Doctoral Degrees & Concentrations

Our degrees

The Doctor of Ministry & The Joint Doctoral Program

Iliff School of Theology offers two doctoral degrees: the Doctor of Ministry (DMin) in Prophetic Leadership and the Joint Doctoral Program (JDP) in partnership with the University of Denver. Both programs reflect Iliff’s commitment to innovative education, social justice, and transformative leadership.

Doctor of Ministry

The Doctor of Ministry (DMin) program is designed for experienced professionals seeking to enhance their leadership and research skills to address contemporary challenges. Through a flexible hybrid model that combines online learning with on-campus intensives, the DMin equips students with advanced research methodologies and practical skills, culminating in a final project that applies new insights to real-world contexts.

Joint Doctoral Program

The Joint Doctoral Program (JDP) is a rigorous interdisciplinary PhD program that leverages the combined strengths of Iliff and the University of Denver. It offers a collaborative, residential experience with coursework in theory, pedagogy, lived religion, and more, preparing students for careers in academia, research, and beyond. For complete details for the JDP, click here.

Doctor of Ministry Learning Outcomes

Engage in an ethical, substantive, and culturally relevant research process that identifies and investigates an area in vocational context that calls for prophetic leadership.

Develop theoretical knowledge, analytical skills, and contextual awareness that enable students to engage in, contribute to, and advance the study and practice of prophetic leadership.

Cultivate disciplines and tools necessary for lifelong learning and reflective practice in prophetic leadership.

Refine competencies and self-awareness in the art of prophetic leadership within the contexts of culturally diverse congregations, denominations, and communities of intersectional identities and institutional cultures.

Define Your Focus

Choose a Doctor of Ministry Concentration

Iliff’s approach to concentrations is deeply rooted in its commitment to providing a personalized and transformative educational experience that aligns with the school’s commitment to advocating freedom, fostering resilience, and empowering students to pursue justice in their careers and vocations. Concentrations at Iliff are designed to allow students to tailor their academic journey according to their unique interests, professional goals, and personal passions. This customization reflects Iliff’s belief in the importance of honoring diverse perspectives and encouraging innovative thinking.

Embodied Spirituality

Description

This concentration prepares learners to understand and assess the spiritual dimensions of life in its many embodied forms. With particular attention to both historic and contemporary contextualized understandings of spirituality, this concentration explores the intersections of spiritual life with communities of racial and cultural identity, ritual and meditative practices, material culture, sexuality, and the natural world. Critical perspectives of spirituality can be a source of resistance in situations of oppression, of communal strength in times of change, and individual grounding in times of struggle. Skills in teaching spiritual practices, leading rituals, and companioning the spiritual life will allow graduates to engage in a variety of consultative, reflective, and leadership practices related to embodied spirituality.

Social Justice and Ethics

Description

This concentration engages learners in a complex interdisciplinary analysis of historical and contemporary social justice struggles and movements. Students will identify and critically evaluate the symbolic systems, power structures, ideologies, values, and religious meanings and practices at play in events and interactions, institutional and social structures, ethical judgments, and living communities, and articulate and enact a vision for increased social justice in these contexts. With a focus on sustainable and community-based practice, the concentration is designed to help people who want to develop an inclusive, collaborative, and justice-based social justice leadership with the cultural capacity and organizational skills necessary for domestic and international religious organizations, diverse non-profit settings, government agencies, educational institutions, the media, and various business and professional contexts.

Prophetic Leadership

Description

The Prophetic Leadership concentration prepares learners to create, understand, and assess leadership approaches that invite profound, life-giving change; its focus is on the need for imaginative and faithful leadership in complex institutional and communal contexts. With critical examination of prophetic models found in religious texts and historical movements, this concentration explores the connections between prophetic vision/voice and community-based action. The concentration includes awareness of various justice-seeking approaches to leadership, advocacy, education, and communal care and development. Graduates will develop skills in research and needs assessments in community building, artistic and narrative sources of inspiration of vision and discernment, and other approaches and practices related to this leadership emphasis.

Religion, Trauma, and Healing

Description

This concentration engages interdisciplinary perspectives on experiences of individual, communal, generational, and historical trauma, including theological, historical, psychological, cultural, and literary approaches. Understanding the structural forces, power dynamics, colonizing practices, ideological and religious beliefs, epidemiological and ecological crises, and psychological factors contributing to traumatic experience will help students recognize, understand, and support/accompany persons and communities who have experienced trauma. Religious trauma, particularly related to expressions of gender and sexuality rejected by some religious communities, will be a particular focus. The wisdom of historical and contemporary survivors of trauma as well as insight from interdisciplinary research will inform constructive practices of lament, recognition, reparation, and healing.

Certificate in Latinx Studies

Highlighting our commitment to diversity and our celebration of inclusive excellence, the DU/Iliff Joint PhD Program in the Study of Religion offers a 24 credit hour Certificate in Latinx Studies as part of the 90 credit hour PhD. Guided by faculty at both DU and Iliff, students consider questions of Latinx histories and culture from a theological and religious studies perspective and engage directly with Latinx communities through a variety of field placement and outreach opportunities. The main objective of the program is to prepare students to teach Latinx Studies, focusing on religion, theology, and social praxis. More details here.

Core Faculty
Dr. Miguel De La Torre, Professor of Social Ethics and Latinx Studies, Iliff School of Theology

Dr. Albert Hernández, Associate Professor of the History of Christianity, Iliff School of Theology

Dr. Kristina Lizardy-Hajbi (Coordinator), Associate Professor of Leadership and Formation; Director of the Office of Professional Formation, Iliff School of Theology

Dr. Debora Ortega, Professor, University of Denver Graduate School of Social Work; Director, University of Denver Latino Center for Community Engagement and Scholarship

Ready to make a difference in your community?