Urshan Graduate School of Theology

Urshan Graduate School of Theology (UGST) is a private seminary affiliated with the United Pentecostal Church International (UPCI) and located in Wentzville, Missouri. It opened in 2001 as a Oneness Pentecostal seminary.

Students

As of Fall 2018, 94 students were enrolled in UGST's three degree programs.[1] Students are not required to be members of the United Pentecostal Church International, but it is loyal to the teachings of that organization. Faculty and staff must subscribe to the biblical doctrines outlined in the Articles of Faith of the UPCI.

History

Urshan Graduate School of Theology is named for Andrew Urshan and the legacy of the Oneness doctrine and visionary teaching that he handed down through his son, Nathaniel. In April 1998, Timothy Dugas, pastor of The Sanctuary in Missouri, formed an ad hoc committee to study the feasibility of the graduate school. Between April 1998 and the October 1998 meeting of the UPCI General Board, the ad hoc committee developed a proposal for the General Board.

In October 1998, the UPCI General Board, augmented with additional personnel, creating a steering committee under the auspices of Arless Glass, superintendent of the Division of Education. In January 1999, a second proposal was made to the UPCI General Board to determine if the project should go forward. In the summer of 1999, the steering committee chose its chairperson to be Jesse Williams, who has served as chairperson from that time to 2007. Under Jesse Williams's direction, a resolution was made to the October 1999 UPCI General Conference in session at Nashville, Tennessee. After relevant debate, the gathered ministers of the United Pentecostal Church voted to found the Urshan Graduate School of Theology.

In 2000, at a meeting in St. Louis, Chairperson Williams continued to lead the Board of Trustees, which was formed at that time. Some significant events took place at the January meeting. The board selected David Bernard as its first president and Nathaniel Urshan as the chancellor of what would be called the Urshan Graduate School of Theology. These officers were installed at the October conference. The board hired James Littles, Jr. as vice president; he did considerable organizational work to ready the graduate school to open its doors. The board of trustees and the president officially installed the founding faculty (James A. Littles, Jr., David S. Norris, Raymond Crownover, and Gerald L. Truman) at the convocation on August 29, 2001.[2]

In 2009, President David Bernard was elected General Superintendent of the United Pentecostal Church International.

In 2010, Urshan Graduate School of Theology received full accreditation from the Association of Theological Schools (ATS) for the maximum initial period of five years.

In the summer of 2011, Gateway College of Evangelism (Gateway) offered for Urshan Graduate School of Theology (UGST) to acquire Gateway in order to start a new undergraduate program. At the 2011 United Pentecostal Church General Conference, the General Board accepted the proposal for UGST to absorb Gateway.[3] On November 23, 2011 the new institution's name Urshan College was announced. As a Christian college, rather than offering degrees solely in theology (like a Bible College), Urshan College offers the Bachelor of Arts degree in several majors. As part of UGST, it is owned and operated by the United Pentecostal Church International and has a Oneness Pentecostal identity.[4]

Academics

UGST offers three degrees: Master of Divinity, Master of Christian Ministry (which has elective tracks in the fields of Counseling and Missiology) and Master of Theological Studies.

Accreditation

In 2010, Urshan Graduate School of Theology received full accreditation from the Association of Theological Schools (ATS) for the maximum initial period of five years.[5] ATS is the primary accrediting agency for graduate theological education recognized by the U.S. Government. Its accreditation is equal to that of the secular regional accrediting associations. Some schools offer credits through a contractual arrangement with secular or other Christian colleges that are accredited, but do not have their own accreditation.

Center for the Study of Oneness Pentecostalism

The Center for the Study of Oneness Pentecostalism contains the archives for the United Pentecostal Church International and the curator, Robin Johnston, is a member of the adjunct faculty.[6]

gollark: You need to teach everyone everything, you need to know a lot of earlier stuff you probably *don't* about how your shiny new knowledge of electromagnetism and whatever were derived, and you need to make people actually able to use it, which is really hard.
gollark: You're constrained by manufacturing.
gollark: The future is like now, except Macron was developed.
gollark: I probably know more maths things™ than people from around then generally did, but not much of the history or motivation or how they did things without modern calculators and such.
gollark: Anyway, see, cyber, your knowledge of modern-day things are probably *not* amazing cutting-edge knowledge until maybe 1600, but then you can't do much because they lack the technology to do much.

See also

References

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