Graduate Catalog

Doctor of Ministry: Spiritual Formation and Leadership

The Doctor of Ministry in Spiritual Formation & Leadership is meant to empower graduates in impact churches, organizations, clients, and communities through practical ministry projects, publications, and a specific focus on leadership development.

Program Goals

  • Prepare students to integrate spiritual formation with biblical interpretation, church history, and Christian theology.
  • Prepare students to enact personal and corporate practices of Christian ministry reflective of holistic and mature spiritual formation.
  • Prepare students to formulate spiritually- formative strategies for furthering justice and cultural engagement in today’s church.
  • Prepare students to demonstrate a proficient understanding of specialized course content, which will be instrumental in providing additional relevancy to varying areas of influence within the ministry of spiritual formation and leadership.

Degree Requirements

The DMin consists of 32-33 semester hours with a continuing relations Ministry Capstone Project. The capstone project may last from one to three semesters. If a capstone is not completed at the end of the Ministry Capstone Project coursework, students will continue within the program with a "Countinued Relations" fee charged per semester.

 

 

Spiritual Formation: 15 hours

DMIN7213Spiritual Formation and Scripture

3

DMIN7223Spiritual Formation and Culture

3

DMIN7233Spiritual Formation and Theology

3

DMIN8213Spiritual Formation and the Gospel of Grace

3

DMIN8223Spiritual Formation and Mission

3

Research and Capstone: 8-9 hours

DMIN7713Foundations of Doctoral Research and Writing

3

DMIN8713Capstone Ministry Project Proposal

3

DMIN8721Capstone Ministry Project

1

Specializations (One Required): 9 hours

DMin students are able to select a specialization within their degree programs. Students must take all courses within a concentration and are unable to "mix and match" content from multiple specializations.

Students who completed the Master of Arts in Clinical and Mental Health Counseling degree at Richmont can transfer credits for DMIN7113: Helping Relationships, DMIN8113: Relating Faith & Spirituality in Counseling, and DMIN8123: Theodicy and Trauma Counseling assuming those students were required to take the courses that the School of Ministry considers equivalent at the time of their enrollment.

 

Ignatian Spirituality

DMIN7313Basics of Ignatian Spirituality

3

DMIN7323Intermediate Ignatian Spirituality

3

DMIN7823Advanced Ignatian Spirituality

3

Pastoral Counseling

DMIN7113Helping Relationships

3

DMIN8113Relating Faith and Spirituality in Counseling

3

DMIN8123Theodicy and Trauma Counseling

3

Trauma, Theology, and Ministry

DMIN8313Trauma-Informed Theology

3

DMIN8323Hermeneutics, History, & Legacies of Trauma

3

DMIN8333Applications of Trauma-Informed Ministry

3

Program Sequence

Fall Semester I: 6 hours

DMIN7213Spiritual Formation and Scripture

3

DMIN7113Helping Relationships

3

DMIN7113: Online Class.

Spring Semester I: 6 hours

DMIN7223Spiritual Formation and Culture

3

DMIN7713Foundations of Doctoral Research and Writing

3

DMIN7713: Online Class.

Summer Semester I: 3 hours

DMIN7233Spiritual Formation and Theology

3

DMIN7233: Online Class.

Fall Semester II: 6 hours

DMIN8213Spiritual Formation and the Gospel of Grace

3

DMIN8113Relating Faith and Spirituality in Counseling

3

DMIN8113: Online Class.

Spring Semester II: 6 hours

DMIN8123Theodicy and Trauma Counseling

3

DMIN8223Spiritual Formation and Mission

3

DMIN8123: Online Class.

Summer Semester II: 3 hours

DMIN8713Capstone Ministry Project Proposal

3

Final Project (2-3 semesters)

DMIN8721Capstone Ministry Project

1

DMIN8721: This course can be repeated up to 3 times.