Training: who pays?

Mark Barnes  |  Features
Date posted:  1 Feb 2009
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It costs £5.7 million to train a fast jet RAF pilot, and almost £250,000 to train a doctor or dentist. Financial consultants KPMG spend £92,000 training a graduate. It even costs up to £30,000 to train a guide dog for the blind. On the other hand, a typical Bible college receives just £13,500 for two to three years full-time training.

As will become clear when we investigate costs later in this piece, an obvious question arises. How does it cost less to train a man for the pastoral ministry over three years than it does to train a dog for a little over a year-and-a-half? And how do you train a pastor, missionary or evangelist for a twentieth of what it costs to train a doctor?

Most students at Bible colleges will be men in their 20s and 30s. Most will already have studied at university, and probably still have the debt to prove it. Many will have young families. Living expenses are not inconsiderable.

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