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  • Seminary grows church planters

    Raleigh Biblical Recorder, NC
    July 7 2004

    Seminary grows church planters
    By Tony W. Cartledge
    BR Editor

    ASHTARAK, Armenia - The Theological Seminary of Armenia stands on a
    high ridge above the village of Ashtarak, about 20 minutes from the
    capitol city of Yerevan. From the windows of its dining room in the
    dormitory building, one can look above the roofs of nearby apartment
    buildings to gaze upon snow-capped Mount Aragats, more than 14,000
    feet tall. From a window in the chapel of the classroom building, one
    can see the biblical Mountains of Ararat rising beyond a scattered
    forest of power lines.

    The view, like the seminary itself, is inspiring. The school's first
    classes were held in 1998, in facilities at Central Baptist Church in
    Yerevan. On June 26, the seminary graduated its second class of
    pastors.

    Seminary students pose outside the dormitory as they look toward
    graduation. Rector Asatur Nahapetyan and faculty member Gagik
    Tarrerdyan are front and center.
    The seminary does not accept a new class of students each year, as in
    American schools. Rather, a single class is recruited and trained for
    three years, building close relationships among the students and
    simplifying the class schedule. After graduation, another class
    begins its course of study.

    The degree programs are more professional than academic. Most
    students have a high school education, though some have more, and
    some less.
    The three-year track for pastors typically includes about 20
    students. A two-year Christian Education program of about 30 students
    trains additional workers for the churches.

    Armenian culture expects men to serve in the role of pastor,
    according to Asatur Nahapetyan, who is rector (equivalent to
    "president" in America) of the school. The Christian Education
    program, however, is predominantly composed of female students, and
    Nahapetyan acknowledges that the churches depend heavily on the
    contributions and informal leadership of women.
    Women, in fact, make up at least 80 percent of the membership in most
    Armenian churches. A large percentage of those women are elderly or
    unemployed, contributing to the difficulty of churches becoming
    self-sufficient.

    The seminary budget of just over $50,000 annually is funded almost
    entirely by donations. Most students attend on scholarship, and also
    receive funds to facilitate travel to their church assignments on the
    weekends. Although Armenia is no larger than the state of Maryland,
    poor road conditions require some students to ride public buses for
    eight hours or more to reach their church field.
    Seminary facilities consist of two primary buildings. A three-story
    academic building contains classrooms, offices and a small chapel. It
    was constructed in 2000 with funds raised by a former International
    Mission Board missionary. In 2002, N.C. Baptist men constructed a
    companion building to provide dormitory rooms and kitchen/dining
    facilities.
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