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  • Andy Rowell is a third year Doctor of Theology (Th.D.) student at Duke Divinity School. His primary concentration is "Church, Ministry, and Evangelism" and his secondary concentration is "New Testament."

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March 06, 2009

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Mark Schnell

Andy, thanks for posting this. This is very helpful info that makes an overwhelming process at least a little more understandable. I was wondering what you meant by this: "... I was 0 for 5 the first year and then 4 out of 5 the second year after talking to people." Did you mean you were accepted into 4 out of 5 programs your second year?

Andy Rowell

Yes. I got in at Fuller, Luther, Duke Th.D., waitlisted at Princeton Theological Seminary and rejected at Emory. I didn't really try at all at Emory and might have gotten in to Princeton but took Duke's offer. So I should say 3 out of 5 probably. (I corrected that above now). See my post about my application process: See http://www.andyrowell.net/andy_rowell/2006/12/phd_application.html

The first time I applied, I tried to get into the programs with a pure New Testament resume and I got rejected at Duke Ph.D., Th.D., Notre Dame, Princeton and Wheaton.

Josh

Very helpful post! Thanks.

I noticed that the concentrations you listed are different from those posted on the DDS website. Can one basically decide on what they want to focus on?

Also, are you allowed to have a secondary concentration? I'm interested in Homiletics but would also like to study New Testament.

Mark Goodacre

Thanks for posting these interesting reflections, Andy. I think a lot of people will find them very helpful. A few notes:

(1) The best place for information on the PhD is the Graduate Program in Religion's website at http://www.duke.edu/web/gradreligion/ . We have recently worked on a major overhaul of this site. Unfortunately, it is one of the many sites at Duke that is suffering under the current crash. This is very frustrating -- it has been going on since last Monday. I got so annoyed about my personal academic sites being unavailable that I moved them away permanently from Duke to their own web space. Hopefully, the Religion GPR site will be back on line again soon.

(2) The best place to see the graduate faculty in Religion is also that site, at http://www.duke.edu/web/gradreligion/about/faculty.htm, also down at the moment. You write "Some Duke Divinity School faculty serve as dual appointments in both schools." I think that that is kind of true, but perhaps a clearer way of saying it would be that the Graduate Program in Religion is made up of faculty from both the Department of Religion and the Divinity School.

Thanks again for the helpful post.

Andy Rowell

Josh, yes, as you can see, there are not prescribed concentrations but it is probably smart to use similar language to what you see here or the official ones listed on the website.
http://www.divinity.duke.edu/academics/degrees/thd/concentrations

And Josh, yes, you are required to have a primary and secondary area of concentration for preliminary exams and so Homiletics and New Testament would be fine.

See http://www.divinity.duke.edu/academics/degrees/thd/cos/document_view

My concentration is "The Practice of Leading Religious Communities and Institutions" which I changed to "The Practice of Leading Christian Communities and Institutions" and which I call for short "Church Leadership" and what some call "Evangelism." My secondary concentration is New Testament.

Andy Rowell

Mark, I so appreciate you reading through this. (For those of you who don't know, Mark is a faculty member in the Graduate Program in Religion and a very fine New Testament scholar). I have added the websites you suggested to the main body of the post and also added your correction about faculty associations so that people will not be misled. Thank you, thank you, thank you--obviously I only know what I need to know about this kind of thing whereas a faculty member understands this kind of thing much better so I am relieved to have it stated more accurately. I do hope my post adds clarity rather than more confusion--I think the post will give people an approximation of what is going on so they can ask better questions. Thanks again, Mark.

Maria D.

Andy, this is a helpful post, although I'm not sure that capturing the difference between Ph.D. and Th.D. at Duke is at all easy -- particularly in light of the fact that other schools (e.g., Harvard) have their main program listed as a Th.D.

When people ask me which program they should choose, I usually ask them where they would ultimately like to teach. I suspect that the Th.D. is the better preparation for a future of working in a Christian setting -- college, seminary, etc. -- whereas the Ph.D., at least in my field (Early Christianity), is more aimed at sending people into universities and liberal arts colleges (... I am not aware of any students from this focus-area teaching in seminaries or divinity schools. Of course, I know that that's not the case for, say, NT graduates.)

It also seems to me that while your confessional background doesn't matter for the Ph.D. (... we've got everything from atheists through all the world religions ...) one would probably expect a Christian background of some sort for Th.D. students.

On the whole, though, I also wanted to send an encouraging note to those who do not have the money to see schools "on their own dime" -- I wasn't in a position to do so and not-visiting didn't in the end hurt my chances. Besides, most schools, including Duke, will fly out students in whom they are particularly interested to visit and interview in person. That being said, your advice re: visits is, of course, very sound -- but just in case your readers find themselves short on time or money, failing to visit won't be the death-knell to their applications :)

Andy Rowell

Maria is correct in all she says. She gets to the heart of the matter here that I somehow failed to mention.

