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Introduction to the online theological world

Someone emailed and asked me about the online theological world because she is researching it for her DMin. 

Here is the online theological landscape in my opinion:

1. There are a few collaboration projects. The New Testament Gateway is run by Duke professor Mark Goodacre.  You can also check out Theopedia.  See also TheResurgence for Conservative Reformed Folk and Emergent Village for the emerging church and Anglimergent for emerging church folks who are Anglican.  Here is a Yahoo group for Jurgen Moltmann
that Tony Jones alerted me to.  Many organizations that exists in the
real world have a way to interact online today.   Christianity Today
and Beliefnet especially God's Politics with Sojourners have powerful online presence. 

2. Most of the real discussion is happening on blogs.  Some blogs have multiple authors like Reformation 21 for conservative reformed folk and the Generous Orthodoxy Thinktank which has a lot of evangelical professors.  They sometimes collaborate.  See the recent post about an online Karl Barth theology conference.

3.  Here are a few important individual blogs by professors:

4.  Sometimes bloggers get together in real life. 
For example, people like Mark Goodacre get together with other bloggers
at meetings like the SBL and AAR -major theology
conferences. 

5. Some seminaries are now offering free online courses. 

Covenant Theological Seminary's "Covenant Worldwide" – free seminary courses.

Gordon-Conwell's Dimensions of the Faith free online theological education program. Listen to full Church History, Systematic Theology, and Biblical Studies courses.

Many other seminaries are putting MP3's on iTunes so people can listen to audio.  See Chris Tilling's post Theology and NT lectures on iTunes and Nijay Gupta's Excellent Christian Academic Material (Free) on ITUNES-U.

Fuller Theological Seminary puts all of their Syllabi / Course Descriptions online

6.  Most seminaries have all of the faculty email addresses on
the web on the faculty pages which leads to some interaction with the
online world. 
Some schools that make available the email addresses of their professors include Duke Divinity School, Princeton Theological Seminary, Fuller Theological Seminary, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Gordon-Conwell, Luther Theological Seminary, Wheaton College, Tyndale, Bethel, Denver, Aberdeen, and Durham.  On the other hand, Regent College, Asbury Seminary, Westminster Seminary, and Covenant Seminary do not make faculty email addresses available.  I think seminaries should make them available online.    

7.  I have a Facebook account but I have not seen much theological discussion going on there except for some groups to join.
See the Out of Ur group for the Christianity Today Leadership Journal
Out of Ur blog and another group for Tony Jones's book The New
Christians

6 replies on “Introduction to the online theological world”

Great list! Thanks, Andy. I’m curious – how do you determine when a website has a ‘strong online presence’? Are there means of finding out hits and popularities of websites and such?

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