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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Associations  



1.1  Other affiliations  







2 Faith & Learning Network, ICS's online worldwide service  





3 History  



3.1  Background, founding and early faculty  







4 Programs  





5 See also  





6 References  





7 Sources  





8 Further reading  





9 External links  














Institute for Christian Studies







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Coordinates: 43°3930.15N 79°2351.03W / 43.6583750°N 79.3975083°W / 43.6583750; -79.3975083
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


43°39′30.15″N 79°23′51.03″W / 43.6583750°N 79.3975083°W / 43.6583750; -79.3975083

Institute for Christian Studies
TypePrivate
Established1967; 57 years ago (1967)
PresidentRonald A. Kuipers

Academic staff

8[1]
Location , ,
Canada
CampusUrban, distance
ColoursWhite, red
NicknameICS
AffiliationsTST, INCHE
Websitewww.icscanada.edu Edit this at Wikidata

The Institute for Christian Studies (ICSorICS Toronto) is a private, graduate-level Reformed philosophical and theological school in Toronto, Ontario. At ICS, students and faculty take part in shared learning through participatory seminars, mentoring, and an interdisciplinary approach to study. There are several unrelated institutions bearing similar names.

Associations

[edit]

ICS is affiliated with the Vrije Universiteit (VU or Free University). The Vrije Universiteit has co-sponsored and co-supervised some ICS doctoral degrees. The Institute is also an affiliated institution to the Toronto School of Theology[2] at the University of Toronto. The Toronto School of Theology allows students to take a certain number of credits towards their degree from external institutions, including ICS. ICS students may also take some of their course work at the University of Toronto Department of Philosophy.

Other affiliations

[edit]

The Institute for Christian Studies is part of a worldwide movement for Christian higher education, where a primary task is often the fostering of teachers for the elementary and secondary levels. In this regard, ICS offers K-12 teachers an Educational Leadership emphasis in its Master of Arts in Philosophy degree program, and prepares Master of Arts in Philosophy and PhD-level graduates to teach across disciplines in colleges and universities, or to enter into a more activist profession. With its unique emphasis among English-based Christian programs of advanced studies, ICS is also a dedicated affiliate of the International Network for Christian Higher Education (INCHE) formerly called the International Association for Promotion of Christian Higher Education (IAPCHE).[3] INCHE is a worldwide network that advances Christian higher education through professional development, scholarship, capacity building, and communication. The network seeks to reflect both the shared view that Christ is central to those efforts and the local realities.

Faith & Learning Network, ICS's online worldwide service

[edit]

As part of its services to its broad circle of affiliated institutions and interested individuals, ICS maintains the Faith & Learning Network (FLN) developed over several years.[4] Principally, FLN is a bibliographic resource that can be accessed directly from the ICS website. Its purpose is to disseminate information on the results of Christian research publications, and popularizations, to various learning levels that resonate with the vision of ICS, INCHE, and related worldwide organizations and movements.

History

[edit]

ICS is accredited by the Ontario government.[5] The original model for ICS was the Central Interfaculty of the Free University (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), an interdisciplinary philosophy department in which the foundations of the special disciplines were to be investigated. The founders of ICS were convinced that a Christian graduate school was vital to generating comprehensively informed perspectives by biblical revelation. Henk Hart was ICS's inaugural professor with the opening of the school in 1967. In 1972, ICS moved to its current location on College Street in Toronto, and had added several faculty and had begun granting master's-level certification in philosophy.[5] In 1980, ICS began to develop a doctoral programme in co-operation with the Free University of Amsterdam.

In 1983, ICS (then, the Association for the Advancement of Christian Scholarship, or AACS) received Royal Assent to a Charter from the Legislative Assembly of Ontario allowing ICS to grant a Master of Philosophical Foundations, and to offer a program of doctoral studies leading to a PhD conferred by the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.[5][6] The AACS then ceased to exist and allowed the ICS to develop. In 1992, ICS was authorized to grant a Master of Worldview Studies degree,[5][7] a one-year program in large part to accommodate non-philosophers teaching in Christian elementary and secondary schools. In December 2004, ICS was given ministerial permission to grant PhD and MA in Philosophy degrees on its own standing before the Crown, without a necessary mediation through the Free University Amsterdam[8] – a process which culminated in receiving Royal Assent to grant these degrees from the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in June 2005.[9][10] The strong bond between ICS and the VU, and inter-academic affiliation and cooperation, continues.

