Our Mission
As a comprehensive Georgia Baptist institution, Brewton-Parker Christian University provides liberal arts and professional programs in a learning community of shared Christian values. Through the application of biblical truth in scholarship and a co-curricular focus on character, servant leadership, and cultural engagement, the university strives to provide a transformational experience that equips the whole student for lifelong learning and service in Christ.
Our Vision
Brewton-Parker Christian University strives to honor Jesus Christ in every area of the academy.
Our Core Values
Biblically-Centered Institution
Brewton-Parker Christian University affirms The Baptist Faith and Message (2000) statement on biblical authority and adheres to the Bible as the standard and basis for a worldview that undergirds and permeates its academic programs as well as every function of the university.
Spiritual and Academic Transformation
In seeking to develop the whole student, Brewton-Parker Christian University endeavors to provide an opportunity for an academically and spiritually transformational experience that will honor the Lord Jesus Christ.
Practical Application
Brewton-Parker Christian University is committed to preparing graduates for a variety of employment opportunities and for engaging a global context with a biblical worldview as ambassadors for Christ.
Servant Leadership
Brewton-Parker Christian University seeks to inspire and develop servant leaders to follow the example of Jesus in self- sacrifice and service to others.
Characteristic Excellence
Brewton-Parker Christian University desires to honor Christ by striving to do all things with characteristic excellence.
Our Denominational Affiliation
Brewton-Parker Christian University focuses its Christian mission on the twin concepts of providing an unapologetically Christian and proudly Baptist tradition of higher education. In matters of theology and doctrine, Brewton-Parker Christian University’s administration and trustees endorse the tenets of faith generally accepted by Southern Baptists and specifically expressed in The Baptist Faith and Message (2000), the denomination’s doctrinal statement approved by the Southern Baptist Convention.
Furthermore, all employees of Brewton-Parker Christian University are encouraged to interact with students and with one another in a manner that contributes to the development of a strong Christian worldview in every member of the Brewton-Parker Christian University family and within the community in which the university exists.
Brewton-Parker Christian University is a coeducational institution owned by the Executive Committee of the Georgia Baptist Mission Board (GBMB). The GBMB elects a board of 30 trustees, six being chosen each year for a five-year term. The board membership rotates, and members cannot succeed themselves. The Executive Committee of the GBMB empowers the trustees to operate the university.
Funding
Income from student fees, endowment gifts (from individuals, churches, foundations, corporations, and the federal government), and appropriations from the Cooperative Program of the GBMB provide financial support for the university.
Accreditation
Accreditation is a voluntary, non-governmental peer review process by the higher education community that aims to assure academic quality and accountability and to encourage improvement.
Brewton-Parker Christian University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) to award associate, baccalaureate, and master’s degrees. Degree-granting institutions also may offer credentials such as certificates and diplomas at approved degree levels. Questions about the accreditation of Brewton-Parker Christian University may be directed in writing to the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, GA 30033-4097, by calling (404) 679-4500, or by using information available on SACSCOC’s website (www.sacscoc.org).
In addition to institutional accreditation, the Georgia Professional Standards Commission (GaPSC) reaffirms continuing approval of the university’s Educator Preparation Program (EPP) within the Division of Education and Behavioral Sciences. Approved programs within the EPP are the Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree programs in Early Childhood Education (P-5); Middle Grades Education (4-8), with concentrations in Language Arts, Mathematics, Science, and Social Studies; Secondary Education-English (6-12); Secondary Education-Science (6-12); Music Education (P-12); and Special Education General Curriculum (P-12). Also approved are Certification Only programs in the above-mentioned areas.
Historical Timeline
| 1904: |
The Reverend John C. Brewton, pastor of the First Baptist Church in McRae, Georgia, and C.B. Parker, a member of Brewton’s congregation and a Telfair County business leader, establish Union Baptist Institute (UBI) as a private boarding school. The Daniel and Telfair Baptist associations support UBI. |
| 1905: |
UBI opens September 12 with 160 students and 7 teachers. The campus, built on property at the juxtaposition of Mount Vernon and Ailey in Montgomery County, consists of an academic hall, two dormitories, and a dining common. Dr. Brewton is the first president. |
| 1912: |
Trustees rename the school Brewton-Parker Institute (BPI). William Anderson Mulloy serves as president. |
| 1913: |
Ray E. Robertson is named president. |
| 1916: |
Bunyan B. Smith assumes the school’s presidency. |
| 1917: |
Brewton-Parker earns accreditation from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). |
| 1918: |
Dr. Brewton returns as BPI’s president. |
| 1919: |
Linton Stephens Barrett becomes president. |
| 1922: |
Barrett proposes making BPI a junior College. Albert Martin Gates succeeds Barrett as president. |
| 1923: |
BPI adds a College freshman class. |
| 1927: |
With the addition of a sophomore class, BPI becomes Brewton-Parker Junior College. |
| 1929: |
Brewton-Parker discontinues its elementary school. |
| 1941: |
Gates resigns; he is followed as president by Robert Lee Robinson. |
| 1946: |
Charles Thomas Ricks becomes president. |
| 1948: |
Brewton-Parker drops all secondary education from its curriculum. The Georgia Baptist Convention assumes sole ownership of the College upon the offer of southeast Georgia’s twenty-one Baptist associations. |
| 1949: |
President Ricks resigns; Melvin Campbell succeeds him. |
| 1953: |
Marion Archie Murray assumes the College’s presidency. |
| 1957: |
Brewton-Parker drops all tactical, vocational, and terminal classes, becoming an institution devoted to a liberal arts curriculum. Dr. Theodore (Ted) Phillips becomes president. |
| 1962: |
SACS accredits Brewton-Parker as a junior College. |
| 1978: |
Trustees officially adopt the name Brewton-Parker Christian University (BPC). |
| 1979: |
Dr. Starr Miller assumes the presidency upon Dr. Phillips’ retirement. |
| 1983: |
Dr. Miller proposes a Bachelor of Ministry degree program. Dr. Yulssus Lynn Holmes becomes president. |
| 1984: |
SACS grants Brewton-Parker Christian University candidacy status for the baccalaureate degree program. |
| 1985: |
Brewton-Parker Christian University graduates first senior class of twenty-two students. |
| 1986: |
SACS recognizes Brewton-Parker Christian University as a four-year institution on December 9. |
| 1997: |
Dr. Holmes resigns; Dr. Miller returns as interim president. |
| 1998: |
Trustees confirm Dr. David Robert Smith as Brewton-Parker Christian University’s fourteenth president. |
| 2011: |
Dr. Smith resigns; Dr. Michel Saville Simoneaux is appointed Brewton-Parker Christian University’s fifteenth president. |
| 2014: |
Dr. Simoneaux retires; Dr. Ergun Michael Caner is appointed Brewton-Parker Christian University’s sixteenth president. |
| 2015: |
Dr. Caner resigns; Dr. Steven Franklin Echols is appointed Brewton-Parker Christian University’s seventeenth president. |
| |
Transnational Association of Christian Colleges and Schools (TRACS) grants Brewton-Parker Christian University candidacy status for the baccalaureate degree program. |
| 2017: |
The College voluntarily withdraws from membership with TRACS. |
| 2021: |
The College is reaffirmed by SACSCOC during its decennial review. |
| 2022: |
The College admits the first cohort into the nursing program. |
| 2023: |
SACS recognizes the college’s ability to offer Master level programs. |
| |
Brewton-Parker opens Temple Baptist Theological Seminary and begins first cohort of students. |
| 2025: |
SACS recognize Brewton-Parker College’s name change to Brewton-Parker Christian University |
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