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Posted: Wed 29 Mar 2006 5:44 pm
by GarethB
Andrew,

I sometimes wonder if you realy are a man of the cloth :D

Sure it is a far more rewrding and varied occupation than mine.

I have always wonderd what you have to do to study theology and become a minister.

Posted: Wed 29 Mar 2006 5:52 pm
by Andrew MacLean
You have to get a good night's sleep, eat plenty of shredded wheat (weetabix, etc) and work very hard. :D

You get into University to study Theology with ordinary GCE or SCE passes at A grade.

Becoming a minister involves a sense of vocation that is supported by the church, and in my tradition it stil requires two university degrees (at least).

This is why we are all so very interesting! :D

Andrew

Posted: Wed 29 Mar 2006 5:54 pm
by John Smith
A friend of mine from work did a theology degree 18 years ago and he ended up being the only person from his course not to end up being a vicar/curate/priest/bishop.

He went into IT. His friends from his course think he is weird!

Posted: Wed 29 Mar 2006 6:39 pm
by Louise Pembroke
Yes Andrew, but you wear a dog collar and a dress!!

Posted: Thu 30 Mar 2006 2:08 pm
by Andrew MacLean
And who ever said that style was dead?

Posted: Thu 30 Mar 2006 2:14 pm
by Louise Pembroke
:)

Posted: Thu 30 Mar 2006 4:25 pm
by Sweet
Andrew - Do you really need to have two degrees to be a minister?! I didn't know that!! I thought it would maybe be one and a lot of vocation needs. Ok, hehe you learn something new every day! So what degrees did you do then??! And do you take them both at the same time? :P

Sweet X x X

Posted: Thu 30 Mar 2006 4:32 pm
by Louise Pembroke
I reckon they need a degree in dress wearing alone, then think of those Bishop hats too!!

Posted: Thu 30 Mar 2006 4:33 pm
by Andrew MacLean
Claire,

I think it varies according to church. Presbyterians, and particularly Scottish Presbyterians have always had a very high regard for education, and it was almost a mantra of the Reformation that every Minister ought to be his own Theologian. some churches train 'Priests", we "educate ministers" :D

There is also a lot of vocational training.

The ministry is not so different to other traditional professions: Ministers needed an arts degree before they could study theology, lawyers needed an arts degree beofe they could study law, Doctors needed a MB before they could study their ChB, Architects needed a degree in building science before they could study design (or was that the other way round?)

More and more nurses are graduating with a Batchellor degree in nursing and then taking a Masters. I know one Theatre ChargeNurse who has a Batchellor Degree, a Masters Degree and a PhD. I often wonder whether the surgeon calls him "doctor"

Andrew

Posted: Thu 30 Mar 2006 4:38 pm
by Louise Pembroke
There is however some debate about nurse training and whether an all degree workforce has been all good [not enough practical experience during training], got any views Sweet?
Is there a lower age limit on entering the church Andrew?