Moore Theological College

(Redirected from Moore College)

Moore Theological College, otherwise known simply as Moore College, is the theological training seminary of the Diocese of Sydney in the Anglican Church of Australia.[1] The Anglican Archbishop of Sydney holds ex officio the presidency of the Moore Theological College Council.

Moore Theological College
MottoNon inferiora secuti
Motto in English
"Not pursuing lesser ideals"
TypeTheological college
Established1856
AffiliationAnglican Diocese of Sydney
PrincipalMark D. Thompson
President of CouncilKanishka Raffel
Academic staff
20
Students600
Location
Sydney
,
New South Wales
,
Australia

33°53′29.45″S 151°11′16.04″E / 33.8915139°S 151.1877889°E / -33.8915139; 151.1877889
Websitemoore.edu.au

The college has a strong tradition of conservative evangelical theology with an emphasis on the study of the Bible in its original languages, the use of primary sources in theology, the heritage of the Reformation and the integration of theology and ministry practice. It gives particular attention to full-time study in the context of a Christian learning community as an appropriate context for training for full-time Christian ministry, however it also offers part-time and online learning opportunities. The college trains both men and women at every level of its program. On 1 July 2021, Moore College was recognised by the Australian Government's Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency as an Australian University College.[2][3]

Moore Theological College

Overview

edit

The college is one of the largest Anglican seminaries in the world,[4] with normally around 300 full-time students in its BD and BTh programs. Over its history, it has had 13 principals and over 4000 graduates. While Anglican in foundation and governance, it has also trained Presbyterians, Baptists, Congregationalists and others who are sympathetic to the evangelical ethos and theology of the college. The college has also prepared missionaries, church planters and independent church pastors. It attracts students from around the world into its undergraduate and postgraduate programs.

While the largest group studying in its four-year full-time undergraduate program is typically those preparing for Anglican ordained ministry, Moore has also trained other Christian workers. Moore graduates also serve as school chaplains, Christian studies teachers and scripture teachers, university chaplains and staff workers, cross-cultural missionaries, social workers, community workers, hospital and nursing home/retirement village chaplains and refugee advocacy workers.

Moore College has an international reputation as the home of evangelical biblical theology. In the 1950s through to the 1970s Donald Robinson pioneered a way of seeing how the whole Bible fits together as God's unfolding purposes. The underlying pattern of promise and fulfilment unfolds as God's gospel promise of salvation, first for the Jews and then for all the nations, is given to Abraham, partially fulfilled in Israel's history, and realised in the coming of the Christ.[5] In the 1980s and 1990s these ideas were developed by Robinson's pupil, Graeme Goldsworthy, in a series of books, Gospel and Kingdom, According to Plan, and Preaching the Whole Bible as Christian Scripture.[6] Biblical theology in this mode has been characteristic of the work done at Moore College since Robinson's time as vice principal.

Robinson was also influential in developing a doctrine of the church which in a distinctive way resisted the strongly ecumenical tone of the mid twentieth century. A study of the terminology and contextual associations of 'church' in the Bible led Robinson to insist 'church' is a gathering, either fundamentally around Christ in heaven and instantiated throughout the world in local congregations.[7] Each congregation is the church and associations of congregations (denominations), while valuable, cannot attribute to themselves the identity and privileges of 'church'.[8] Such structures exist to support the local congregation in its life as a community of faithful men and women committed to the global gospel mission. Broughton Knox gave these conclusions added theological depth in his own studies of 'fellowship' and the critical nature of 'relationship'.[9] While this perspective was sometimes decried as 'congregationalism', both men were active throughout their lives in the work of the Diocese of Sydney, and Robinson himself became a bishop and in time Archbishop of Sydney. They cannot be construed as congregationalists in any pure sense of the word. However, their teaching gave a priority to the local congregation over denominational and ecumenical concerns and located the unity of the church, something to be maintained rather than established, in the unity of the heavenly gathering around the throne of Christ.

