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Church of Christ college Town Burritt College (closed, 1939) : Spencer, Tennessee: Cascade College (closed, 2009) : Portland, Oregon: Lipscomb University Austin Center formerly the Austin Graduate School of Theology (closed, 2022)
Lipscomb University is a private Christian university in Nashville, Tennessee. It is affiliated with the Churches of Christ . The campus is located in the Green Hills neighborhood of Nashville; it also maintains one satellite location called "Spark" in Downtown Nashville to serve the business community. [ 9 ]
A list of universities and colleges affiliated with the ... Lipscomb University: 1891: ... Nations University: 1996: New Orleans, Louisiana: Nebraska ...
Mount Lebanon University, Mount Lebanon, 1860–1906 — closed, replaced by Louisiana Baptists with Louisiana College St. Charles College , Grand Coteau , 1837–1922 — closed . Campus currently a Jesuit scholasticate, retreat center, and retirement home.
From 1981 to 1983, he was an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Lipscomb University. When Shelly stepped down from the pulpit in 2005, he began teaching again as a Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Rochester University, in Rochester Hills, Michigan. He was named the President of Rochester College in May 2009.
Hartford International University for Religion and Peace: Hartford, Connecticut: Joel Lohr (President) 1938: Inter/Multidenominational Harvard Divinity School: Cambridge, Massachusetts: David Hempton (Dean) 1940: Inter/Multidenominational Hazelip School of Theology of Lipscomb University: Nashville, Tennessee: Terry Briley (Dean of College of ...
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (Newark, New Jersey) – sold by Seton Hall University to the State of New Jersey in the 1960s Webster University ( Webster Groves, Missouri ) – founded by the Sisters of Loretto ; renounced affiliation with the Catholic Church in 1967
David Lipscomb (January 21, 1831 – November 11, 1917) was a minister, editor, and educator in the American Restoration Movement and one of the leaders of that movement, which, by 1906, had formalized a division into the Church of Christ (with which Lipscomb was affiliated) and the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ).