Libby A. Nelson at Inside Higher Education reports on the latest trend in clergy training:
Dual degrees for seminary students aren’t entirely new. For decades, some seminaries and their nearby or affiliated colleges have graduated students with masters’ degrees in both divinity and social work. bination of a master’s degree in divinity with a master’s in business administration is newer, but growing, says Dan Aleshire, executive director of the Association of Theological Schools, an accrediting body.
In the past five years, programs bine master’s degrees in divinity with business credentials have sprung up, Aleshire says. He sees two reasons: leadership studies have e mon as an academic field, and Christian ministry has expanded beyond the church into nonprofit organizations and social entrepreneurship — start-up businesses that try to serve a larger good.
Read more . . .