The Northside Chicago Theological Institute (NCTI) was organized in 1971 for educational and ecumenical purposes by five theological schools: Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, North Park Theological Seminary, Seabury-Western Theological Seminary, Mundelein Seminary and Trinity Evangelical Divinity School.
The schools are located on the north side of the Chicago area, with one in Chicago, two on contiguous campuses in Evanston adjacent to Northwestern University, one in Deerfield and one in Mundelein.
The activities of the NCTI are under the direction of a board of directors whose officers are elected biennially. From its beginning the NCTI has emphasized the importance of student representation on its boards and committees. The NCTI sponsors two academic courses each year.
The Church and Its Mission, a fall seminar, explores the views of several major Christian communions on this theme. The weekend sessions are held on the campus of Mundelein Seminary for a minimal fee. Credit hours are contingent on whether the school is on a quarter or semester system. The seminar is scheduled for October 5-6 and 26-27, 2001. For further information call Sister Sara Butler, M.S.B.T., at MS: 847.970.4868; or Richard Carlson at NPTS: 773.224.6227.
The spring seminar, Prayer and Life in the Spirit, has addressed various theological themes in Christian spirituality and practice and has focused on the diversity of ways in which Christians of many traditions understand prayer and life in the Spirit. In its present format the seminar includes two overnight intensive retreat experiences on the campus of Mundelein Seminary.Registration is limited. Student participants pay a minimal fee. For further information regarding the seminar, contact Professor John Weborg, coordinator, at NPTS: 773.244.6231.
Each member school of NCTI observes the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity through activities appropriate to its own tradition. Exchange of pulpit speakers has proven enriching for the schools.
The five ACTS schools located in Hyde Park (Catholic Theological Union, Chicago Theological Seminary, Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, McCormick Theological Seminary, and Meadville/Lombard Theological School) and the Divinity School of the University of Chicago identify themselves as the Hyde Park Cluster of Theological Schools. The cluster seeks ways to deepen academic cooperation and sharing beyond those made possible by the ACTS structure.
The purposes of the cluster are to (1) promote academic cooperation among the schools in Hyde Park; (2) foster dialogue and scholarship among its faculties through support of discipline groups and interdisciplinary colloquies; (3) develop support for academic programs through cooperative student services, recruitment and language programs; and (4) aid in communication and planning among the member institutions.
A committee consisting of the chief academic officers of the six schools administers the Hyde Park Cluster of Theological Schools. The chief executive officers of the cooperating institutions serve as an advisory board to the committee, especially in areas related to institutional planning.
A Doctor of Ministry in Preaching degree is offered by a group of six ACTS schools as an accepted program of the association. The six schools are Chicago Theological Seminary, Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, McCormick Theological Seminary, North Park Theological Seminary, Northern Baptist Theological Seminary, and Seabury-Western Theological Seminary. The program is ecumenical and cross-disciplinary in its design. The curriculum includes three summer residencies of three weeks each in Chicago, two preaching ministry projects, and a final thesis. Each student’s program is tailored to his or her needs in consultation with a supervisor and peers in the residency, as well as with a parish advisory committee. Interested persons should contact Richard Jensen, Dean of the Program, 1100 E. 55th Street, Chicago, IL 60615; phone 773.256.0777; or Danna Gobel, Program Coordinator, ACTS D.Min. in Preaching Program, 5555 South Woodlawn, Chicago, IL 60637; phone: 773-947-6270.
Opportunities to travel and study outside Chicago are offered for course credit by several ACTS schools; they are listed below by geographic area. Students from CTU, LSTC, and MTS may contact the office of the Chicago Center for Global Ministries for full details about programs and funding.
Africa. CCGM (LSTC, MTS, CTU) offers to students on a yearly basis overseas exchange opportunities in Africa. CCGM offers a cross-cultural quarter in Ghana. For more information contact Richard Bliese at the CCGM office, 773.363.1342.
Caribbean. G-ETS offers a study tour, Religion and Culture in the Hispanic Caribbean, January 7–18, 2002. For information, contact registrar’s office, 847.866.3905.
Chicago. CTU offers a cross-cultural quarter in Chicago. Phone Richard Bliese at CCGM, 773.363.1342.
Eastern Europe.LSTC periodically offers students internships in Eastern Europe. For information contact Connie Kleingartner, LSTC; phone: 773.256.0746.
