- December 9th, 2009, 2:41 pm
#290699
No longer would the seminary feel connected to Liberty University. That may be a good thing in some people's minds, but in mine, it's not.
Right now it is very convenient for the seminary professors to bring in guest speakers who are currently working in ministry. A lot of the TRBC staff members add a lot to classes, especially in the practical majors (student ministry, evan/church planting, Christian leadership, church ministries, discipleship ministries, etc). Jonathan Falwell came into one of my classes the other day to do a Q&A about conflict resolution in the church. It was very easy for him to do that because it was a two minute walk down the hall and not a ten minute drive across town.
Libertine wrote:Moving the seminary to the old TRBC. I think it takes away from a couple of things. Right off the top of my head:SuperJon wrote:Not freaking out, just don't like it.Don't like what specifically? And please cite something that isn't someone else's conjecture.
No longer would the seminary feel connected to Liberty University. That may be a good thing in some people's minds, but in mine, it's not.
Right now it is very convenient for the seminary professors to bring in guest speakers who are currently working in ministry. A lot of the TRBC staff members add a lot to classes, especially in the practical majors (student ministry, evan/church planting, Christian leadership, church ministries, discipleship ministries, etc). Jonathan Falwell came into one of my classes the other day to do a Q&A about conflict resolution in the church. It was very easy for him to do that because it was a two minute walk down the hall and not a ten minute drive across town.




- By LU Armchair coach
- By thecomeback