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Virginia Theological Seminary (VTS), formally the Protestant Episcopal Theological Seminary in Virginia, [2] is an Episcopal seminary in Alexandria, Virginia. It is the largest and second-oldest such accredited seminary in the United States .
She has taught at Middlebury College (1987–2002) and Bangor Theological Seminary (1993–1996) and, since 2002, at Virginia Theological Seminary, where she became the William Meade Professor in 2014.
Virginia Theological Seminary; Virginia Union University; Virginia University of Lynchburg This page was last edited on 26 August 2021, at 01:56 (UTC). Text ...
Virginia Theological Seminary: Alexandria, Virginia: Ian Markham (Dean and President) 1938: Episcopal Church Wake Forest University School of Divinity: Winston-Salem, North Carolina: Gail R. O'Day (Dean and Professor of New Testament and Preaching) 2005: Inter/Multidenominational Wartburg Theological Seminary: Dubuque, Iowa: Stanley N. Olson ...
The school was founded in 1886 and incorporated in 1888 by the Virginia Baptist State Convention as the coeducational "Lynchburg Baptist Seminary". Classes were first held in 1890 under the name Virginia Seminary. [4] With the offering of a collegiate program in 1900, the name was again changed, to Virginia Theological Seminary and College.
Robert Atkinson Gibson (1846–1919), bishop of Virginia Terrell Glenn (born 1958), bishop in the Anglican Mission in the Americas and the Anglican Church in North America W. A. R. Goodwin (1869–1939), rector of Bruton Parish Church in Williamsburg , "the father of Colonial Williamsburg "
Prior to joining the VTS faculty in 1996, Cook served on the faculty of Union Theological Seminary at Columbia University in New York City for four years. He did his doctoral training in Old Testament at Yale University after having completing the M.Div. degree at Yale's Divinity School, where he also served as an instructor and fellow.
He served as pastor of Carver Memorial Presbyterian Church in Newport News, Virginia, from 1982 to 1988, before studying for his doctorate.He served as the Richard J. Dearborne Professor of New Testament Interpretation at Princeton Theological Seminary for 15 years before being called as President of Union Presbyterian Seminary in Richmond, Virginia in 2007.