Baptist Seminary Back in Business

After being closed seven years during Liberia’s civil war, the campus of Liberia Baptist Theological Seminary has reopened with 95 students enrolled.

The seminary, which began operations in 1976, trains Liberian Baptist leaders to evangelize and plant churches throughout the West African nation.

Although the campus closed in 1990, students met in down town Monrovia between 1993 and 1996.

After the civil war, evangelicals in Liberia helped restore order, and church leaders have assisted the process of rebuilding the country’s war-torn cities (CT, Dec. 7, 1998, p. 24). But stability is by no means assured. In March, the U.S. State Department warned Americans not to travel to Liberia because of rebel activity on the Sierra Leone border.

Copyright © 1999 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

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A Troubled Young Evangelist

Orthodoxy with an Attitude

Can Good Come Out of This Evil?

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Mall Gains Second Life As Church

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Church Name-Dropping Pays Off

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Religious Freedom Panel in Place

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In Brief: June 14, 1999

Churches Reach Out to Refugees

Christine J. Gardner.

Evangelicals Reject Religious Statues

Deann Alford in Managua.

Evangelicals Come Up for Air

Bishop Faces Genocide Accusation

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The Criminologist Who Discovered Churches

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Missionaries in Harm’s Way

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Church of the Web

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Mark A. Kellner.

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Mr. Wallis Goes to Washington

John Wilson

God's Contractor

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A Call to Evangelical Unity

The Gospel of Jesus Christ: An Evangelical Celebration

Guardians of the Lost Ark

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Severe Mercy in Oregon

Christine J. Gardner in Portland and Coos Bay

A Mother’s Strange Love

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Committing the Unforgivable Sin

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