a business leader or an educator, and you’re deeply motivated by your Christian faith, we think theological education has something to offer there as well,” said Shari Oosting, project director of the Polaris Network.
In recent years, many U.S. seminaries have faced existential threats fueled by the COVID-19 pandemic and a changing religious landscape. As organized religion continues to fade in popularity among many Gen Z, some seminaries are downsizing, combining and embracing online and hybrid models.
B.H. Carroll Theological Seminary, now part of East Texas Baptist University, was an early adopter of an online model of theological instruction.
“We exist to serve Christ and his church through the worldwide provision of affordable, high-quality, accessible and accredited theological education,” the seminary’s purpose statement says.
“Wherever there is Internet access, there is a classroom. Whether global or local, we equip students through the teaching of dedicated professors who are academically well-qualified, experienced in the diverse ministries of the church and missions-minded.”
Seminaries also are evolving, offering different certificate programs or degrees tailored for nonclergy students. Some seminaries target retired or second-career students. Others refuse to give up on young adults, instead designing programs to help them live out their spirituality beyond seminary walls.
Todd Still, dean of Baylor University’s Truett Theological Seminary, points to his institution’s mission statement: “To equip God-called men and women for gospel ministry in and alongside Christ’s church by the power of the Holy Spirit.”
“The ‘alongside’ language communicates our school’s concern and commitment to prepare people who will serve with the church and not only in the church,” Still said.
For students “who have the time, space and finances to do a dual degree,” Truett Seminary offers a Master of Divinity degree in conjunction with a Master of Social Work, Master of Business Administration, Master of Education, Master of Music or Juris Doctor degree from Baylor.
At the other end of the spectrum in terms of a commitment of time and money, Truett Seminary offers an online certificate program as an alternative “when Sunday school isn’t quite enough, but a Master of Divinity isn’t the right fit,” the school’s website explains.
Freymann, 28, a Dallas-based tech consulting manager and a participant at the Polaris summit, said meeting other Christians doing “the Lord’s work” in the secular world has made her feel less alone.
“I love that we’re pushing to form Christian leaders. Not Catholic, not Presbyterian, not Episcopal leaders, but Christian leaders,” said Freymann, who is Catholic and hosts a Spanish-language podcast for Latino Catholics.
Freymann gathered in the seminary’s library with roughly 30 other young adults. The room was abuzz as participants responded to discussion prompts, wove strands of yarn for an interactive art project and heard a lecture about the church in the modern world.
Throughout the summit, each shared eight-minute personal stories about Christian leadership in groups or at the final storytelling festival.
“Something that really stood out to me is the fact that everyone is a young adult,” said participant Kennedy Maye, a 22-year-old psychology major at the University of Kentucky.
Raised as a nondenominational Christian, she often discusses God with other young adults in her life but said she often finds herself “defending God.” Here, it was different.
Launched in 2023 with a $4 million grant from the Lilly Endowment, the Polaris Young Adult Leadership Network convenes these cohorts while also offering sub-grants to fund their local ministry efforts and provide workshops on topics like mental health, vocational discernment and sustainability.
The aim is to combat isolation among young Christian leaders and counteract the narrative that all young people are losing their faith.
“In a lot of ways, these young people are teaching us how to be a seminary for the next generation,” said Kenda Creasy Dean, the Mary D. Synnott professor of youth, church and culture at Princeton Theological Seminary and one of the architects of Polaris.
Built to train pastors, many seminaries like Princeton are increasingly welcoming students looking to discern their calling rather than intending to work at a congregation. Dean said she has observed pastoral credentials don’t have the draw they used to for students, which is mirrored in trends at the seminary.
Enrollment in its Master of Divinity program—a prerequisite for many seeking ordination—has declined in recent years, down to 155 students in the 2024-2025 school year, from 245 students in 2020-2021.
However, Princeton’s master’s programs for leaders interested in theology/sustainability and in justice/public life have grown steadily since being launched in 2023. The seminary also has seen growth in part-time, hybrid and online offerings. And this year, it saw the largest incoming class of degree-pursuing students in the last five years.
According to data from the Association of Theological Schools, an umbrella group of more than 270 schools, Princeton isn’t alone.
Enrollment in Master of Divinity programs continues to decline among ATS member schools, down roughly 14 percent since 2020.
However, that dip has been offset by boosts in two-year, often customizable Master of Arts programs and nondegree enrollment, leading to an overall 1.8 percent increase in enrollment at ATS schools since 2020.
Still noted Master of Divinity degree enrollment at Truett Seminary has declined somewhat, but enrollment in the seminary’s Master of Arts in Christian Ministry and Master of Theological Studies programs is increasing.