Background, founding and early faculty

[edit]

More than ten years before, a lay movement was initiated amongst Dutch immigrants in Canada to promote academic studies from a Reformational Christian perspective.[11] As a result of that movement, the Association for Reformed Scientific Studies (ARSS) was launched in 1956 in Toronto, Ontario, by a number of pastors, including Paul Schrotenboer, who emerged as key figures in close contact with H. Evan Runner, a professor of philosophy at Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Michigan.[11][12] Runner had graduated from Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, and then during studies at Harvard University had served as an assistant to Werner Jaeger, a leading classicist there. Runner then went to the Free University to study philosophy under D. H. Th. Vollenhoven, as would many of the early faculty members of ICS from its inception. In 1958 the philosopher Herman Dooyeweerd visited America and suggested to the ARSS – which later became the Association for the Advancement of Christian Scholarship (AACS) – that they write an educational creed.[13] The creed appeared several years later and was drafted by D. H. Th. Vollenhoven, during his subsequent visit and conferencing with Runner, Schrotenboer, and others. The prevailing idea was to lay the groundwork for an independent Protestant Christian university modelled after the VU (Free University of Amsterdam), not under the governance of the state or any church.[13]

In 1967 the ARSS became the AACS which soon established the Institute.[14] The first professor, called a Senior Member, appointed to serve the new Institute was Hendrik Hart who proceeded to teach worldview studies and philosophy, an appointment which later became specialized to Systematic Philosophy as the number of Senior Members grew.[11] The student body also began to grow in numbers. A second Senior Member, James Olthuis who had graduated from Calvin Theological Seminary and received his doctorate from André Troost in philosophical ethics, received an appointment in ethics and philosophical theology.[11] Then, in short order, because of a dispute at another institution in the United States, individuals in what may be called "the Chicago School" of thought within Reformational philosophy became available for ICS appointments: Calvin Seerveld in philosophical aesthetics,[11] Arnold DeGraaff in psychology and education, and Thomas McIntire in history. What marked this entire contingent was the strong emphasis on pursuing philosophy and the philosophical foundations of other disciplines, with intense historical depth.

Upon completion of his dissertation under Herman Dooyeweerd, professor of jurisprudence at VU Amsterdam, Bernard Zylstra took up an appointment at ICS as Senior Member in political philosophy. Zylstra had been a student of Runner's as an undergraduate at Calvin College, had received his theological degree at Calvin Theological Seminary, his Master's in Law at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and was the only faculty member to have studied directly under Dooyeweerd at VU Amsterdam. He had a strong influence on numerous students who are teaching in political science departments today. Many other ICS Senior Members were also students of Runner and had completed doctorates at VU. The exception among early faculty was McIntire who was writing his dissertation for the University of Pennsylvania at the time of his ICS appointment. He received it a few years later.

At some point, ICS's affiliation with VU required that a full-time Senior Member in History of Philosophy be added to the faculty, so that candidates for the PhD program in philosophy sponsored by VU could meet VU's own internal requirements regarding the credit hours in discipline of history of philosophy, a trademark of VU's philosophy faculty since its establishment under Vollenhoven. ICS was quite amenable to this arrangement. Runner, Hart, and Seerveld had all studied history of philosophy directly under Vollenhoven. A fourth Senior Member "promoted" by Vollenhoven, Albert M. Wolters, received the first ICS appointment as Senior Member in history of philosophy.

The current ICS faculty includes: Nicholas John Ansell (Theology), Ronald A. Kuipers (Philosophy of Religion), Rebekah Smick (Philosophy of Arts and Culture), Gideon Strauss (Leadership and Worldview Studies), Robert Sweetman (History of Philosophy), and Edith van der Boom (Philosophy of Education and Practice of Pedagogy).[15] Emeritus faculty include: Doug Blomberg (Philosophy of Education), James Olthuis (Philosophical Theology), Calvin Seerveld (Philosophical Aesthetics), and Lambert Zuidervaart (Philosophy).[16]

ICS Presidents have included: Bernard Zylstra (1978–1985), Clifford Pitt (1985–1989), Harry Fernhout (1989–2005), John Suk (2006–2008), Chris Gort (2010–2012), Tom Wolthuis and Dawn Wolthuis (2013–2014),[11] Doug Blomberg (2014–2017), and Ronald A. Kuipers (2018–present).[17]

Programs

[edit]