Germany. The Collegium Oecumenicum in northern Munich, Germany, offers LSTC students the chance to live and study for up to a year among a community of 50 students from Germany and other parts of the world. Students do their academic work at the University of Munich. Students may register for the winter semester (November to February) and/or the summer semester (May to August). Students from other ACTS schools who are interested in this program should contact Dean Kadi Billman, LSTC, 773.256.0721.
Israel. CTU offers a program in Israel as an opportunity to reflect prayerfully on the Scriptures in the Holy Land. A portion of each day is given to orientation to biblical sites as well as visiting sites and a portion is reserved for prayer and reflection. For information and application forms, contact Mary Jo Curtsinger, CTU; phone: 773.753.5355; e-mail: mjcurtsinger@ctu.edu.
Israel/Jordan. CTU offers a program in Israel and Jordan June 2003. This study tour is a three-week intensive with guided exploration of biblical and historical sites directed by Barbara Bowe, RSCJ. One may receive credit for this course (B502) by taking a prerequisite, History and Archaeology of Israel (B475), offered in the evening during the spring quarter. This study tour is offered at the end of the spring quarter in odd numbered years. For information and application forms, contact Mary Jo Curtsinger, CTU; phone: 773.753.5355; e-mail: mjcurtsinger@ctu.edu.
Malta/North Africa. CTU offers the study travel program Early Christianity in Malta and North Africa. Carolyn Osiek, RSCJ, directs the program. For information and application forms, contact Mary Jo Curtsinger, CTU; phone: 773.753.5355; e-mail: mjcurtsinger@ctu.edu.
Mexico/U.S. Border. The CCGM-sponsored course Cross-Cultural Quarter is designed to prepare for cross-cultural ministry within a global environment. The centerpiece of the course is a three-week trip to the Mexico/U.S. border. Preparation and debriefing sessions are also part of the course. For more information, contact Stephen Bevans or Richard Bliese at 773.363.1342.
Middle East. CTU offers an extended program of study and guided exploration of biblical sites late August–mid-November. Course work concentrates on the history and archaeology of Israel in a variety of Old and New Testament traditions. A six-day reentry program conducted at CTU concludes the on-site program. Participants earn 12 graduate hours for the travel program, which includes Greece, Turkey, Israel, Jordan, and Egypt. Apply in January for the following fall quarter. For information and application forms, contact Mary Jo Curtsinger, CTU; phone: 773.753.5355; e-mail: mjcurtsinger@ctu.edu.
Middle East. LSTC and Evangelicals for Middle East Understanding jointly provide short trips each year to various sites in the Middle East (including Israel, Palestine, and Turkey) for the purpose of studying Muslim-Christian relations. For more information, contact Richard Bliese at the CCGM office; phone: 773.363.1342; or Harold Vogelaar, phone: 773.256.0755.
Pine Ridge/Rosebud.CTU offers a cross-cultural quarter at Pine Ridge/Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota. Preparation and debriefing sessions are also part of the course. Phone Stephen Bevans or Richard Bliese at CCGM, 773.363.1342.
Sweden. Under an agreement between LSTC and the University of Uppsala, LSTC students may study at the University of Uppsala on a full-time basis for a year; courses are offered in English. Students from other ACTS schools who are interested in this program should contact Ralph Klein, LSTC; phone: 773.256.0721; or Richard Bliese at the CCGM office; phone: 773.363.1342.
Six schools (Chicago Theological Seminary, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, McCormick Theological Seminary, Meadville/Lombard Theological School, and the Divinity School of the University of Chicago) and one hospital system (Advocate Health Care, related to the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the United Church of Christ) sponsor the ACTS Urban Clinical Pastoral Education Program in the summer and during the academic year. Accredited by the Association for Clinical Pastoral Education, the program offers a nontraditional CPE experience with a focus on urban and public ministry. It brings together the CPE methodology of integration of personal and professional attributes with the practice of ministry in urban agencies, parishes, and community organizations. The goals of the program are to enable students:
The summer intensive program runs full time from mid-June through late August, and the yearlong program for 30 weeks, 15 hours per week, in coordination with the seminary calendars. Applicants should complete the standard ACPE application, have an admission interview with a CPE supervisor, and meet with the director of the program. Applications submitted by December 20 (for the summer) or May 1 (for the fall) will be given first priority. There is a $25 application fee. For further information contact Barbara Sheehan, S.P., Director, ACTS Urban CPE Program, c/o CTS, 5757 South University Ave., Chicago, IL 60637; phone: 773.322.0266; e-mail b-sheehan@msn.com.
