Saturday, May 17, 2008

Episcopal Seminaries Struggle With Costs

Long-Held Training Model Faces an Uncertain Future
By G. Jeffrey MacDonald
Religion News Service
Saturday, May 17, 2008

In the cloistered world of Episcopal seminaries, time sometimes seems to stand still as clergy-in-training gather in stone chapels to pray in ways familiar to their forebears centuries earlier.

But the semblance of timelessness can be deceiving.

Some of the 11 seminaries affiliated with the Episcopal Church are slashing core programs, while others report rapid growth in enrollment. Still others are reexamining conventional wisdom about what it takes -- and how much it costs -- to shape a faithful priest.

The Episcopal method of training clergy "is a very expensive way to do theological education," said Daniel Aleshire, executive director of the Pittsburgh-based Association of Theological Schools. "There is significant financial stress in the Episcopal seminary system." the rest

1 Comments:

At 7:21 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Of course the liberal wing of the Episcopal Church would deny that this trend of liberal seminaries cutting back and conservative ones prospering has anything to do with Gene Robinson and their re-writing of scripture.

 

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