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Master of Theology degree course
The John Owen Centre for Theological Study offers a
ThM degree course in association with Westminster Theological
Seminary, Philadelphia, USA. This Master
of Theology course is in the area of Historical Theology and is taken as a series of modules, making it accessible to those already in full-time ministry.
The John Owen Centre has been established to promote evangelical scholarship
of excellence for the good of the church and the advance
of God's kingdom. Westminster Theological Seminary is the doyen of intellectually rigorous
Reformed seminaries worldwide, with over 700 students currently
enrolled, and it has a proven track record of keeping faithfully
to the historic Reformed faith.
The purpose of the course is to increase the student's knowledge
of a major field of theological learning - in this case that
of the Reformed and Puritan periods - particularly through
training and practice in the use of the methods and tools
of theological research, and thus to further the student's
preparation for pastoral or teaching ministry, or for more
advanced graduate study. It is aimed especially at theology
graduates, ministers and missionaries.
Credentials for admission to the course include an initial baccalaureate degree
plus the MDiv degree or its theological equivalent from approved institutions. Knowledge of both Hebrew and NT Greek is required, as well as of one
other language relevant to theological study (e.g. Dutch,
French, German, or Latin). An examination in this chosen
language must be passed before the course's thesis can be
submitted.
For the purposes of admission to this course, the two-year training course at LTS has been recognised by the Association of Theological Schools of America and Canada, and by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, following on-site inspections, as equivalent to a Master of Divinity degree in the USA.
The course itself consists of six modules, taught by visiting faculty members of WTS and adjunct
faculty members, each
of one week's duration. Essays are required following each module, plus the writing of a thesis after all the modules are completed. Five modules are normally offered in each calendar year.
Students are also required to complete and pass the Theological Bibliography and Research Methodology course which is included in one of the modules.
Fees and accommodation
The tuition and examination
fees for the course are £3,750 payable in installments of £625 at the commencement of each module and there is a small charge for meals and facilities. There is an additional fee of £220 on submission of the thesis.
It is also possible for those not taking the degree
course to attend the lectures. The auditing fee for this is £175 per
module.
Accommodation, if required, is available during the teaching weeks in single study
bedrooms. Residence at the John
Owen Centre at other times is also possible subject to availability.
How to apply
Application forms are available from The John Owen Centre for Theological Study, 104 Hendon Lane, London N3 3SQ, UK
Telephone: 020 8346 7587
E-mail: johnowen@ltslondon.org
Applications must be submitted by the end of September for January entrance to the course, by January 15 for June entrance, or by March 15 for August entrance.
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Master of Theology Course Curriculum 2008
January 7 - 11 The Life and Thought of Martin Luther
The purpose of this course is to examine the life and teaching of Martin Luther through studying texts written by Luther and his contemporaries which illuminate the intellectual development and theological contribution of the German Reformer. Topics include the controversy over indulgences, the nature of justification, the dispute with Erasmus, the Marburg Colloquy, and the development of Lutheran theology in the 1530s and 1540s.
Carl R. Trueman MA PhD
Professor of Historical Theology and Church History
Lecturer in Theology, University of Nottingham, 1993-98; Senior Lecturer in Church History, University of Aberdeen, 1998-2001, Westminster Theological Seminary, 2001 -
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March 17 - 20 History of the Atonement
An opportunity to engage first-hand with a selection of classic Reformed treatments of the doctrine of the Atonement. The course will involve extensive reading of primary texts from a range of Reformed theologians, including John Calvin, John Owen, Jonathan Edwards and Charles Hodge, focusing particularly on their exposition and defense of penal substitution atonement. The course will examine the historical background of Reformed conceptions, their polemical function, their biblical basis, and their internal systematic coherence.
Garry Williams MA MSt PhD
Lecturer in Church History and Doctrine
Oak Hill Theological College, London.
Garry Williams studied for a doctorate at Oxford University, where he researched Hugo Grotius's doctrine of the atonement.
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June 23 - 27 The Doctrine of the Church in Reformed Theology
This course seeks to familiarize students with ecclesiology in the Reformed tradition through readings in historical, biblical and systematic theology (including John Calvin, John Owen, William Cunningham, James Bannerman, Charles Hodge, Herman Bavinck, G.C.Berkouwer, John Murray, Thomas E. Peck, Herman Ridderbos, Stuart Robinson, James Henley Thornwell, Gerhardus Vos, and Thomas Witherow). Those who hold to Reformed convictions face the numerous challenges of sacramental, liberal, and emergent views of the church, as well as the ongoing need to speak meaningfully in an age in which so much of the church is infatuated with individualism, the parachurch, and "postmodernism." This course seeks to equip students more fully with the ability to articulate—thoughtfully and winsomely—the conviction that "there is no ordinary possibility of salvation" outside of the church, and to defend the church's rightful claim to ordain "stewards of the mysteries of God" (1Cor 4.1), to exercise the "keys of the kingdom" (Mt 16.19), and to carry out her work as the "pillar and foundation of the truth" (1Tim 3.15).
Craig Troxel MATS PhD
Adjunct Professor of Systematic Theology
Pastor, Calvary Orthodox Presbyterian Church, Glenside, PA. 1995—; Westminster Theological Seminary 1997—
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August 25 – 29 Old Religion in the New World: Transatlantic Puritan Thought
The course will investigate New England puritan theology (through Jonathan Edwards) in comparison with British and continental Reformed Tradition.
Jeffrey Jue BA MDiv PhD
Associate Professor of Church History
B.A., University of California at Irvine, 1994; M.Div. Westminster Theological Seminary 1998; Graduate studies, University of Geneva, 1999; Ph.D. University of Aberdeen, 2003; WTS, 2003-
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September 1 – 5 The Life and Thought of J. Gresham Machen
This course looks at the life and thought of Gresham Machen, setting him in the transatlantic context of the Modernist/Fundamentalist debate of the early twentieth century. Attention will be given to Machen as biblical scholar, theologian, culture critic, and churchman.
Stephen Nichols BS MA MAR PhD
Professor of Historical Theology and Philosophy at Lancaster Bible College and Graduate School.
Graduate of Philadelphia Biblical University (BS), Westminster Theological Seminary (MAR), West Chester University (MA) and Westminster Theological Seminary (PhD). Lancaster Bible College Faculty, 1997 - ; Lecturer in Church History, Westminster Theological Seminary, 2004-. Author of books on Jonathan Edwards and Martin Luther.
All courses meet daily from 9:15 am to 3:30 pm with lunch provided
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Details of topics covered to date in the ThM course can be found by clicking here
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