She notes that people who want to teach at a non-Christian university or college are probably better off doing the Ph.D. and those interested in working in a Christian college, university or seminary are more likely be in the Th.D. program. I think she is generally right BUT there are lots of exceptions to that (which she acknowledges). As she says, my bet is that Ph.D. grads in Christian Theological Studies and New Testament end up at Christian institutions as often as secular institutions. For example: Christian Theological Studies (William T. Cavanaugh--University of St. Thomas, Telford Work--Westmont College, Jonathan Wilson--Carey Theological College, Glen Stassen, John L. Thompson, Robert K. Johnston--Fuller Theological Seminary, John Jefferson Davis--Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary, Beth Felker Jones--Wheaton College) and New Testament (Craig Keener--Palmer Theological Seminary, Marianne Meye Thompson, Love L. Sechrest, J. R. Daniel Kirk, Fuller Theological Seminary, Rollin Grams--Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary, Leroy A. Huizenga--Wheaton College, James H. Charlesworth, C. Clifton Black, J. Ross Wagner, Beverly Roberts Gaventa--Princeton Theological Seminary) And I know a few of the Th.D. students hope to be in secular universities and colleges. Again though I would agree with Maria in general that Th.D. tends to be lead you toward Christian settings whereas as the Ph.D. tends to be more diverse.

Thank you Maria. That was a glaring omission. I have added a comment in the text pointing to your comment.

Maria D.

No problem, Andy -- and thank you for so amply demonstrating the number of colleagues from different focal areas who have gone on to do wonderful work at Christian colleges and seminaries. (Indeed, I've very much enjoyed working with John, Marianne, Glen, Rob and, to a more limited extent, Love during my M.A. :)

I may send you a document I put together a couple of years ago on "how to brave the Ph.D. application process". If you felt it might benefit your readers, I would be happy for you to make it public.

Best,

Maria

Andy Rowell

Maria,
Sure, that would be great. I would definitely love your Ph.D. advice.

Everyone,
I have just added above the feature to my blog:
"You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post."

Mark Goodacre

Hi Andy. Thanks for your kind comments. The good news is that the GPR pages are back online again now. Steadily, Duke appears to be recovering from this big crash, though all personal academic pages (at http://www.duke.edu/~ etc.) are still down.

Josh

You said that the PhD accepts a certain amount of students based on which field they want to study, maybe 1 student per field. Is this the case for the ThD as well?

Andy Rowell

Josh, I'm not sure how the Th.D. selection process works. There is a committee and they pick applicants to be admitted--8 this year. You may have a better chance getting in, if you propose working with professors that have fewer doctoral students already working with them. But it is not strictly a "draft" where each professor gets to choose someone. Eventually, Th.D. students choose someone to be their Prelim Exam advisor and later to be their dissertation advisor but this is not set in stone in the application process.

Andy Rowell

In three different sections above, I just added three links to Chronicle of Higher Education articles which discuss stipends, the chances of getting hired, and the dissertation.

Lisa Beth White

This is a fantastic post, thank you. Wish I'd had something like this to refer to three years ago!

I'm currently in the Practical Theology Th.D. program at Boston University, focusing on missiology. They are now offering a Ph.D. within the School of Theology, and I may convert, but there are many issues around these degrees which you have indicated. For me the key issue is one that you have not yet mentioned, that of an ordained person seeking one of these degrees. As a pastor I cannot imagine leaving the local church entirely and yet I feel passionate about the study of mission and the need for education around issues of missiology. Which degree I seek and how I write that lonely long dissertation are connected to my ordination and the church.

Again, thank you.

Josh

Andy,

I know that you aren't currently looking for teaching jobs, but have you found or heard that there are a lot more job openings in the practical fields?

http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=2962

According to the article that I posted above, it looks like the academy needs more teachers in C.E., homiletics, church leadership, etc.

Andy Rowell

Lisa,
Thanks for weighing in. My friend Steven Porter was at Boston University and speaks very highly of Bryan Stone and Dana Robert and others.

As to your question about long-term staying in the church and getting a Ph.D for academic work, I would simply say that there are lots of adjunct and part-time professor positions available and so I think it is possible (if one so chooses) to both be in a leadership position at a church and serve part-time in the academy. I may end up doing it as I love the church and theological education.

The article cited above "Graduate School in the Humanities: Just Don't Go" http://chronicle.com/jobs/news/2009/01/2009013001c.htm emphasizes the trend that there are less and less full-time positions being made available for professors so you may be forced into it! Schools can trim their budgets by hiring adjuncts and part-timers--paying them far less than tenured faculty track positions and not offering them health-care. A seminary or theological school that did this (and this is standard practice at some schools especially extension campuses) would have professors with day-to-day pastoral experience BUT the adjuncts will often not provide the same level of availability and investment in students and the time to do research. It is conceivable someone could be a great pastor and great professor at the same time but I think usually it is difficult to do both well--it is difficult to give yourself to two communities. At Duke Divinity School, Bill Turner models this approach--teaching preaching http://www.divinity.duke.edu/portal_memberdata/wturner and pastoring http://www.mtlevelbaptist.org/
Also Sam Wells and (Will Willimon before him) as Dean of the Chapel http://www.chapel.duke.edu/staff/viewprofile.aspx?id=103 and a professor http://www.divinity.duke.edu/portal_memberdata/swells fulfills a similar function--but this is a unique situation and the Duke Chapel and Duke Divinity Schools worlds are geographically connected to a a great degree. Craig Barnes might be another example--pastoring at Shadyside Presbyterian Church and teaching at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. http://www.pts.edu/barnesc

