Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Vanderbilt University Divinity School

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Type
  
Private

Postgraduates
  
230

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
38,160 USD (2011)

Total enrollment
  
247 (2011)

Founded
  
1875

Established
  
1875

Location
  
Nashville, TN, US

Dean
  
Emilie M. Townes

Phone
  
+1 615-322-2776

Dean
  
Emilie Maureen Townes

Vanderbilt University Divinity School

Address
  
411 21st Ave S, Nashville, TN 37240, USA

Notable alumni
  
James Lawson, Amy Welborn, Margaret Starbird, Roy Herron, Claude C Williams

Similar
  
Vanderbilt University, Peabody College, American Baptist College, Yale Divinity School, Harvard Divinity School

Profiles

The Vanderbilt Divinity School and Graduate Department of Religion (usually Vanderbilt Divinity School) is an interdenominational divinity school at Vanderbilt University, a major research university located in Nashville, Tennessee. It is one of only five university-based schools of religion in the United States without a denominational affiliation that service primarily mainline Protestantism (University of Chicago Divinity School, Harvard Divinity School, Wake Forest University School of Divinity, Yale Divinity School, and Howard University School of Divinity are the others).

Contents

Early history

Vanderbilt Divinity School was founded in 1875 as the Biblical Department and was under the auspices of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, one predecessor of the present-day United Methodist Church. In 1914, in concert with the University's severance of its ties with the MECS, the school became interdenominational and ecumenical, and in 1915, the school's name was changed from the Biblical Department of Vanderbilt University to the Vanderbilt School of Religion; it adopted its present name in 1956. The present physical plant of the school, known colloquially as the "quadrangle" or "quad," was completed in 1960; the Benton Chapel that abuts the quad is named for a mid-20th-century dean, John Keith Benton. In 1966 the Graduate School of Theology of Oberlin College in Ohio merged with that of Vanderbilt, increasing the faculty resources of both the Divinity School and the Graduate Department of Religion, as well as the holdings of the school's portion of the University Library.

Civil Rights era

A notable period in the history of Vanderbilt Divinity School was the Civil Rights Movement. In 1960, African-American Divinity student James Lawson was expelled from the university for his role in nonviolent protests in the Nashville area. This expulsion, in turn, sparked great protest from many members of the Vanderbilt community, including most of the faculty of the Divinity School, who resigned en masse. The so-called "Lawson Affair" was eventually resolved with Lawson's nominal reinstatement, and the resigned faculty resumed their posts, with the exception of the Dean of the Divinity School

Denominations served

Despite having ended formal association with Methodism nearly a century ago, the United Methodist Church is the largest beneficiary of graduates from the Divinity School, with sizable numbers ordained in denominations such as the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) (which operates a seminarian apartment nearby the campus), the Presbyterian Church (USA), and African-American Baptist, Methodist, and Pentecostal groups. VDS, through the merger with Oberlin and an earlier absorption of Atlanta Theological Seminary, a Congregationalist seminary in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1929, maintains a historical relationship (although no legal ties) with the United Church of Christ as well.

Students come from throughout the United States, representing numerous denominations and traditions.

Leadership

The dean of the Vanderbilt Divinity School is Emilie M. Townes, formerly on the faculty of Yale Divinity School in Connecticut. Notable recent deans of the Divinity School include Joseph C. Hough, Jr., Sallie McFague, Walter Harrelson, and H. Jackson Forstman.

Vanderbilt Divinity School is a member of the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada.

Notable faculty

  • Langdon Brown Gilkey - Professor (1954–63)
  • Amy-Jill Levine - E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Professor of New Testament Studies
  • Wilhelm Pauck - Distinguished Professor of Church History (1967–72)
  • Jack M. Sasson - Mary Jane Werthan Professor of Jewish Studies and Hebrew Bible
  • Choon-Leong Seow
  • Kelly Miller Smith - former assistant dean
  • Eugene Sutton
  • Fernando Segovia - current president of the Society for Biblical Literature
  • Notable alumni

  • Kenneth Lee Carder (D.Min. in 1980) - United Methodist bishop
  • Earnest Sevier Cox (1880-1966), Methodist preacher, white supremacist
  • Al Gore - attended 1971-72 on a yearlong Rockefeller Foundation scholarship for people planning secular careers
  • John William Harkins (M.Div.) - Senior Lecturer of Pastoral Theology and Care at Columbia Theological Seminary, Episcopal priest
  • Clare Purcell (B.D. in 1916) - Methodist bishop
  • Robert Hitchcock Spain (M.Div.) - United Methodist bishop
  • Amy Welborn (M.A. in Church History) - Roman Catholic author, columnist, activist, academic and public speaker
  • Don West - studied under Alva Taylor and Willard Uphaus
  • Shelli Yoder (M.Div.) - Miss Indiana 1992, former Democratic Party nominee for U.S. Congress (IN-9)
  • References

    Vanderbilt University Divinity School Wikipedia