Div School Attractive to Baptists
Friday, September 8, 2000
Duke University Divinity School may be one of the nation's leading
United Methodist seminaries, but the school is becoming an
increasingly popular place for Baptists to study, too.
More than 100 Baptists students are registered for the 2000 fall
semester, including 35 first-year scholars, and both are record
numbers, said Dean L. Gregory Jones. "These are significant
milestones in our effort to provide the comprehensive theological
education that many Baptist students are seeking," he said.
Baptist students have also taken leadership roles in the divinity
school.
Last year's student government directors were both Baptists, as is
the current head of the Black Seminarians Union. Baptists have been
co-directors of the divinity school's Women's Center for the last
two years.
Duke Divinity School is one of the United Methodist Church's 13
seminaries. Approximately 60 percent of its students identify
themselves as United Methodists. This fall, the school has enrolled
a total of 460 students representing nearly 40 Christian
denominations.
The school stepped up its recruitment of Baptist students in 1988,
soon after the conservative wing took control of the Southern
Baptist Convention, the nation's largest Protestant denomination.
Baptist enrollment has been rising at Duke since 1988, when only
about a dozen Baptist students attended the divinity school.
"It's not a surprise to me that Baptists are coming to Duke," said
W. Randall Lolley, former president of Southeastern Baptist
Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, N.C. "Duke is well known for
its academic and practical preparation and is making an effort to
place these students. There's no doubt that the university
responded well to the controversy and to changes that occurred in
Baptist seminaries."
Lolley, who pastored large Baptist congregations in Winston-Salem,
Raleigh and Greensboro, also noted the appeal of Duke's diverse
campus. "There's a wonderful mix of ethnic and gender diversity at
Duke, and many strands of Baptists from the North and West, as well
as the South," he said.
Will Willimon, dean of Duke Chapel and professor of Christian
ministry, called the increasing presence of Baptist students at
Duke Divinity School "one of the most dramatic developments in
theological education at Duke in the past decade."
"They have enriched us," he said. "Preparing Baptist students for
the challenges that they face in their church has been a great
challenge for us as faculty."
A key component of the Duke Divinity School's recruitment effort
has been the Baptist House of Studies program, which was organized
in 1988. The program hosts monthly social events, provides
counseling and assists with field education and employment
placements for students in the divinity school, the graduate school
of religion and the chaplain intern program at Duke University
Medical Center.
T. Furman Hewitt, who was hired as the program's first full-time
director in 1992, said Baptist students are attracted to Duke
because of its openness to women - who constitute 40 percent of the
entering class - and its recruitment of African Americans, who make
up 13 percent of the entering class. "Our students enjoy an
academic environment in which the faculty challenges their
assumptions while honoring their Baptist traditions," said Hewitt,
who teaches the divinity school's courses on Baptist polity.
Anna Kate Ellerman, a third-year master of divinity student from
Radford, Va., said, "The Baptist House of Studies is an important
network within Duke's ecumenical environment. It has allowed me to
ground myself in my Baptist tradition while gaining a greater
appreciation for the other Christian traditions represented
here."
Support for Baptist students in the divinity school includes the
Roger Williams Fellowship, which is a student organization whose
members are primarily Baptists. Local Baptist pastors lead
spiritual formation groups in which all first-year divinity
students participate. And there are eight Baptists on the divinity
school faculty.
Duke Divinity School is one of 11 schools supported by the
Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, an organization that sprang up as
an alternative to the Southern Baptist Convention, said Ray Allen,
recently retired pastor of Blacksburg (Va.) Baptist Church and
chairman of the Baptist House board of directors. To date, Duke's
divinity school has graduated the second-largest number of Baptist
alumni.
"Our graduates are becoming the leaders that the moderate churches
desperately need," Allen said.
For more information, contact: David Reid | (919) 660-3416 | david.reid@duke.edu
