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30 Educators providing Theology courses in London

London School Of Ministries & Theology

london school of ministries & theology

London

The London School of Ministries and Theology (LSMT) has its roots since 1994 with the specialized training in Bible and Christian Ministries conducted by the London Metro Region of the Church of God, later known as the Church of God-UK Cross Cultural Ministries. Many pastors and lay leaders were trained and equipped for doing ministry with the relevant practical knowledge and guidance to serve the Church and its various ministries. Location & Administration It is a non-residential institute with an evangelical/Pentecostal emphasis where all may enroll for the courses offered. The offices and class rooms are shared with the Southall Church of God, 9 Norwood Road, Southall, Middx. UB2 4EA, UK. Registration The London School of Ministries & Theology is a Registered Company Limited in UK and has the rights and privileges to operate as a proper Ministry training institute. Accreditation Currently the Institute is accredited by the International Association for Theological Accreditation (IATA) which offers Certificate, Diploma and Bachelors’ Degree courses. The LSMT is recognized by the School of Ministries in USA as a Level I category institution to teach the Certificate In Ministerial Studies (CIMS) program which could earn College Credit hours with the Lee University, Cleveland, Tennessee, USA. We are negotiating to partner with the Global School of Open Learning, formerly known as the Southern Asia Bible College, Bangalore, India (eLearning Programmes) to offer the Master of Divinity Degree.

Citizens UK

citizens uk

London

Founded in 1989, we are a single organisation with seventeen Chapters across England and Wales. Our Chapters are led by local people acting together for the common good through the method of Community Organising. The UK has a rich history of people organising for power and change such as the Levellers, the Abolitionists, the Chartists, early trade unionists like the match girls and dock strikers, and the Suffragettes. Our work at Citizens UK is influenced by a heritage which draws on the broad-based organising of our sister organisation, the Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF) and before that the US civil rights movement. Over the last thirty years we have won £1.8bn in additional wages for low paid workers, ended child detention for immigration purposes, secured an amnesty of ‘legacy cases’ for 160,000 asylum applicants as well as winning many victories at the local and regional level. We build power with people so that together we can move from the world as it is toward the world as it should be. Some of our campaigns have spun off into dedicated projects, to create long-term change. The largest and most successful of these teams is the Living Wage Foundation which now accredits a network of over 9,000 employers who pay 300,000 employees the real Living Wage. Others include Parents and Communities Together (PACT) and Sponsor Refugees. We are proud of other social innovations that have successfully spun out to become independent organisations such as Safe Passage, London Community Land Trust and Money Mentors.

Pushkin House Trust

pushkin house trust

London

The founder of Pushkin House Maria Kullmann was one of the few women of her generation to have a degree in theology. In her youth she became personally acquainted with the philosophers of the Russian Religious Renaissance who made the journey to the West in the legendary ‘Philosophers’ Ship’: Nikolai Berdyaev (1874 - 1948), Sergei Bulgakov (1871 - 1944) and Nikolai Lossky (1870 - 1965). Their writings, as well as those of Vladimir Solovyov were explored in depth in lectures and talks at Pushkin House. Nikolai Lossky frequently visited from Paris and also gave talks. Across the border in Soviet Russia, the works of Bulgakov, Berdyaev and Lossky were published in self-published ‘Samizdat’ form: the intelligentsia considered religious discourse as providing a theoretical platform that could inform resistance to the regime - alongside a discourse on human rights and continental philosophy. The charismatic head of the Russian Orthodox Church Diocese of Sourozh Metropolitan Anthony (Bloom) (1914 - 2003) regularly contributed to the programme at Pushkin House. He spoke on a wide variety of topics including Russian Christian thinkers and Nikolay Fedorov, the founder of Russian Cosmism. Among his lectures was one entitled ‘On Faith and Deed’ that was published as an essay and became an influential text within the Russian Orthodox Church community, as did ‘On Russian People’s Faith’, recordings of which from the Pushkin House archive can be listened to at this exhibition. In many ways Metropolitan Anthony defined his faith and beliefs through his lectures at Pushkin House, which were to have a great influence within the Russian Orthodox Church and beyond.