Update published its first edition in September 1974 and continued through the spring of 1988. As a monthly publication, it served to provide short summaries for the Southeastern community on recent events, developments, and news pertinent to the school.
Equipper was created by the Office of Financial Development at Southeastern. The first issue of Equipper was published in 1980 in an effort to help serve the community of Southeastern with helpful financial advice. Issues typically included information on financial subjects such as estates or wills, and were often written by a guest author.
Southeastern News was produced by the Office of Public Relations and Communication to provided information for readers regarding the school and events of special interest. News included topics such as special donations to the seminary, new building projects, trustee meetings, news from the Southern Baptist Convention, speakers visiting the seminary, and other interesting occurrences on the campus and among students.
Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary summer catalogs provide information regarding courses offered at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary during summer months on the campus in Wake Forest, North Carolina. The seminary held its first summer school in 1957 and generally offered main sessions in June and July. Throughout the years, courses were available for various certificate and degree programs.
The Ketockton Primitive Baptist Association was formed in August of 1766, accepting its articles of faith and holding its first session at what was then Ketocton Church in Loudoun County, Virginia. At that time the association was comprised of four churches including Ketocton Church, Mill Creek in Berkley County, Virginia, Smith’s Creek in Shenandoah County, Virginia, and Broad Run in Fauquier County, Virginia, all of which had previously been a part of the Philadelphia Association. The association grew to include churches from the Virginia, Maryland, and Washington D.C. regions and frequently corresponded with churches in North Carolina and Georgia. Through the years, and with new church formations and growth, churches moved in and out of the association. Early on, the Ketockton Primitive Baptist Association was known as the Ketockton Baptist Association and later addressed themselves as the Ketocton Association of Primitive Baptists, the Ketocton Old School Baptists, or Ketocton Primitive or Old School Baptists. The Ketockton Primitive Baptist Association at one point noted itself to be the second oldest Primitive Baptist association.