Accreditation

Accreditation:

Vine University America was born out of the passion we have to raise an end-time army for God. We understand that people called to the ministry need thorough foundation and training so that they can be effective, avoid the pitfalls of life, and become all that God has called them to be.

I will not forget the day God showed me the globe in a vision. I was onboard the plane traveling from the USA to Nigeria. God asked me if I could take that globe, and I responded that if He gives it to me, I will give it back to Him. When I woke up from the sleep in the plane, I knew that God was showing me a global assignment for the future. Every step He made me take from that day has led to where we are now. The scriptures He gave to me after that vision were Habakkuk 2:14, John 4:23-24, and Isaiah 59:19—the end.

My wife has been very supportive all through this journey, and after decades of journeying through life serving the Lord together, God fulfilled the vision by making our paths cross with Lawyer Nova Pack and Dr. Jason Welsh. God used them to midwife the birth of this university.

Through this commission, God has helped us raise men and women, young and old, for the work of the ministry. He has sparked a revival fire in our hearts that is unquenchable; zeal that cannot be stopped, and a passion that keeps rising every day.

We welcome you to Vine University America.

Bola and Yemi Arowolo

U.S. Department of Education Accreditation

USDE accreditation is not necessary for the theological degrees in which we offer. Individuals seeking employment in government-licensed positions such as public school teachers, state-licensed psychologists or psychiatrists, and non-church-related counselors will more than likely need USDE accredited degrees. Generally speaking, people working in ministry positions do not need a USDE accredited degree. If you are pursuing education at RKBC with the intent of obtaining employment or for some other reason, you should check with that organization BEFORE applying for enrollment in RKBC. RKBC assumes no liability of any kind.

Separation of Church and State

• There is secular education and there is religious education.
•Religious schools are not legally required to become accredited
•Secular schools seek secular education, and sacred schools receive sacred or ecclesiastic accreditation—each by their own peers.
•Religious institutions need no secular accreditation because they offer no secular degrees.
•Secular accreditation associations in turn are recognized by governmental agencies. They trace their authority back to the capitol of a country, like Washington, D.C.
•Religious accrediting associations are recognized by the Church of Jesus Christ, which has no supreme central office on earth. Our authority is derived directly from Heaven.
•Civil and religious interests are different and have separate realms of jurisdiction.
•The State is not superior to the Church. The Church need not wait for approval from the secular world.
•Civil agencies should not be dictating standards of Christian education, any more than a police officer should be directing the worship of God.
•Theological Seminaries should not be accredited by accrediting associations that are “recognized” by an agency of the federal government, because it is contrary to the Biblical principle of “Separation of Church and State,” indicated by Christ when He said, “…Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s…” (Mark 12:17).
•What business does a Christian educator have going to the world of unbelievers for recognition and acknowledgement when 2 Corinthians 6:14 clearly tells us, “Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness?”
•A Christian educational institution securing accreditation from an association which is attached to a governmental agency is a Scripturally condemned and unholy union as James 4:4 says, “Ye adulterers and adulteresses, know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God?”
 
Why not become accredited by the Department of Education? In many cases the government’s Department of Education is not qualified to accredit a private school, such as a Bible School, because the DOE is secular and a Bible or Christian School is spiritual thus our standards are not secular and cannot be judged by secular standards!
 
As we find in 1 Corinthians 2:14 “But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned.” Therefore a state agency is not able to determine if a spiritually directed learning institution is meeting the mandates of the Bible!

Accreditation has many benefits for both educational institutions and students, but it is neither a guaranty nor is it the sole criterion of an excellent education. Every accredited institution was once unaccredited. For example, Dallas Theological Seminary (DTS) was founded in 1924 but was not accredited by SACS until 1969, long after the graduation of notables such as Dwight Pentecost, Charles Ryrie, and Chuck Swindoll. Dallas Theological Seminary was not accredited by ATS until 1994, but its excellent education before then is unassailable.
 
Where promotional material for an unaccredited institution consists of an advertisement in a periodical published by a person or entity that is not affiliated with the unaccredited institution, the disclosure required in subsection (a) may be abbreviated to state as follows NOT ACCREDITED BY AN AGENCY RECOGNIZED BY THE U.S. SECRETARY OF EDUCATION. The disclosure required under this subsection shall be made in a type size as large or larger than any other text in the advertisement.