Institute for Christian Studies offers the following degree programs:[18]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Faculty". Institute for Christian Studies. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ "Overview & History". Toronto School of Theology. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ "INCHE". International Network for Christian Higher Education. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ "Faith & Learning Network". Institute for Christian Studies Library. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ a b c d "Our Story". Institute for Christian Studies. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ "Statutes of Ontario - c Pr25 Institute for Christian Studies Act, 1983". Osgoode Digital Commons - York University. 9 November 1983. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ "Transcript - December 9, 1992 Standing Committee on Regulations and Private Bills". Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ "ICS Given Ministerial Consent to Offer PhD and MA (Phil)". Perspective. 39 (1): 1–2. January 2005 – via ICS Institutional Repository.
  • ^ "Bill PR14, Institute for Christian Studies Act, 2005". Legislative Assembly of Ontario. June 13, 2005. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ "Amended ICS Act Passed in Ontario Legislature". Perspective. 39 (3): 3. July 2005 – via ICS Institutional Repository.
  • ^ a b c d e f Blomberg, Doug (2015). "Institute for Christian Studies". In Kurian, George Thomas; Lamport, Mark A. (eds.). Encyclopedia of Christian Education. Vol. 3. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 632, 633. ISBN 9780810884939. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ Schrotenboer, Paul G. (1956). "Association for Reformed Scientific Studies". The Outlook Magazine. 6 (7). Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ a b McIntire, C.T. (1985). "Herman Dooyeweerd in North America". In Wells, David F. (ed.). Reformed Theology in America: A History of Its Modern Development (PDF). Eerdmans. pp. 172–174. ISBN 9780802800961.
  • ^ "Opening of the Institute issue". Perspective. 1 (1). December 1967 – via ICS Institutional Repository.
  • ^ "ICS Faculty". Institute for Christian Studies. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ "Emeriti". Institute for Christian Studies. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ "Dr. Ronald Kuipers appointed President of ICS". ICS News. 31 January 2018. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • ^ "Academic Programs". Institute for Christian Studies. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  • Sources

    [edit]

    Further reading

    [edit]
  • Cook, Harry (29 November 2009). "Robert E. VanderVennen, A University for the People. A History of the Institute for Christian Studies. Sioux Center, IA 2008: Dordt College Press. 273 pages. ISBN: 978-093291475-0". Philosophia Reformata. 74 (1). Brill: 73–74. doi:10.1163/22116117-90000460. ISSN 0031-8035.
  • Cook, Harry (2008). "A University for the People: A History of the Institute for Christian Studies". Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith. 60 (4): 273–274. Also available as a PDF.
  • Courier, C. (2016). ICS agrees to sale of long-time home, but will stay as tenant. https://ir.icscanada.edu/bitstream/handle/10756/615025/ChristianCourierJune2016.pdf?sequence=1
  • Covolo, R. S. (19 December 2011). "Herman Dooyeweerd: Christian Philosopher of State and Civil Society". Journal of Church and State. 54 (1). Oxford University Press (OUP): 126–128. doi:10.1093/jcs/csr126. ISSN 0021-969X.
  • Frame, John M. (1972). The Amsterdam philosophy: a preliminary critique. Harmony Press.
  • Kits, H. J. (1988). World views and social involvement: A proposal for classification of Canadian Neo-Calvinist social involvement, 1945-1980 (PDF) (Doctoral dissertation). Institute for Christian Studies.
  • McIntire, C. T. (1985). Herman Dooyeweerd in North America. The Canadian Society of Presbyterian History Papers, 1984–1985, 72-87. https://www.allofliferedeemed.co.uk/McIntire/DooyeweerdNorthAmerica1985.pdf
  • Miller, Vincent P. Jr. (1987). "Trade-offs between man and nature IV: Strategies of resource development and depletion". Proceedings of the Pennsylvania Academy of Science. 61 (2). Pennsylvania Academy of Science: 181–190. JSTOR 44111745.
  • Seerveld, Calvin. (2002). 35th Anniversary of ICS Speech. Institute for Christian Studies. https://ir.icscanada.edu/bitstream/handle/10756/344273/Seerveld_20021115.pdf?sequence=1
  • Seerveld, Calvin. (2008). Thinking Deeply About Our Faith. The Banner, v. 143, no. 1, pp. 34–35. https://ir.icscanada.edu/bitstream/handle/10756/558419/Seerveld_2008_a.pdf?sequence=1
  • Swartz, David (20 May 2020). "The Reformed Evangelicals Who Smoked Pot in Toronto". Anxious Bench. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
  • VanderVennen, Robert E. (2002). "Thirty-five years old" (PDF). Perspective. 36 (3). Institute for Christian Studies. ISSN 0847-0324.
  • VanderVennen, Robert E. (2008). A University for the People: A History of the Institute for Christian Studies. Dordt College Press. ISBN 978-0-932914-75-0.
  • [edit]


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