The Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary Catalogs are published by Southeastern Seminary to provide information for each academic year. The earliest catalog was published in 1951. Catalogs were sometimes published in connection to the Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary Bulletin and most contain information for one academic year, though some cover multiple years. The catalogs provide an academic calendar and a brief introduction to the seminary, its facilities, and the community. Further information includes curriculum and class offerings, details regarding admissions, and registers of students, faculty, staff, trustees, and graduates. Subcollections for the 1990s and 2000s include CASE catalogs for the college.
The date used to name and organize these items corresponds to the more specific date given at the bottom of the documents rather than the annotated information.
SEBTS_NI_1996_04_19a: God called Southeastern's newest religious ed professor out of law school; SEBTS_NI_1996_04_19b: Hebrew scholar to join Southeastern faculty
The following items have been included in one work as they are dated only by month and all appear to discuss the Southern Baptist Convention held in New Orleans, Louisiana, in June of 1996.
SEBTS_NI_1996_06a: Former SEBTS Trustee Named Alumnus of the Year; SEBTS_NI_1996_06b: Seminary Growth Outpaces CP Support Says Patterson; SEBTS_NI_1996_06c: Burke County Native Elected SEBTS Trustee
News and Information produced campus news articles for Southeastern. Events such as faculty news, trustee updates, and school events were commonly covered in its reports. Items in the collection that were undated were given approximate dates according to internal information and other records, and those approximations were noted in item descriptions.
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.