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Timothy & Titus

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Shepherding the Church: Reading Timothy and Titus for Ministry Today.⁠ ⁠​

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An elective seminar on the Pastoral Epistles that introduces the historical background, literary structure, and major theological themes of 1–2 Timothy and Titus. You will read the letters closely in their first‑century contexts, trace how their pastoral counsel orders life in the household of God, and examine core topics such as sound teaching, leadership and ordination, worship and prayer, care for the vulnerable, and the gospel’s embodiment in everyday life. Attention is given to how these texts shape Anglican ministry today through preaching, catechesis, and parish governance.⁠ ⁠​

Your Guide to

Timothy & Titus

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The Rev. Dr. Jacob Rodriguez

Assistant Professor of New Testament

Before coming to Trinity, the Rev. Dr. Jacob Rodriguez served for twelve years across Ethiopia, Oxford, and Washington, DC in theological education, discipleship mobilization for Muslim background believers, and pastoring. In each context, he saw the Lord working through well-trained missionaries and pastors who mentored him in faithful gospel service. He subsequently sensed a call to train the next generation within the global Anglican communion. As a New Testament scholar with missional and pastoral experience across three continents, he trains aspiring leaders to interpret Scripture faithfully as the foundation of effective ministry.

While Dr. Rodriguez finds great joy in classroom dialogue—engaging difficult questions through the whole counsel of Scripture—he believes the deepest formation happens in one-on-one office hours, the weekly Greek reading group he leads, prayer lunches with advisees, and early morning runs with students. As Associate Director of the Stanway Institute, he models a love for Scripture rooted in regular immersion in the biblical text, especially in its original languages. What he treasures most is communal life shared in daily office, lunchtimes in the commons, talent shows, flag football, and running into Trinity friends at local Ambridge coffee shops. His threefold hope for students: that they articulate the one gospel as proclaimed across the New Testament, understand it within the storyline of the whole biblical canon, and see how it addresses every issue of our day. He loves playing piano for worship—and noodling jazz on the out-of-tune commons piano.

If this is your first credit class at Trinity, or you are not taking the course as part of a degree, please complete the non-matriculated application. A bachelor’s degree is required to obtain credit.
To register to audit a Master’s Level course, please complete an audit application.

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