Andy Rowell

Josh, I really don't know if there are more positions available for people in the more practical fields "C.E., homiletics, church leadership, etc." though I did use Thomas Long's article in my application--arguing that there was a need for people like me! :-)

Here is how I began my personal statement:

Thomas Long of Emory University has written that there is a critical need for people who have experience teaching ministerial studies and who also have the ability to do outstanding scholarship: “Theological schools are looking for a rare commodity: teachers of the ministry arts who are able practitioners as well as well-trained research scholars able to move nimbly across interdisciplinary lines.” Thomas Long, “The Crisis in Practical Theology,” The Christian Century, February 24, 2004, 30-33.

Lisa Beth White

Thank you for your feedback and the links, Andy. Grace and peace!

Andy Rowell

A masters level student wrote me saying that he really wants to get two Ph.D. degrees: one in Old Testament and one in theology.
Here is my response:
1. In answer to your question about whether it would hurt you having a doctorate to get into another doctoral program. No, having another doctorate would not hurt you getting into a Ph.D. program. We have a student in the Th.D. program who is an MD and another who has a Ph.D. in English and is a professor of English at Duke.
2. You are right to be interested in more than one narrow field. Many professors have more than one interest and over the course of a scholar's career they are able to delve into those areas.
3. In Germany, you need to write two dissertations: one gets you your doctorate and the other one to be a "professor"--the second is called the Habilitationsschrift. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habilitation. Miroslav Volf did his Habilitationsschrift with Jurgen Moltmann--the book After Our Likeness. Bonhoeffer's dissertation was Sanctorum Communio and his Habilitationsschrift was Act and Being. Similarly, to get tenure at a institution like Duke, you have to produce a second piece of significant academic work in addition to your dissertation. Stan Grenz thought about doing a second doctorate in ethics but Pannenberg told him just to write a book on ethics--which he did The Moral Quest. I think that is standard advice: get the Ph.D. and then write significant books and articles that demonstrate your strength as scholar--not get another doctorate.
4. I would dissuade you from thinking about doing two doctorates in religion. There really is no need to do so. You can do everything you would like to do as a professor that you could do as a doctoral student. As a doctoral student you grade the papers of other professors' courses, read what your advisors tell you to read, and most often do not get paid a living wage. It is intended to be a temporary vocation. As a professor you can still do research. You can win grants to do research (e.g. http://www.ats.edu/LeadershipEducation/Documents/Grants/2008-09LillyGrantRecipients.pdf ) and you get sabbaticals but unlike a doctoral student, you get paid a full salary As a professor, you design and teach your own courses with the books you have chosen and others help you with administrative jobs such as secretaries and students. You can still publish, travel, and present at conferences. If you did doctorates in Old Testament and Theology, people would think you were strange--not smart and accomplished. If however you had what they call the "range" to publish in scholarly peer-reviewed journals in both Old Testament and theology and to publish books with respected publishers in both fields, people would be impressed.
5. You could combine the two topics in your dissertation and look at the way a certain theologian used the Pentateuch or you could use your theological grid to address some issue in the Pentateuch. A theology Ph.D. tends to be more flexible to do something like that. But I would assume if you did something in OT, you would want to do something that has theological significance even if you could not explicitly state those implications in the context of a Hebrew Bible dissertation. You might check out Peter Enns and Stephen Chapman's discussion about the Bible: http://aboulet.com/2008/11/03/enns-chapman-audio-now-available/ as an example of Old Testament scholars discussing theological issues. Iain Provan, Walter Moberly, and Walter Brueggemann are OT scholars known for their interest in theological issues and of course there are many, many more--all scholars not just OT scholars have theological interests of some kind (even if they are not aware of them)!

Andy Rowell

A new post from Jimmy McCarty who was accepted into Emory's Ph.D. program in religion.

Tips on Applying to Ph.D. Programs

http://jimmymccarty.wordpress.com/2009/04/05/tips-on-applying-to-phd-programs/

Andy Rowell

See R.R. Reno on theology programs.

On Graduate Study In Theology
First Things: On the Square - Apr 13, 2009
http://www.firstthings.com/onthesquare/?p=1374

Reno: Best Schools for Theology
By R.R. Reno
Wednesday, August 30, 2006, 9:14 AM
http://www.firstthings.com/onthesquare/?p=447

Andy Rowell

I have fixed the links above and revised a few things given the thoroughly and excellently revised official Th.D. website that I noticed tonight. See http://www.divinity.duke.edu/academics/degrees/thd/

You also might be interested in my post:

My Th.D. program progress update
http://www.andyrowell.net/andy_rowell/2009/05/my-thd-program-progress-update.html

Andy Rowell

See also the advice of

Dr. Daniel J. Treier
Associate Professor of Theology,
Wheaton College, IL

"PhD Preparation"
http://tryer.jottit.com/phd_preparation

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