The Baptist College of Florida (BCF) is a private, Level III foundation ( Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges), situated in Graceville, Florida, 90 miles northwest of Tallahassee, 60 miles north of Panama City, and 25 miles south of Dothan, Alabama. BCF is claimed and worked by the Florida Baptist Convention. It is the main organization of higher learning bolstered by the Florida Baptist Convention.
BCF, established by a gathering of ministers on September 7, 1943, held its first classes in a Sunday school room in the First Baptist Church of Lakeland, Florida. The instructive organization, then named Florida Baptist Institute (FBI), was purposed to give preparing to "God-called" men and ladies who required theological school sort preparing, however needed professional educations. Around then in Baptist life, theological school preparing was accessible basically to understudies who had earned four-year advanced educations. While "unique classes" for "the non-college alumni" were offered at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, then known as Baptist Bible Institute, (Annual of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1946, p. 98), Florida clergymen would need to migrate to exploit the course offerings. In this way, people who felt "called" to the service and required theological school preparing, especially those of nontraditional school age who did not have a four-year professional education, had constrained opportunite s, especially in Florida, to get ecclesiastical preparing of considerable degree and quality looking like theological school training.
A percentage of the first understudies to select in FBI were WWII veterans and six Seminole Indians (Minutes of Board of Trustees, 1945, October 24). One of the Seminole Indians was Billie Osceola, an "extraordinary grandson of Chief Osceola of Seminole War popularity" (Richards,1993, p. 30).
Since the school looked after an "open enlistment" strategy and both Baptists and non-Baptists could go to, the establishment developed. Two years in the wake of starting classes in a percentage of the Sunday School rooms at First Baptist Church, Lakeland, the school gained seven sections of land to create as a grounds (Bennett, 1973, p. 95). A sum of twelve structures, ten of them surplus military property bought from ADrane Field, a U. S. Armed force Corps office seven miles southeast of Lakeland@ were moved to the new grounds (Bennett, p. 129).
BCF, established by a gathering of ministers on September 7, 1943, held its first classes in a Sunday school room in the First Baptist Church of Lakeland, Florida. The instructive organization, then named Florida Baptist Institute (FBI), was purposed to give preparing to "God-called" men and ladies who required theological school sort preparing, however needed professional educations. Around then in Baptist life, theological school preparing was accessible basically to understudies who had earned four-year advanced educations. While "unique classes" for "the non-college alumni" were offered at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, then known as Baptist Bible Institute, (Annual of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1946, p. 98), Florida clergymen would need to migrate to exploit the course offerings. In this way, people who felt "called" to the service and required theological school preparing, especially those of nontraditional school age who did not have a four-year professional education, had constrained opportunite s, especially in Florida, to get ecclesiastical preparing of considerable degree and quality looking like theological school training.
A percentage of the first understudies to select in FBI were WWII veterans and six Seminole Indians (Minutes of Board of Trustees, 1945, October 24). One of the Seminole Indians was Billie Osceola, an "extraordinary grandson of Chief Osceola of Seminole War popularity" (Richards,1993, p. 30).
Since the school looked after an "open enlistment" strategy and both Baptists and non-Baptists could go to, the establishment developed. Two years in the wake of starting classes in a percentage of the Sunday School rooms at First Baptist Church, Lakeland, the school gained seven sections of land to create as a grounds (Bennett, 1973, p. 95). A sum of twelve structures, ten of them surplus military property bought from ADrane Field, a U. S. Armed force Corps office seven miles southeast of Lakeland@ were moved to the new grounds (Bennett, p. 129).

No comments:
Post a Comment