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Why did Trinity Evangelical Divinity School fail?
Christian Post ^ | 05/15/2025 | John B. Carpenter

Posted on 05/15/2025 11:56:49 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Last month, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (TEDS) announced it is merging with a Canadian university, closing its campus north of Chicago, and relocating over 2,000 miles away. As happy a face as the seminary and we alumni wish to put on this, this effectively marks the end of a once-prominent Evangelical institution.

At its heyday, when I was a student there in the late 90s, it was home to world-class scholars like Don Carson, Wayne Grudem, Harold O.J. Brown, Douglas Sweeney (now dean of Beeson Divinity School), the erudite and genuinely godly missiologist Paul Hiebert, and many others. Carl Henry was one of my visiting professors. John Stott spoke in the chapel. And yet, in just a quarter of a century, it's on the verge of dissolution. How did this happen?

Collin Hansen, editor-in-chief at The Gospel Coalition (TGC), wrote an obituary for our mutual alma mater. He identified two reasons — both practical — for TEDS’ demise:

1. lack of “ample endowments” like those that sustain elite institutions such as Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Duke despite their liberalism and declining enrollments;

2. insufficient financial support from a large denomination. Although TEDS had a denomination backing it, it was the tiny Evangelical Free Church of America (EFCA).

For reasons unknown, the EFCA chose not to continue investing in TEDS. I’m sure Hansen’s autopsy is partly correct. But I know, from my experiences there, an underlying spiritual cause for TEDS’ untimely end – one that TGC may overlook due to its similar weaknesses.

I arrived at TEDS in 1996, six years after earning an M.Div. at Fuller Theological Seminary. Academically, Fuller and TEDS were comparable. Indeed, Paul Hiebert had transitioned from being a missiology professor at Fuller to TEDS by then. But they were worlds apart culturally. Fuller was committed to “Evangelical feminism,” which is, of course, an oxymoron. TEDS hosted feminism, toyed with it, allowed it, but thought it was above taking a definitive stance either for or against it. It aimed to be above the fray in the complementarianism vs egalitarianism debate. Hansen hints at this by celebrating TEDS’ “alternative to death-dealing liberalism and soul-stifling fundamentalism.” That may be true, but when it comes to overt biblical issues, like feminism, remaining neutral, as though there’s a biblical case to be made for feminism, is a dereliction. It is theological third-wayism, and TEDS’ decision to take that route was, I believe, the way to its dead end.

Accustomed to the free-wheeling seminary culture of Fuller, when I arrived at TEDS and saw a bulletin board notice for a meeting of “Christians for Biblical Equality” (CBE, the pseudo-Evangelical feminist propaganda outlet), I posted an alternative notice, a parody of the CBE invitation. Mine featured a mock logo with a question mark inside a fish symbol, advertising a fictional “Christians for Bible Evasion” (also CBE). I thought it was funny, Wittenberg Door — now Babylon Bee — kind of stuff. I was the only one who thought so on that campus. When I admitted in class that I was responsible for the mockery of CBE, a fellow student turned around and scornfully asked me, “You posted that?” Fuller would have shaken its collective head, except for a minority like me, but allowed the parody to remain.

At TEDS, it was taken down immediately and caused a tempest in a seminary teacup. Soon, during a chapel meeting, professors chided such boorishness and advised us all that, above all — not that we defend the clear, repeated, emphatic statements in God’s Word about men’s headship or how feminism inevitably undermines the authority of Scripture; or even, as at Fuller, a convictional, though naïve and foolish insistence that we can be “Evangelical and feminist” — but, above all, be nice.

TEDS was undone by its refusal to take a stand, its commitment to third-wayism, and its tacking to the middle. When you attempt to walk down the middle of the road, you get hit by traffic coming from both directions.

Oh, what could have been. TEDS was positioned to be the seminary of the “Young, Restless and Reformed” (YRR) movement, had it only been bold enough to embrace it. With Grudem on board, TEDS could easily have been a bastion of complementarianism, even served as the home of the Council of Biblical Manhood and Womanhood (CBMW). But that would have required taking a stand. TEDS might have been better off, purely practically, though not spiritually, if it had taken the Fuller route and embraced feminism. Instead, it chose to be political, thinking that if they were as inoffensive as possible, avoiding taking stands on controversial issues, then they would offend no one and prosper.

But this strategy never works.

Believers want their institutions to be bold when the Bible is bold. TEDS, however, tried to be all things to all people and, in the end, became nothing. This should teach us all a lesson for the future.


John B. Carpenter, Ph.D., is pastor of Covenant Reformed Baptist Church, in Danville, VA. and the author of Seven Pillars of a Biblical Church (Wipf and Stock, 2022) and the Covenant Caswell substack.


TOPICS: Evangelical Christian; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: seminary; teds

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1 posted on 05/15/2025 11:56:49 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

TEDS got woke and moved away from preparing pulpiteers toward becoming a PhD factory. It is the near-inevitable path of every grad divinity school.


2 posted on 05/15/2025 12:19:15 PM PDT by lurk (u)
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To: SeekAndFind

Only thing in the middle of the road is yellow stripes and dead possums.


3 posted on 05/15/2025 12:40:39 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (Ecce Crucem Domini, fugite partes adversae. Vicit Leo de Tribu Iuda, Radix David, Alleluia!)
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To: SeekAndFind

The driving passion behind the “Wheaton mafia,” the gatekeepers and shapers of the generic / mainstream evangelical subculture seems to be, in Gary North’s memorable phrase, “trendier than thou.”

To make one of these devotees and vendors of pablum go into a frothing seizure, just breathe the word “theonomy,” and smile.

Even a writer as good as Nancy R. Pearcey is apparently contractually bound to pretend that the most influential Reformed scholar of the last century, the ArmEnian Calvinist, never existed. His name never shows up in the lengthy index to “Total Truth,” for example, and the bizarre linguistic gymnastics she employed (page 119) to pretend ignorance of RJR’s book “Foundations of Social Order” will startle you. “Foundations of human sociability,” indeed?

To cite another example of the motif driving this subculture, you’d think a book written by the screenwriter Randall Wallace, who created the script for the movie “Braveheart” would have some manly juices flowing through it. Instead, it breathes the mandated flavor of simpering sanctimony.

I read two of Ed Stetzer’s books out of respect to the lady who gave them to me, and again — there was very little a man could get a grip on, or sink his teeth into. (Ed is president of the BGEA)

Christian Reconstruction (Calvinism on Steroids) at least stands for something, and offers real-world approaches to confronting the world’s problems. As the implosion of the evangelical subculture demonstrates, a navel view will never do when a worldview is overdue. No matter how much you try to goose your gnosis. As the debris and detritus of the obsolete paradigm lose credibility, the people who know their God will be strong and do exploits. And O Lord, may we be in on what You are up to!


4 posted on 05/15/2025 1:46:18 PM PDT by TomEd (Her şey hazır! Buyrun, şölene!)
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To: lurk

Correct, go woke go broke.


5 posted on 05/15/2025 9:14:59 PM PDT by No name given ( Anonymous is who you’ll know me as)
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To: SeekAndFind
Although TEDS had a denomination backing it, it was the tiny Evangelical Free Church of America (EFCA).

Wipedia sez 371000 as of a decade ago. Not what I think of as "tiny". When I think of tiny, I think of something like the RPCNA, with 7K-ish members.

AS to what went on between the EFCA and TEDS, I got no idea.

6 posted on 05/16/2025 8:17:50 AM PDT by Lee N. Field ("And if you are Christ's, then you are Abraham's offspring, heirs according to promise" Gal 3:29)
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