Summer Courses

Summer is a great time to begin, or continue, your theological training. Central Seminary offers a variety of summer courses designed to fit your schedule and equip you for faithful ministry. 

Whether you’re looking to start your degree, explore seminary-level learning, or advance in an existing program, our summer courses provide flexible options for busy students:
• One-Week Modules – Dig deep in a focused course and complete it in just five days.
Weekend Courses – Spread your studies across four weekends without stepping away from your weekday responsibilities.
ThM Seminars – Join fellow pastors and ministry leaders in July for advanced seminars that challenge and enrich.

Summer is short, but it can be significant. Signup today for a summer course. 

 

2025 Summer Course Offerings

BI 545 – Romans meets during the week of June 2-6, from 7:30am – 1:00pm

All times listed for courses are Central Time (CT) 

CO 540 – Biblical Philosophy of Addiction meets over four weekends: 

• Week 1 (5/30–5/31)
• Week 2 (6/6–6/7)
• Week 3 (6/13–6/14)
• Week 4 (6/20–6/21)

CO 563 – Discipling Women through Biblical Counseling meets over four weekends:

• Week 1 (6/27–6/28)
• Week 2 (7/11–7/12)
• Week 3 (7/18-7/19)
• Week 4 (7/25-7/26)

Looking to start a class?

Visit our Catalogs & Schedules page to get an idea of how your classes could fit into your work and ministry obligations.

Fully Accredited, Distance Education 

Central Seminary has designed a distance education program that is different from most. It puts the distance student in the classroom during the class. Through multiple high definition cameras and monitors, advanced sound equipment, and the best conference software available, distance students will be able to interact live with each class.

Central Seminary’s distance education program is not a separate program – it’s only a medium. None of our academic programs have been lessened and every requirement is the same. The only difference between resident students and distance students is just that…distance. All of our programs are offered in their entirety through this medium.

  • Learn theology from theologians.
  • Learn history from historians.
  • Learn Greek and Hebrew from people that know them.
  • Learn ministry from pastors, not programs.
  • Be a student, not a consumer.

What about library resources?

Both resident and distance education students have access to an online library of over 1.4 million volumes, including electronic databases such as EBSCO. Borrow eBooks and journal articles to supplement your research.