Tokyo Christian University . . .
- is the premier evangelical university in Japan.
- is the only evangelical institution accredited by the Japanese Ministry of Education, accreditation that is recognized around the world.
- is an international affiliate of the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities (CCCU).
- offers a bachelor of arts degree, with various majors in the fields of theology, international relations, and social work.
- provides a Christ-centered liberal arts education for both men and women in Asia.
- educates the heart and the mind for leadership, service, evangelism, and mission.
- unites students from all over the world who live, learn, and serve with a high purpose, that Christ is all and is in all.
- rests in a park-like setting and "green zone" city near Narita International Airport and downtown Tokyo.
Firmly rooted in the Evangelical tradition, Tokyo Christian University spans 125 years of Japan's 150-year Protestant history.
TCU emerged out of a merger of three Christian schools. The oldest, founded in 1881 in Yokohama, focused on women's education, at a time when Japan offered women few opportunities for higher education. In 1949 the Tokyo Christian Theological Seminary came into existence, and 1950 saw the establishment of the Japan Domei Institute. The Domei Institute later offered both a three and a four year course, achieving accreditation as a “junior college.”
These three schools merged in 1979, with the goal of upgrading the junior college into a university while maintaining the seminary as a distinct graduate program with its own identity.
In 1989, the merged school moved to its present location in Chiba New Town, a part of the greater Tokyo metropolitan area.
Having achieved the approval of the Japanese national department of education, the transition from the junior college to the university took place between 1990 and 1993. The university admitted its first group of students in 1990, when the junior college graduated its final class.
In 1993, the university gained full recognition and autonomy from the Japanese national department of education, and it continues in this status until today.
TCU emerged out of a merger of three Christian schools. The oldest, founded in 1881 in Yokohama, focused on women's education, at a time when Japan offered women few opportunities for higher education. In 1949 the Tokyo Christian Theological Seminary came into existence, and 1950 saw the establishment of the Japan Domei Institute. The Domei Institute later offered both a three and a four year course, achieving accreditation as a “junior college.”
These three schools merged in 1979, with the goal of upgrading the junior college into a university while maintaining the seminary as a distinct graduate program with its own identity.
In 1989, the merged school moved to its present location in Chiba New Town, a part of the greater Tokyo metropolitan area.
Having achieved the approval of the Japanese national department of education, the transition from the junior college to the university took place between 1990 and 1993. The university admitted its first group of students in 1990, when the junior college graduated its final class.
In 1993, the university gained full recognition and autonomy from the Japanese national department of education, and it continues in this status until today.