Melbourne School of Theology
The Melbourne School of Theology (MST) is an evangelical Christian theological college with its main campus in Wantirna, an eastern suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
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Former names | Melbourne Bible Institute Bible College of Victoria |
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Motto | Biblical Depth. Spiritual Formation. Missional Heart |
Type | Tertiary Christian education |
Established | September 1920 |
Religious affiliation | Nondenominational Christian Borneo Evangelical Mission |
Academic affiliation | Australian College of Theology |
Principal | Tim Meyers |
Students | 350+ |
Location | , |
Campus | Wantirna South, Victoria, Melbourne CBD |
Website | mst.edu.au |
The school has a Chinese department, known as MST Chinese, in which undergraduate and graduate courses are taught in both Mandarin and Cantonese. It also has a postgraduate research section known as MST Centre for the Study of Chinese Christianity.
In 2011 the main (Wantirna) campus relocated from the suburb of Lilydale in the outer eastern suburbs of Melbourne to its present location. The Chinese department, which used to operate in Box Hill, also relocated to the new campus and was renamed MST Chinese.
List of principals
- C. H. Nash (1920–1942)
- John W. Searle (1944–1963)[1]
- J. Graham Miller (1965–1970)
- Neville Andersen (1971–1980)[2]
- Arthur Cundall (1981–1989)[2]
- David Price (1990–2004)[2]
- Michael Raiter (2006–2011)
- Tim Meyers (2012–)
gollark: And each of those needs its own inputs.
gollark: If you want, say, 100000 winter coats (large) (blue), you also have to produce a lot of dye (blue), fabric, factories for coat production, and all that.
gollark: Anyway, the best mathematical thing for central planning is apparently "linear programming", and to make that useful you need to decide on (in some form) the "value" of each output of your production.
gollark: Tech companies are interesting because they can service tons of people with few workers.
gollark: Google just has to keep services up for them and mine their data.
References
- "Mainly About People" (PDF). The Australian Church Record. 21 August 1969. p. 8. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
- Woods, Ted (24 June 2010). "Tribute To Barbara Wilson (Nee Baddeley) From MBI/BCV" (PDF). New Life. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
External links
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