Moore College has played a role in the shape of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney by training the vast majority of the diocese's clergy including the last five Archbishops of Sydney, three of which were also full-time members of the college faculty.[citation needed] Members of the current faculty also serve in various capacities in the diocese, including its Synod, Standing Committee, the Social Issues Committee and the Sydney Diocesan Doctrine Commission.[citation needed]

History

edit

Thomas Hobbes Scott, the first Archdeacon of New South Wales (1825–29), shared his vision for a tertiary training college in the colony in the 1830 Report of the Church and Schools Corporation.[10] With this vision in mind, one of the early settlers of the colony of New South Wales, Thomas Moore,[11] made provision in his will to leave a substantial portion of his considerable fortune[12] to found a college to train young men in 'the principles of the United Church of England and Ireland'.[13] Moore died in 1840, but the vision was realised when Bishop Frederic Barker opened Moore College on 1 March 1856 in Moore's former home in Liverpool, New South Wales.[14] In terms of the date of opening, at least, the college is, therefore, the third oldest tertiary institution in Australia after the University of Sydney (1850) and the University of Melbourne (1853). It began with three students and one full-time tutor, the principal. For almost the first one hundred years of its life (1856–1953), the principals of the college came from the United Kingdom and Ireland. Marcus Loane was the first Australian-born principal of the college (1953–58). The current principal, Mark D. Thompson, took up office in May 2013.

After a theological controversy which, alongside a downturn in student enrollments, led to the dismissal of the principal of the day (T. E. Hill), the teaching activity of the college was suspended in 1888. It reopened in 1891, at the present site in Newtown adjacent to the University of Sydney.[14] The college began to grow in student numbers and influence, particularly under the important principalships of Nathaniel Jones (1897–1911) and later T. C. Hammond (1935–1953).[15] However, the college's most notable leader in 20th century was Broughton Knox (1959-1985).[16] His vision, drive and shrewd management of the college saw it built into a theological college with an international reputation, a noted faculty and students spreading out from Sydney to many other parts of Australia and the globe.

The site on which the college reopened in 1891 has expanded considerably since then. Numerous adjacent buildings have been acquired or built. The Broughton Knox Teaching Centre was opened in 1994. In 2017 a major new building was opened which houses, amongst other things, the Donald Robinson Library and Marcus Loane Hall.

By 1985 the Donald Robinson Library held 90,000 books[17] and it has since grown to contain close to 300,000 works including numerous manuscripts and other items of significance to Anglican, Australian and Evangelical history.[18] In recent years it has developed a significant body of electronic resources and a growing collection of rare books, including the Latimer Library, which was once housed in Latimer House Oxford and was acquired by the library in 2020. In the 1970s the college established its own theological bookstore, I.M.P.A.C.T. Books, which was later renamed MooreBooks. With the advent of internet books sales, Moore Books became financial unsustainable and was closed in 2012.

Well-known Moore College theologians and writers have included Broughton Knox, Donald Robinson, Paul Barnett, Peter Jensen, Graeme Goldsworthy, Peter O'Brien, David Peterson, Barry Webb, John Woodhouse, Peter Bolt, Mark D. Thompson, Andrew G. Shead, Paul R. Williamson, and Edward Loane. Through the influence of Moore College, Sydney Anglicanism has maintained its distinctive Evangelical perspective within worldwide Anglicanism.[19]

In 2021 Moore College received approval to develop new student accommodation for 91 students to replace the existing John Chapman House on the corner of City Road and Carillon Avenue in Newtown, New South Wales.[20][21]

Annual events

edit

In 1977 the college began to host an annual lecture series, the Annual Moore College Lectures, which have been a showcase of leading contemporary biblical and theological scholarship, and most of which have been subsequently published. International guests who have contributed to the lecture series have included J. I. Packer, F. F. Bruce, D. A. Carson, Kenneth Kantzer, Henri Blocher, Mike Ovey, Ashley Null, Gerald Bray, Michael Horton, Kevin Vanhoozer, Carl Trueman and James Hely Hutchinson. Past and present Moore College faculty have also contributed to this lecture series.

Also in the late 1970s, an annual school of theology began to be held which enabled faculty and graduates to explore subjects of interest and importance in the wider Christian community. Subjects treated have included the church, the Spirit, the ethics of life and death, biblical theology, justification, emotions in the Christian life, a celebration of the John Calvin Quincentenary (2009), the Quincentenary of the Reformation (2017), and various books of the Bible (incl. Galatians, Exodus, and the Psalms). The school still continues as a biennial School of Biblical Theology.

