| History
Beginnings
Newbury Biblical Institute, 1840-1847
Methodist General Biblical Institute,
1847-1867
Boston, Beacon Hill, 1867-1949
Boston, Commonwealth Avenue, 1949-
Beginnings
LaRoy Sunderland
The idea for a School of Theology begins in to the mid-1830s
when the Junior Preachers' Society of the New England Conference
asked LaRoy Sunderland to write an "Essay on Theological
Education," published by the Methodist Episcopal Church
office in New York during the second half of 1834.
The introduction reports the essay was originally presented
to the Christian Advocate and Journal,
but the editor "thought it unadvisable to insert it."
Soon after, an editorial article called "An Educated
Ministry Among Us" was written, but never published.
Thus, the topic was relegated to the pamphlet produced in
1834.
The debate continued for nearly five years on the issue of
whether clergy can be created by education, or if the call
was God-given and could only be improved by education.
Conference at Bromfield Street
Church
A notice was published in Zion's
Herald on March 27, 1839, announcing a meeting on Wednesday,
April 24, at the Bromfield Street Church in Boston to discuss
the issue of clergy education and the possible establishment
of a Theological Institution.
That meeting turned into a two-day discussion that approved
the basic purpose "that in the judgment of this Convention,
it is expedient to establish in New England, a Methodist
Theological Seminary, to be denominated THE WESLEY INSTITUTE,
based on the principles of Christianity, as exhibited in Wesleyan
Methodism, and affording the young men called of God to preach
the gospel, ample facilites for a systematic and critical
investigation of the Sacred Scriptures, and by a thorough
course of religious, mental and physical discipline, preparing
them to enter upon the duties of the sacred office, whether
in the regular ministry at home, or in Foreign Missions."
(Zion's Herald, May 1, 1839)
The Convention appointed committees to oversee the presentation
of this proposal to the New England, New Hampshire and Maine
conferences, to find a leader for the project, and to raise
funds.
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