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°Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï Alliance and Seminario Teologico Nazareno
°Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï Alliance and Seminario Teologico Nazareno

The Alliance for Ministry Education

The Alliance for Ministry Education is a partnership between °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï (°Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï) and participating district training centers (DTCs) who work together to provide college-level ministry training at the district level. This training is designed to produce effective ministers and allows persons to fulfill the educational requirements for ordination in the Church of the Nazarene.

The Alliance is:

  1. district-sponsored training centers that provide instruction to students in a classroom setting or through structures which best meet the educational needs of the students.
     
  2. support from °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï to member DTCs that includes instructional design and methodology, curricular expertise, and programmatic development.
     
  3. organizational and instructional consultation shared among the members of the Alliance.
     
  4. the use of the Student Academic Portfolio (see Section II) through which students may be granted °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï college credit for work completed at a DTC.

There are currently 14 districts which have an Alliance with °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï and are teaching courses in English. The Alliance has one member, The Seminario Teológico Nazareno of Los Angeles which teaches entirely in Spanish. 

The Seminario Teológico Nazareno held their 2019 Graduation at the Los Angeles First Church of the Nazarene, with three graduating students and approximately 100 in attendance on Saturday, June 29, 2019.

The Seminario Teológico Nazareno (STN) was started in the 1980’s to prepare Hispanic pastors and workers from the four Nazarene Districts of Los Angeles, Anaheim, Western Latin American and Southern California. The Seminario has approximately 40 Spanish speaking students attending classes every week. These students are pursuing all the courses required for ordination but are doing it at a university level. That is because for decades, the Seminario has been a member of the Alliance for Ministry Education.

When an STN student enrolls at °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï, in the degree program, that student has the option of submitting her or his STN course work through a portfolio to °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï for evaluation. If a portfolio course is accepted by °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï, those course credits are applied to the student's official °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï transcript, the STN student can be accepted as an °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï student, and can continue studying until they have completed a Bachelor’s degree with °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï. So far historically, three of the eleven graduates from °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï’s Hispanic Pastoral Ministries Bachelor’s degree program came from the Seminario Teológico Nazareno.

Three students graduated Saturday: Aura Carrillo, José Carrillo and Martha Valencia. °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï Board of Trustees member, Rev. Moisés Champo, is a long-time member of the STN faculty. Rev. Ramiro Juárez, the Rector of STN, is also an adjunct professor for the °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï HPM program. Rev. Tim McKeithen gave the Commencement address at the STN Graduation.

Los Angeles First Church of the Nazarene was founded by Phineas F. Bresee in October, 1895. It was intended to be a group of people who would minister to the poor living in the streets of Los Angeles. It is the first congregation of the Church of the Nazarene, existing more than a decade before the denomination’s founding.

By: Mrs. Cheryl A. Graves, °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï Director of the Alliance for Ministry Education program and Prof. Tim McKeithen, °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï Faculty and Program Director for the Hispanic Pastoral Ministries degree.

Published: 07/08/2019

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