Academic and practical training for Christian ministry

edit

When the College opened in 1856, the principal developed a curriculum which enabled the college to offer its own 'college certificate'. By the end of the nineteenth century, however, the college was preparing students for the Oxford and Cambridge Preliminary Examination for Holy Orders. In 1907, students began to sit examinations leading to the University of Durham's Licentiate of Theology. A long association with the Australian College of Theology began soon after, with students preparing for the ACT's Licentiate in Theology examinations, and from the 1970s until 2001, its Bachelor of Theology degree. At the same time, from 1958 to 1986, around 200 students were prepared for the external Bachelor of Divinity degree of London University, tutored by the Moore College faculty. Students received the 'Moore College Diploma', an unaccredited award, for work done during the fourth year of study.

In 1992, the four-year program of study at Moore College was redesigned as an integrated package and became the College's own Bachelor of Divinity degree. This degree and the college's three-year Bachelor of Theology degree were originally accredited by the New South Wales Government's Department of Education and Training, doing away with the need for the accreditation through the Australian College of Theology. In 2011, the college became a self-accrediting Australian Higher Education Provider, able to design and accredit its own programs of study.

The college currently offers a suite of diplomas and degrees:

  • Diploma of Biblical Theology-DBT (online, 1 year full-time)[22][23]
  • Advanced Diploma of Bible, Mission and Ministry-AdvDipBMM (part-time, 1 year full-time)[24][25]
  • Bachelor of Theology-BTh (3 years full-time)[26]
  • Bachelor of Divinity-BD (4 years full-time)[27]
  • Master of Arts in Theology-MA(Theol) (part-time, 2 years full-time) [28]
  • Master of Theology-MTh (part-time, 2 years full-time) [29]
  • Doctor of Philosophy-PhD (3 years full-time) [30]

Community courses

edit

In the 1940s, under Hammond, the college began to train lay preachers within the Diocese of Sydney. This initially involved attending evening lectures by the principal, other members of the faculty and some graduates of the college. The notes from these courses formed the basis of the later correspondence course, the Sydney Preliminary Theological Certificate, which was widely used within Sydney and, in time, internationally. In the 1960s Knox invited B. Ward Powers to develop a three year correspondence course that would parallel the full-time course of the college for ministry candidates. Evening lectures continued alongside this correspondence course and eventually became the Diploma of Biblical Studies.

In late 2013 a significant review of the college's correspondence and evening course was undertaken. The opportunity was taken to move into the online learning space. A chief concern of the review was to keep these courses as flexible as possible to allow them to be used in less resourced places throughout the world. The 'Department of External Studies' was renamed Moore Distance and a variety of initiatives were undertaken to explore the possibilities. In 2020 these were brought together under the heading of the P.T.C. The P.T.C. is the college's unaccredited online course of preliminary theological education.

This course is used in places around the world, in some cases becoming the basic training for church planters and pastors. These include Nigeria[31][32] and India.[33] Translation is under way into Chinese, Tamil, Hindi and Hausa languages.[34] The college has also provided some of this information for use by other organisations such as MOCLAM and African Enterprise.

In 2017 the college began to offer an accredited entrance level diploma entirely online, the Diploma of Biblical Theology. A number of the units of this course provide for advanced standing in the college's full-time degree program.

Centres

edit

Moore College has developed four academic and ministry centres alongside its mainstream academic program:

  1. the Priscilla and Aquila Centre, which promotes, resources and encourages the ministry of women in partnership with men;[35][36]
  2. the Centre for Christian Living, which seeks to provide accessible resources to the general Christian public for intelligent gospel engagement with the wider community;[37]
  3. the Centre for Global Mission, which supports Christian organisations worldwide by providing high quality theological training resources;[38]
  4. the Centre for Ministry Development, which provides specialised continuing training and education for graduates and others involved in Christian ministry;[39]

In addition to these centres, the John Chapman Preaching Initiative is a network of activities designed to promote excellence in biblical expository preaching.

Principals

edit

Notable alumni

edit

Affiliations

edit

Moore College is a member of the Australian and New Zealand Theological Society (ANZATS) and its principal sits on the Council of Deans in Theology (CDT). Moore College is also a member of the GAFCON Theological Education Network.[59]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c "Moore College | The Dictionary of Sydney". dictionaryofsydney.org. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  2. ^ "New university and three University Colleges registered by TEQSA". 8 July 2021.
  3. ^ "Australia gets a new university and three university colleges". Australian Financial Review. 1 July 2021. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  4. ^ "Theological colleges and seminaries of the Anglican Communion".
  5. ^ D. W. B. Robinson, 'The Pattern of Biblical Truth', reprinted in Donald Robinson Selected Works: Volume 3, Biblical and Liturgical Studies, ed. E. A. Loane (Sydney: ACR/Moore College, 2018) in 232–255.
  6. ^ G. L. Goldsworthy, Gospel and Kingdom: A Christian Interpretation of the Old Testament (Exeter: Paternoster, 1981); According to Plan: The Unfolding Revelation of God in the Bible (Leicester: IVP, 1991); Preaching the Whole Bible as Christian Scripture (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2000).
  7. ^ D. W. B. Robinson, 'The Church of God, Its Form and Unity', reprinted in Donald Robinson Selected Works: Volume 1, Assembling God's People, ed. P. G. Bolt & M. D. Thompson (Sydney: ACR/Moore College, 2008), 230–253.
  8. ^ D. B. Knox, 'The church, the churches and the denominations of the churches', reprinted in D. Broughton Knox Selected Works: Volume 2, Church and Ministry, ed. K. Birkett (Kingsford, NSW: Matthias Media, 2003), 85–98.
  9. ^ D. B. Knox, 'The Biblical Concept of Fellowship', reprinted in D. Broughton Knox Selected Works: Volume 2, Church and Ministry, ed. K. Birkett (Kingsford, NSW: Matthias Media, 2003), 57–84.
  10. ^ See P.G. Bolt, 'Training Colonial Clergy after Moore's Will and Before Moore's College', in Thomas Moore of Liverpool: One of our Oldest Colonists. Essays and Addresses to Celebrate 150 Years of Moore College (Camperdown NSW: Bolt Publishing Services, 2007), 249–293, and "Educating for Eternity: Ultimate Learning Outcomes in Colonial NSW", in P.G. Bolt & P. Laughlin (eds.), God’s Exemplary Graduates. Character-Oriented Graduate Attributes in Theological Education (LATT Series No.2; Macquarie Park, NSW: SCD Press, 2021), 32–57.
  11. ^ See P.G. Bolt, Thomas Moore of Liverpool. One of Our Oldest Colonists. Essays & Addresses to Celebrate 150 Years of Moore College (Camperdown, NSW: Bolt Publishing Services, 2007); and A Portrait in his Actions. Thomas Moore (1762–1840). Part 1: From Lesbury to Liverpool (Camperdown, NSW: Bolt Publishing Services, 2010).
  12. ^ P.G. Bolt, ‘Thomas Moore’s Fortune: How Did He Get it? How Did He Use it?’, Anglican Historical Society Journal 56.2 (2011), 39–50.
  13. ^ M. L. Loane, A Centenary History of Moore Theological College (Sydney: Angus & Robertson, 1955), 8.
  14. ^ a b c d "Moore turns 160 as new building rises". Sydney Anglicans. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  15. ^ J. A. McIntosh, Anglican Evangelicalism in Sydney 1897 to 1953: Nathaniel Jones, D. J. Davies and T. C. Hammond (Eugene: Wipf & Stock, 2018).
  16. ^ M. Cameron, An Enigmatic Life: David Broughton Knox, Father of Contemporary Sydney Anglicanism (Brunswick East, Vic: Acorn, 2006).
  17. ^ a b Cameron, Marcia (2021). "Knox, David Broughton (1916–1994)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 19. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  18. ^ Details of Moore College Collection Archived 29 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Darling, B. (2009). "Sydney and Melbourne Anglicans from 1836 to 2009: Historical and personal reflections" Archived 9 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ "Green light given for Moore College's new Student Accom Building". Architecture & Design. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  21. ^ "Plus sets a higher bar for student accommodations at Sydney's Moore Theological College". Archinect. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  22. ^ "Diploma of Biblical Theology (DBT)".
  23. ^ "From Sydney to Seoul, studying the Bible in community - Eternity News". www.eternitynews.com.au. 31 July 2019. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  24. ^ "Advanced Diploma of Bible, Mission and Ministry".