The Center for Ethics and Values at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary offers seminars, lectures, and conferences on a rich array of public concerns. Recent topics have included dying well in the late twentieth century, religion and war, the Kosovo crisis, children in the city, the future of health care, and business ethics. The center is connected with the graduate faculty of Northwestern University and enjoys the resources of Northwestern’s professional schools as well as those of the churches and synagogues of the Chicago area. Seminars are also held in out-of-state locations under the sponsorship of churches and business groups.
ACTS faculty and students are invited to attend lectures of interest or to become involved as scholar-participants in any of the cycles. For more information, contact the Center for Ethics at 847.866.3915.
The Center for Religion and the News Media is a collaborative project sponsored by Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary and the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. The center was established in 1994 to enhance the news media’s coverage of religion and the religious dimension of other issues. Inquiries about the center should be directed to Roy Larson, Garrett-Evangelical: 847.866.3960.
To meet the growing challenges to preparation for ministry posed by globalization trends today, Catholic Theological Union, Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago and McCormick Theological Seminary established the Chicago Center for Global Ministries (CCGM) in 1993. The purpose of the center is to coordinate more effectively current resources and to build upon those resources to meet the globalization challenge for ministry, especially in regard to world mission, cross-cultural ministries, interreligious dialogue, urban ministries and issues of justice, peace and ecology.
CCGM serves as a focus point for these areas of ministry by coordinating course offerings, offering a forum where concerned faculty may meet to discuss these issues, and providing a locus for new research efforts in these areas of globalization. At a time when theological education is becoming more international and multicultural, and the world itself manifests simultaneously a new concern for particularity and greater possibilities for communication, the work of the Chicago Center for Global Ministries embraces these paradoxes and complexities as the location for training ministers for the 21st century.
For additional information, contact Mark Thomsen, director, or Daniel Rodríguez-Díaz and Charles Walter, MCCJ, associate directors, at the CCGM office at CTU; phone: 773.363.1342; fax: 773.363.1343; e-mail: ccgminstry@aol.com.
Hispanic Ministries programs, offered by McCormick Theological Seminary and the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, offer a concentration within the course of study of the regular M.Div. and M.A.T.S. degrees. The purpose of the programs is to prepare Hispanics and other bilingual persons to serve effectively in Hispanic communities. The programs offer courses in all fields of the seminary curriculum and in the practice of ministry in local Hispanic settings. In addition to the instruction provided by their own faculties, MTS and LSTC invite outstanding Hispanic theologians and ministerial practitioners to their campuses to expand the resources available.
Noncredit courses in French, German, Spanish, Latin and Greek are available to graduate students (and others) in the Chicago area through the Language Program of the Hyde Park Cluster of Theological Schools. Designed to help students develop the language skills necessary for academic research, these courses emphasize grammar and translation practice. Hundreds of university and seminary students have taken these courses in order to prepare for their graduate language examinations or otherwise to fulfill their graduate language requirements. Courses are taught throughout the four quarters of the academic year, and are generally held at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, 1100 East 55th Street (at University Avenue) or on the University of Chicago campus. Moderate fees are charged. For further information, please see the Web page at http://www2.uchicago.edu/divinity/languages.html or contact Celia Brickman by phone: 773.324.9383, or by e-mail <cbrickma@midway.uchicago.edu>.
The World Mission Institute (WMI) is an annual three-day conference held on the last weekend in April every year. The Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago and Catholic Theological Union, with other ACTS member schools, have sponsored WMI since 1970. In addition, other educational and mission organizations help support the WMI each year. Today, the WMI is organized and administered by the Chicago Center for Global Ministries (CCGM). Each year outstanding international speakers and resource persons deal with a significant aspect of Christian mission. All students and faculty of ACTS schools are invited to participate in the WMI without registration charges. Inquiries regarding WMI should be addressed to the Chicago Center for Global Ministries, 5401 South Cornell Avenue, Chicago, IL 60615; phone: 773.363.1342; e-mail: ccgminstry@aol.com.