Thursday, November 21, 2024

9 May 2018

Thursday, May 10, 2018, 21:32
This news item was posted in Presbyterians Week category.

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“But if the watchman see the sword come, and blow not the trumpet, and the people be not warned; if the sword come, and take any person from among them, he is taken away in his iniquity; but his blood will I require at the watchman’s hand.” [Ezekiel 33:6]

“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.” [Ephesians 6:12]

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Presbyterians Week Headlines

[1] First and Second Thessalonians by Gordon H. Clark is now available as an eBook from The Trinity Foundation

[2] The Future of Christendom 2018: Transforming the Culture Through Education Scheduled for 5-7 October 2018 at the Crowne Plaza in Reading, Pennsylvania

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[1] First and Second Thessalonians by Gordon H. Clark is now available as an eBook from The Trinity Foundation

First and Second Thessalonians by Gordon H. Clark is now available from the Trinity Foundation as an eBook for a $US5.00 download.

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+ The Trinity Foundation, Post Office Box 68, Unicoi, Tennessee 37692, 423-743-0199, Fax: 423-743-2005, tjtrinityfound@aol.com

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[2] The Future of Christendom 2018: Transforming the Culture Through Education Scheduled for 5-7 October 2018 at the Crowne Plaza in Reading, Pennsylvania

The Mid Atlantic Reformation Society on 5-7 October 2018 is presenting a conference titled “The Future of Christendom 2018: Transforming the Culture Through Education” at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Reading, Pennsylvania.

Headline speakers include Paul Michael Raymond, president of the New Geneva Christian Leadership Academy, and Martin Selbrede, vice-president of the Chalcedon Foundation.

Breakout session speakers include Charles Van Wyk, missionary and author of “Shooting Back,” Peter Hammond, director of the Frontline Fellowship, Matt Truhella, author of “The Doctrine of the Lesser Magistrate,” John Eidsmoe, author and constitutional attorney, Philip Kayser, founder and president of Educational Blueprints, and Godfrey Kyazze, CEO of Master’s Institute for Education (Uganda).

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+ Mid-Atlantic Reformation Society, Contact Page

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[3] Calvin College Board of Trustees Approves Decision for Calvin College to Become Calvin University

The institutional change, which will take place in 2020, is part of Vision 2030, a statement that sets a vision for the college as it seeks to fulfill its mission over the next decade.

Meanwhile, Dordt College, a Christian Reformed Church-affiliated school in Sioux Center, Iowa, also recently announced that it will become Dordt University in May 2019.

In speaking about this move, Richard Mouw, president emeritus of Fuller Theological Seminary and a member of the Dordt College Board of Trustees, said, “In many countries, the word college refers to high school, so some students overlook Dordt as an option for postsecondary education. Potential graduate students search for universities . . . as an engaging, challenging place to learn.”

The shift to become Calvin University in 2020, approved during the board’s spring meeting, will take place in the 100th-anniversary year of Calvin’s becoming a four-year college.

The board’s decision follows unanimous endorsement by the college’s faculty senate in late April, after more than nine months of collaborative strategic work by the Calvin community.

“This direction enables us to live into what has already been true about Calvin, and it will better position us for the innovative work that is necessary for the future,” said Michael Le Roy, president of Calvin College. “We see this move providing a great opportunity to introduce more people to Calvin’s distinctive Christian mission.”

Le Roy says the rationale for Calvin’s becoming a university is strong, including Calvin’s strength, breadth, and depth of academic programs; new opportunities for academic innovation; and increasing influence with students and higher education partners around the globe. The college also has a large international student population for whom the term university is more visible and better understood than college.

“A move to becoming a university with a liberal arts foundation both names what we already do and liberates us to do that work better,” said Kevin den Dulk, political science professor at Calvin College and executive director of the Henry Institute. “I’m especially enthusiastic about using the university structure to expand our global reach, which is already considerable yet has a lot of room to grow.”

In Sioux Center, the similar change “fits Dordt’s mission, highlights the excellence of its academic programs, and emphasizes its global footprint,” said president Erik Hoekstra.

“Dordt University best describes who we are and who we are becoming,” he said.

“Over the years, we have developed academic and cocurricular programs that grow out of our mission to prepare students to serve in the professions they enter and the communities in which they live. Dordt now looks and acts more like a university than a college.”

Dordt College will officially become Dordt University on May 13, 2019, three days after the class of 2019 becomes the final class to graduate from Dordt as a college.

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+ Christian Reformed Church in North America, 2850 Kalamazoo Avenue Southeast, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49560, 616-241-1691, Fax: 616-224-0803 crcna@crcna.org

+ Calvin College 3201 Burton Southeast, Grand Rapids, Michigan  49546, 616-526-6000

+ Dordt College, 498 4th Avenue Northeast, Sioux Center, Iowa 51250, 712-722-6000, public-relations@dordt.edu

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