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This degree is designed for already credentialed and practicing ministry professionals (lay, religious, ordained) who wish to foster self-improvement and motivation in the pursuit of theological education as an end in itself or in preparation for doctoral studies. With a specialized focus upon a specific theological agenda, the M.Th. is ideally suited to the ministry professional who desires to update previous ministry training with particular attention to theological refinement. The residence sessions involve graduate-level course work and are coupled with the writing of the Master of Theology thesis. Roman Catholic Deacons Track An applicant who holds a bachelor's degree and has completed a three year diocesan-approved diaconal training program which has led to ordination as a Roman Catholic deacon may earn the Foundation's Master of Theology through the "Roman Catholic Deacons Track." Requirements include providing documentation to verify training and ordination and submitting a 35,000-40,000 word (140-160 page) Master's Thesis to the Graduate Theological Foundation.
The usual time frame for degree programs is a minimum of eighteen months and a maximum of forty-eight months for completion.
Tuition: $6,250.00
Thesis Processing: $200.00
Graduation: $100.00
The student completes four Units of Study at approved educational venues. A research paper of 1,750- 2,500 words (7-10 pages) must be submitted for each Unit of Study. Research-based papers should focus upon the required readings for the course. The paper should be footnoted with bibliography and suitable for submission to a scholarly journal for publication consideration. Research papers should be analytically reflective regarding the relevance of each Unit’s content to the exercise of the student’s ministry. Papers are evaluated by the Foundation’s faculty and an acknowledgement letter is sent to the student. If further development of the paper is deemed necessary, the student will be notified. All academic work must be completed by February 1 of the intended year of graduation.
NOTE: For Paper Guidelines, please Click Here.
Transfer credit does not require a paper.
Option A: Students may select a faculty member of the Foundation to serve as Thesis Supervisor. This option enables the student to receive helpful and pragmatic evaluative feedback from a member of the faculty in the developmental process of producing the Master’s Thesis. The role of the faculty Thesis Supervisor is responsive and suggestive. The faculty person is encouraged to limit feedback to pragmatically helpful hints and suggestions and not to attempt any censorship of the thesis. The exercise of discretion with respect to time demands is very important for both the student and faculty member. The faculty Thesis Supervisor must give final approval of the student’s work by submitting the Thesis Supervisor Report Form. The assessment from the Thesis Supervisor is due by February 1 of the intended year of graduation.
Selection of Faculty Thesis Supervisor and Nomination Procedure:
Option B: Students are at liberty to select a Thesis Supervisor who is not on the
faculty of the Foundation. In that event, the Thesis Supervisor must
hold a comparable degree to that being pursued by the student. The
student must nominate the Thesis Supervisor by submitting a letter of
nomination to the Foundation along with a C.V. of the nominee. The
student is notified upon approval of the Thesis Supervisor by the
Academic Affairs Committee. The Thesis Supervisor must give final
approval of the student’s work by submitting the Thesis Supervisor’s
Report Form. The assessment from the Thesis Supervisor is due by
February 1 of the intended year of graduation.
The candidate must submit a Master’s Thesis of
35,000-40,000 words (140-160 pages), which addresses some topic,
issue, or problem in the field of theological inquiry and demonstrates a
grasp of the literature and philosophical/theological components
required in the treatment of the selected project. Each candidate must
present one copy of the thesis to the Foundation. The Master's Thesis
is considered a major component of this degree program and valued
most highly. The thesis must be submitted to the Foundation by
February 1 of the intended year of graduation.