  25. ^ "Advanced Diploma of Bible, Mission and Ministry (Music Ministry)". Emu Music. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  26. ^ "Bachelor of Theology (BTh)".
  27. ^ "Bachelor of Divinity (BD)".
  28. ^ "Master of Arts (Theology) (MA Theol)".
  29. ^ "Master of Theology (MTH)".
  30. ^ "Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)".
  31. ^ marieke (28 May 2020). "Training, and being trained by, African Christian leaders". Australia | African Enterprise. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
  32. ^ Use of Moore Correspondence Course in Nigeria Archived 29 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine, with the Bible Training Partnership
  33. ^ Use of Moore Correspondence Course in India, with the India Training Mission Team
  34. ^ Details of Correspondence Course Translation Projects Archived 23 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ "Submission to your husband is a dangerous doctrine". ABC News. 9 March 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
  36. ^ "Service not Servitude: Women in the Church". ABC Radio National. 14 October 2012. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
  37. ^ "Home". Centre for Christian Living.
  38. ^ "Home". Centre for Global Mission.
  39. ^ "Home". Centre for Ministry Development.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g Loane, Marcus L. (1955). A centenary history of Moore Theological College. Sydney: Angus and Robertson. p. 228. OCLC 10366848.
  41. ^ Jensen, Michael (17 July 2013). "The church and the world: The politics of Sydney Anglicanism". ABC Religion & Ethics. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  42. ^ a b c McIntosh, John A. (2018). Anglican Evangelicalism in Sydney, 1897 to 1953 : Nathaniel Jones, D. J. Davies and T. C. Hammond. Australian College of Theology Monograph Series. Eugene, Oregon: Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 978-1-5326-4309-5. OCLC 1030913334.
  43. ^ Gill, Alan (15 November 1975). "The turbulent years of Doctor Rumble" (PDF). Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  44. ^ a b "The Most Rev Marcus Loane". www.telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  45. ^ Loane, Marcus L. (1994). Broughton Knox : principal of Moore College, 1959-1985. Peter F. Jensen. Newtown, NSW: Moore Theological College. ISBN 0-909443-21-1. OCLC 33038341.
  46. ^ "Sydney's new Anglican Archbishop; theological colleges; a new choral work". ABC Radio National. 5 June 2001. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
  47. ^ "Will the real God please give us a sign". The Sydney Morning Herald. 15 March 2003. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
  48. ^ "Glenn Davies". sydneyanglicans.net. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
  49. ^ "Rev Chris Edwards named as new Bishop of North Sydney". christiantoday.com.au. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  50. ^ "Hayward new bishop in Gong". Sydney Anglicans. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  51. ^ Marr, David (10 June 2008). "The archbishop says No". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  52. ^ "A new Bishop for the West". Sydney Anglicans. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  53. ^ "Newest bishop prefers saving souls to saving bodies". The Sydney Morning Herald. 3 January 2003. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  54. ^ "Peter Lin". Sydney Anglicans. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  55. ^ Earngey, Mark E., ed. (2021). "Nominee Snapshot: Kanishka Raffel" (PDF). Australian Church Record. Autumn 2021 (1925): 34. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  56. ^ "Passing of a leader who made 'immeasurable' contribution". Sydney Anglicans. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  57. ^ Powell, Russell (24 August 2015). "Scholar bishop chosen for South Sydney". Sydney Anglicans. Anglican Diocese of Sydney. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
  58. ^ "New NW Bishop". Anglican Diocese of North West Australia. 6 September 2022. Retrieved 13 June 2023.
  59. ^ "Bill Salier appointed Consultant in the GAFCON Theological Educators' Network". Moore Theological College. 9 February 2021.

Further reading

edit

Biographies of principals

edit
edit