Princeton Theological Seminary is a theological seminary located in Princeton Township, New Jersey in the United States.
PTS is one of the world's leading institutions for graduate theological education and home of the second largest theological library in the United States. Today it is an international community with nearly 1000 students, a faculty of 53, and an ecumenical and worldwide constituency. Not all the students are candidates for the ministry in the Presbyterian Church; some are candidates for ministry in other denominations, while others are studying toward careers in the academy, and still others are pursing fields less directly related to theology, such as law, medicine, social work, administration and education.
Like other elite theological institutions, such as Duke Divinity School and Candler School of Theology, Princeton Seminary has roots in a distinctive denominational heritage. Whereas university-affiliated divinity schools such as Harvard and Yale are of Congregationalist founding (with Harvard subsequently becoming Unitarian and both having disavowed all religious affiliation), Princeton Seminary was affiliated from the beginning with the Presbyterian Church.
In 1812, the Seminary boasted three students and the Reverend Dr. Archibald Alexander as its first professor. By 1815 the number of students had gradually increased and work began on a building: Alexander Hall was designed by John McComb, Jr., a New York architect, and opened in 1817. The original cupola was added in 1827, but it burned in 1913 and was replaced in 1926. The building was simply called "Seminary" until 1893, when it was officially named Alexander Hall. Since its founding, Princeton Seminary has graduated approximately 14,000 men and women who have served the church in many capacities, from pastoral ministry and pastoral care to missionary work, Christian education and leadership in the academy and business.
The seminary was made famous during the 19th and early 20th centuries for its defense of Calvinistic Presbyterianism. The college was later the epicenter of a modernist/fundamentalist battle which ultimately led to the formation of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church and Westminster Theological Seminary under the leadership of J. Gresham Machen.
The Principals
The Presidents
Presbyterianism | Seminaries and theological colleges | United States seminaries | Presbyterian_Church_(USA)_Seminaries
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