Intersting article in the New York Times march 17, 2006:
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/17/national/17seminary.html?n=Top%2fReference%2fTimes%20Topics%2fPeople%2fB%2fBanerjee%2c%20Neela&_r=1&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&adxnnlx=1142698327-Y2de82DRo03a1AI2ReS/DAAcross the country, enrollment is up at Protestant seminaries, but a shrinking portion of the graduates will ascend the pulpit. These seminarians, particularly the young ones, are less interested in making a career of religion than in taking their religion into other careers.
Those from mainline denominations are being drawn to a wide range of fields from academia to social service to hospital chaplaincy, said the Rev. Daniel O. Aleshire, executive director of the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. Students who are evangelical Protestants, meanwhile, often end up at advocacy groups, sometimes called parachurches, which have defined the priorities and solidified the influence of conservative Christians.
Only about half of those graduating with a Master in Divinity now enter parish ministry, Mr. Aleshire said. The portion has fallen sharply in a generation, he said, and declined 10 to 15 percentage points in the last five years alone. The idea of using the seminary as the jumping off point for other, seemingly unrelated pursuits, is not new; just the number of people doing it is.
While I do think this is wonderful - more people should have seminary educations, in my opinion; or at least, if they are people of faith, they should take some time and actually learn about it and let it inform their lives and not separate their careers from their ostensibly proclaimed faith. :-) It's a great experience, seminary, and all the self-evaluation and looking into oneself, dialogue and debate with one's peers, the ability to explore and try new ways of thinking and see where they lead...
But I want to go off topic from this article somewhat, and hit it from the opposite side: we have a lot of seminarians who aren't going into pulpit ministry; but sadly, we have a lot of people going into pulpit ministry who aren't going to seminary.
I am saddened by the number of people who DO want to go into ordained ministry who are going to seminary part-time, or over the Internet, or are getting their educations in ways that take them out of the seminary community. They might be learning some book stuff, but in my opinion, I think they're missing about 80% of the essentials that an actual full-time seminary experience provides them. And in my opinion, I think their ministry and their ability to think intellectually and their ability to communicate is hampered because of it.
What think thee all?