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Talbot School of Theology

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Talbot School of Theology
Former name
Talbot Theological Seminary
Established1952
Parent institution
Biola University
AffiliationsNondenominational
PresidentBarry H. Corey
DeanEd Stetzer
Academic staff
52
Administrative staff
15
Students1,800 (La Mirada: 1,500)
Location,
U.S.
Websitebiola.edu/talbot
Map

Talbot School of Theology is an evangelical Christian theological seminary located near Los Angeles. Talbot is one of the nine schools of Biola University, located in La Mirada, California. Talbot is nondenominational and known for its conservative theological positions, particularly its historical adherence to biblical inerrancy.[1]

The seminary has two campuses: Los Angeles (La Mirada) and Phoenix (Scottsdale), with extension sites in San Diego, Las Vegas, Hawaii, and Seattle. With a combined enrollment of 1,800, Talbot is the second largest nondenominational seminary in the world.

History

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In 1952, during the last year of his second term as Biola's president, Louis Talbot worked to establish a fully accredited theological seminary. The seminary's first dean was Charles L. Feinberg, who, along with his colleagues, unanimously voted to name the seminary "Talbot Theological Seminary." In 1981, the seminary's name was changed to "Talbot School of Theology" when Biola moved from college to university status.[2]

Talbot is known for its conservative theology, especially related to the doctrine of biblical inerrancy and premillennial eschatology.

With attendance declining since 2020 to approximately 300 students and a multi-million dollar budget deficit the board of Phoenix Seminary reached out to Biola about acquiring the seminary for free and merging it with Talbot.[3]

In June 2026 both institutions announced the merger and that the seminary would be renamed Talbot Seminary Phoenix with classes expected to begin in August. The combined school will enroll more than 1,800 graduate students, making it the second largest nondenominational evangelical seminary in the world, behind only Dallas Theological Seminary.[4]

Academics

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Talbot first became accredited in 1978 by Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada.[5] Talbot has more than 1,200 students, 70 full-time faculty members, 50 part-time faculty, and offers nine master's degrees and five doctoral degrees.[citation needed] Ed Stetzer is Talbot's seventh and current dean, serving since 2023.[6]

Notable alumni

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Notable faculty

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Talbot Complex Project

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The Talbot Building Complex Project was an ambitious $55.4 million project that was to take place in two phases over the course of several years. Prior to completion of Phase One, existing Talbot facilities, which had been designed for 300 graduate students, were serving 1,000 students in massively overcrowded conditions. When completed, the buildings were designed to form a seminary "campus within a campus." However, after the completion of Phase One in 2011 plans for Phase Two were placed on indefinite hold over funding challenges and as of 2026, there are currently no official plans to build a second building.

Phase One added a new 30,617-square-foot (2,844.4 m2) building adjacent to Feinberg Hall, named Talbot East. This $21.4 million project added 7 classrooms, 31 academic offices, and features a faculty meeting room, prayer chapel, two conference rooms, and a Ph.D. seminar room. On May 20, 2010, Biola officials held a ground breaking ceremony for Phase One and it was officially dedicated on October 14, 2011.[7][8]

Phase Two would have been much larger than Talbot East and demolished 60 year old Myers Hall. It would haven been a state-of-the-art 57,798-square-foot (5,369.6 m2) building, providing 17 classrooms, 53 academic offices, a theology reading room, a student lounge/cafe', and a recreation room. Rooftop gardens would have helped decrease the amount of energy required to heat and cool the building. Phase Two would have also remodeled the first floor of Feinberg Hall to accommodate the Institute for Spiritual Formation. Those plans were scrapped when a new remodel project was completed on Feinberg years later.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Doctrinal Statement". Biola University. Retrieved 2019-02-06.
  2. ^ "History and Accreditation: Talbot School of Theology". Biola University. Retrieved 2019-02-06.
  3. ^ https://ps.edu/information-hub/
  4. ^ https://www.biola.edu/blogs/biola-news/2026/biola-university-to-acquire-phoenix-seminary-expanding-talbot-school-of-theology-s-presence-in-the-southwest
  5. ^ "ATS - Member Schools". The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. Archived from the original on 2013-05-13. Retrieved 2021-10-15.
  6. ^ Velasco, Brenda (June 28, 2023). "Biola University Appoints Ed Stetzer as Dean of Talbot School of Theology". Talbot Magazine. Biola University.
  7. ^ "Talbot East Groundbreaking Ceremony". Biola News - Biola University Blogs. Retrieved 2021-10-15.
  8. ^ "Inside Talbot East". Biola Magazine - Biola University Blogs. Retrieved 2021-10-15.
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33°54′23″N 118°01′05″W / 33.906472°N 118.017932°W / 33.906472; -118.017932