Get to know us

Faculty Mission

The Faculty of Divinity, Spirituality & Moral Philosophy (FDSMP) advances rigorous, evidence-based scholarship in Hebrew Scriptures, Judean legal and philosophical traditions, African–Hebraic civilizational studies, and covenant-based ethical leadership.

The Faculty is committed to:

  • Archaeologically and textually grounded research

  • Open scholarly debate

  • Transparency regarding contested historical interpretations

  • Distinguishing theological formation from historical-critical scholarship

  • Training students in both faith literacy and academic methodology

man in grey shirt using grey laptop computer
man in grey shirt using grey laptop computer

Our mission

Our mission is to advance rigorous, evidence-based scholarship in Hebrew Scriptures, Judean legal and philosophical traditions, African–Hebraic civilizational studies, and covenant-based ethical leadership.

Our vision

Our Faculty envisions a world where wisdom and compassion illuminate the paths of humanity, guiding individuals toward profound understanding, ethical living, and spiritual awakening.

Academic Programs & Institutional Frameworks

Academic Integrity & Methodological Framework

Evidence-Based Scholarship

All academic programs within FDSMP require:

  • Engagement with primary sources in original languages where applicable

  • Use of peer-reviewed scholarship

  • Archaeological and inscriptional evidence where relevant

  • Methodological transparency in historical reconstruction

Students are trained to distinguish between:

  • Established scholarly consensus

  • Majority scholarly positions

  • Minority or emerging hypotheses

  • Theological interpretations

person holding magnifying glass with black frame
person holding magnifying glass with black frame
Transparency Regarding Contested Historical Claims

The Faculty acknowledges ongoing scholarly debate in various areas, including:

  • The nature of the United Monarchy

  • Interpretations of early Israelite state formation

  • Israelite–Kushite–Kemetic interactions

  • Claims in African–Hebraic identity discourse

  • Diaspora identity formation

Courses label contested theories and require analysis of competing arguments.

No claim is presented as settled fact without scholarly support.

FDSMP distinguishes between:

Theological Formation

  • Normative faith commitments

  • Covenant theology

  • Leadership preparation

  • Pastoral development and

Historical-Critical Research

  • Archaeological investigation

  • Textual criticism

  • Philological analysis

  • Comparative historiography

Students in these tracks are trained in both but must know the differences between theological and historical interpretations.

Theological Formation vs. Historical-Critical Research
a skateboarder is skating on an ice rink
a skateboarder is skating on an ice rink
man using microscope
man using microscope
people sitting on chair in front of computer
people sitting on chair in front of computer

Dual Competency Training

All degree programs integrate:

  • Faith literacy (scripture, tradition, ritual systems, ethical frameworks)

  • Academic method (research design, historiography, textual criticism, peer review standards)

Graduates are expected to:

  • Interpret sacred texts responsibly

  • Engage critically with academic scholarship

  • Distinguish devotional teaching from historical claims

  • Participate in scholarly discourse with intellectual integrity