Westminster College, Cambridge
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Westminster College in Cambridge is a theological college of the United Reformed Church, formerly the Presbyterian Church in England. Its principle purpose is the training of clergy for ordination, but is also used more widely for training within the denomination. The current Principal of the college is the Revd Dr Susan Durber, and the Vice-Principal and Director of Studies is the Revd John Proctor.
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[edit] History
The college was founded in London in 1844 with a temporary home in the Exeter Hall before moving to permanent premises in Queen's Square, London in 1859. It then moved to Cambridge in 1899 following the gift of a prime site of land near the centre of the city by two Scottish sisters, Agnes Smith Lewis and Margaret Dunlop Gibson, both noted biblical scholars. Following an appeal for funds from the wider Presbyterian congregation, the college commissioned a new building designed by Henry Hare and built between 1897–1899. In 1967 the college began to amalgamate with Cheshunt College, Cambridge, presaging the union of the Congregational and Presbyterian churches to form the United Reformed Church in 1972.
Notable former students include T.W. Manson, the biblical scholar and Rylands Professor in the University of Manchester; Lesslie Newbigin, ecumenist, bishop, scholar and pioneer of the Church of South India; William Paton, a precursor to Newbigin and a seminal figure in modern ecumenism; and W.D. Davies, famous for his groundbreaking work on Paul and his Jewish background.
[edit] Lewis and Gibson
Agnes Smith Lewis and Margaret Dunlop Gibson were noted for their study of one of the earliest versions of the Old Gospels in Syriac Sinaiticus discovered in the monastery St. Catherine, Mount Sinai. The other important contributions to the field of Aramaic and Theology are the publications of the Codex Climaci Rescriptus, a 6th century palimpsest written in Christian Palestinian Aramaic which contains portions of the Old Testament and New Testament[1], and another palimpsest manuscript of the Forty Martyrs of the Sinai desert and the Story of Eulogios, the Stone Cutter in the same Aramaic dialect. The sisters found the manuscripts in the antiquities market of Cairo and acquired them for the library in Westminster College. They edited also many other important manuscripts in Syriac and Arabic.
In 1897 Lewis and Gibson also found and purchased some fragments of parchment of the Cairo Genizah whilst travelling in the Middle East. With the support of Solomon Schechter they made several more trips to the Middle East, locating the majority of the Genizah at the Ben Ezra Synagogue in Cairo. Schechter identified the fragments as forming part of the Hebrew text of Ben Sira (Ecclesiasticus) [2].
[edit] Today
The college is not part of the University of Cambridge, but is united with six other religious colleges in Cambridge to form the Cambridge Theological Federation which is affiliated with the university. In concentrating on religious studies for training clergy, the college is in some ways closer to the original conception of the main university colleges when they were founded.
Currently, Westminster has around 25 students in training for ministry in the United Reformed Church, served by 5 academic staff. Most students study for four years, which includes an internship year working in a local church. Most students work either for a BA or MA degree (validated by Anglia Ruskin University) or a BTh or BA/Tripos degree (validated by Cambridge University).