“These are shorter degrees,” he explained. “While the MTS is a general theological/biblical degree, the MACM remains decidedly focused on churchly ministry.”
Truett Seminary offers several other Master of Arts degrees designed for students who plan to serve “alongside” the church. Degrees focus on the intersections of theology with health care, sports studies, contextual witness and innovation, ecology and food justice.
Truett Seminary has seen its overall enrollment increase in recent years due in large part to its emphasis on affordability and accessibility, Still said.
“We work intentionally and painstakingly to raise as much scholarship funding as we possibly can in order to drive down the tuition price-point. We are seeking to find the golden mean of students to train and scholarships to offer,” he said.
“Some schools have students but little financial support. Other schools have strong finances but few students to educate. We are striving to have both.”
To make theological education more accessible, in addition to its home campus in Waco, Truett Seminary opened additional instructional sites in Houston and San Antonio.
Its Doctor of Ministry degree program not only meets in those three locations, but also in Amarillo and in Falls Church, Va., at the Baptist World Alliance headquarters.
Some seminaries are facing significant challenges. Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, an influential Evangelical Free Church school near Chicago, announced last month it will be acquired by a Canadian university and move to British Columbia.
Despite financial setbacks, the school has had a transformative impact on the nearby city of Waukegan, Ill., thanks to a young adult-centered program called Mosaic Ministries.
Mosaic Ministries began praying with and building relationships with Waukegan churches in 2010. With the help of the Lilly Endowment, it became a formal collaboration of 12 churches in 2017, with the purpose of developing ministries with young adults.
By listening to what young people asked for—space to ask hard questions and do life together, not just host another barbecue, for example—churches adapted.
“As the years went by, our churches grew healthier, they grew more intergenerational, they grew more missional, and this collaboration of churches shifted from individual churches to a network,” said Daniel Hartman, co-director of Mosaic Ministries at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School.
In 2022, that network came together to form Refined, a program for young adults from each of the 12 churches. Across 18 months, the young adults received mentoring, attended retreats and became involved in Waukegan-based community projects.
Though Adi Camacho grew up attending a Baptist church in Waukegan, she joined Refined after several years away from the church.
“It was my first time getting to meet brothers and sisters who were not from my congregation that could hear my heart and be there for me and love and support me in such a godly way,” Camacho said. “We were able to break barriers between our churches.”
Camacho hosts a podcast about Mosaic Ministries’ impact and pitches the program at citywide events like cleanup days, toy drives or prayer services. The city routinely looks to Mosaic to meet local needs, and Mosaic’s hub, a revamped former library, is a gathering place designed to welcome young people who might be hesitant to meet at church, said Hartman.
It’s not yet clear how Mosaic Ministries will be impacted by the seminary’s move. However, Mosaic and similar innovative seminary initiatives take a unique approach to empowering young people in their own contexts, without trying to convince them to enroll as students.
For example, Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary has created programming for both Christian and “Christ curious” young adults.
“There are all kinds of places where young adults gather at the edges of Christian conversation,” said Melissa Wiginton, vice president for strategic engagement and partnerships at the Austin seminary.
“We know that there is a longing out there for people to be connected to something that’s sturdy enough to hold them, but not so rigid that it encages them.”
Since 2017, the seminary, also with the help of the Lilly Endowment, has created such spaces via its 787 Initiative, which offers faith and community engagement for young people in Austin.
Mercedes Collins, who runs a recreational club, We Outside ATX, for Austin’s Black community, provides input for 787’s advisory council. She said young people in her network are craving spaces where their voices are heard.
“Community is a spiritual thing, right?” said Collins, who identifies as more spiritual than religious. “We’re not meant to be here alone.”
787 was a precursor to the seminary’s Austin Story Project, which launched in January and will offer an in-person storytelling cohort and spiritual pilgrimages for young adults. The first pilgrimage will focus on nonviolence, where participants will visit sites connected with nuclear weapon production in the Pacific Northwest. A survivor of the bombing of Hiroshima will accompany them.
“Everybody’s in a massive period of experimentation,” said Dean, of Princeton Theological Seminary. “Desperation is a spiritual gift, and so it gives you a chance to experiment with things that, you know, 10 years ago were off the table. That’s happening everywhere, and we are no different in that.”
Still likewise emphasized the importance of continuing to try new approaches.
“The bottom line is this: those who are willing and able to collaborate and innovate in theological education will likely be able to weather the storm longer and to navigate the headwinds better than those who are not,” he said.
With additional reporting by Managing Editor Ken Camp.
 
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