2015-2016 Undergraduate General Catalog


200

RELI 200 Reason, Faith and the Search for Meaning

A study of those issues which are of common concern to philosophy and religion. Topics focused upon include: the nature and function of religion; the existence and attributes of God; the claims of reason and the claims of faith; God and the problem of evil; the meaning of religious statements; religious experience and the inexpressible; religion and morality; human freedom and the meaning of life. Tradition and Culture course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

Cross Listed Courses

PHIL 200

RELI 210 Ethical Perspectives

An introductory exploration of basic ethical issues from different philosophical perspectives as well as from the vantage point of the Christian faith. This course is designed to encourage a thoughtful appraisal of the deep questions of life within the broadest possible context. Tradition and Culture course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

Cross Listed Courses

PHIL 210

RELI 211 Story and Theology

An exploration of biblical and secular narrative with particular attention to their compositional conventions, theological convictions, and literary connections. Text and Context course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 212 Lessons in Living: Biblical and Contemporary Reflections on Wisdom

An exploration of the biblical wisdom books of Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Job, and Song of Songs in conjunction with contemporary reflections on wisdom. Text and Context Course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 213 Power, Politics, and the Biblical Prophets

An exploration of the prophetic biblical literature with particular attention to the historical situation of the prophets as well as the contemporary relevance and importance of their message. Text and Context course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 214 Gospels and Drama of Human Life

The stories of the Christ are painted out of the events of the life of Jesus. In this course we will explore the ways this single human life was (and is) told and understood as a drama of cosmic transformation. Text and Context Course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 215 Paul and Christian Origins: Torah, Messiah and Empire

Paul was an observant Jew who came to understand Jesus as God's messiah. As a consequence, he corresponded with messianic communities all around the Mediterranean basin. His letters became Scripture for Christians (a development that would have amazed Paul) and shaped the developing Christian movement. In this course we will explore Paul's role in the origins of Christianity, and consider how this movement developed in the context of Jewish faith and Roman imperial power. Text and Context Course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 216 God: The Problem and the Promise

An exploration of various biblical and theological, historical and contemporary images used to portray and characterize God, including a discussion of the advantages and limitations of these conceptions for an intelligible and credible understanding of God. Tradition and Culture course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 218 Hope and the Future

Does the future hold the good that has not happened yet or the bad? This course studies the ways Jewish and Christian scripture uses the future as a threat and as a hopeful sign. Close attention will be paid to the literary shape and function of resurrection narratives, especially as they draw on apocalyptic and eschatological texts. Text and Context Course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 219 God, Suffering, and Evil

This course will analyze various theological and Biblical texts which seek to reconcile a suffering world to a moral God. The course will also examine the traditional problem of evil. Contemporary Issues course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 223 Religion and American Culture

This course examines the intersection of religion and culture in American society and how that intersection has influenced both religion and the culture. Attention will be given to questions of how culture and religion have influenced each other throughout American history as well as how religion and culture intersect in today's America. This intersection will be viewed through a variety of mediums including film, music, television, internet, and literature among others. Tradition and Culture Course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 225 The Church in Global Perspective

This course aims at introducing the student to Christian theology as it is being developed in a global context in Africa, Latin America and Southeast Asia. This will be done through reading in theology, videos, guest appearances and individual and group activities. Tradition and culture course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 229 Reading for Meaning and Truth with Hermes, God of Thieves and Interpreters

Do readers find truth or steal it? Create it or deconstruct it? This course explores how interpreters and texts dance with each other to discover and create meaning and truth. Interpretive theories will be explored, and literary, philosophical, and theological implications will be examined. Text and Context course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 235 Sexual Ethics

This course will examine central theological and practical issues in Christian ethics that influence the churchand the world today. The focus will be on one or more primary issues of theological ethics (e.g., justice, sexuality, love, economics, gender, etc.) which will be examined in their historical, theological, constructing helpful approaches to difficult contemporary ethical dilemmas. Contemporary Issues course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 241 Theology and Philosophy in Dialog

This course is a survey of Western philosophical thought with the purpose of introducing students of theology to the philosophical ideas which have had a significant influence on the development of Christian theology. Tradition and Culture Course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

Cross Listed Courses

PHIL 241

RELI 242 Liberation Thought

This course is devoted to concentrated study in liberation theologies and philosophies. Specific attention will be given to understanding the differences between a variety of schools of liberation thought. Contemporary Issues Course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

Cross Listed Courses

PHIL 242

RELI 243 Conversation Between Science and Religion

This course will develop the theological implications of the Christian doctrines in light of current conversations between religion and science. Major topics of the course will include topics like: 1)The doctrine of creation; 2) What it means to be Human; 3) Beginnings and Endings of Life; 4) Genetics and Theology; and 5) Ecology and eht Environment. Contemporary Issues Course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

Cross Listed Courses

PHIL 243

RELI 244 Christology

This course examines how the Christian movements witness of faith has understood the person of Jesus the Christ from both his relationship to God and how his person is expressed as fully human. Tradition and Culture course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 245 After Auschwitz: The Holocaust and Christian Faith

The word "Shoah" means desolation of cosmic proportions. Auschwitz and the killing of six million Jews from 1939-1945 was a "Shoah." This course examines how the "holocaust" has and should affect Christian faith and life. Tradition and Culture course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 247 From Plato to Genesis to Job: The Question of Justice

This course addresses the great issues of justice, both human and divine. What is justice? Does God act justly? Can human beings act justly? This course will focus on a close and careful reading of three important primary texts: the Republic of Plato, the book of Genesis, and the book of Job. Each text provides a different perspective on the problems of justice and its relevance for forgiveness, community, religion, punishment, and natural injury. Text and context course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 248 Different Voices: Christian Faith and World Religions

This course will explore the dilemma facing traditional Christianity regarding the World’s religions.  The primary questions to be addressed are:  How should Christians engage other world religions?  In what ways have different Christians theologically dealt with other religions?  What are the positive and negative ways that Christianity has related to other religions?  Is it inevitable that the religions of the world must be in conflict with each other?  Are all religions equally true?  As the world gets smaller and smaller how ought contemporary Christians deal with their evangelical vocation to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ?  How do other religions help or hinder Christians from dealing with their understanding of evangelism, anthropology and Christology? These and other questions will be discussed and debated.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 250 Story, Faith, and Meaning: Biblical Origin Stories

In voicing the proposition: "We tell ourselves stories in order to live," essayist Joan Didion asserts that humans derive meaning through stories. Stories shape and interpret life events (real or imagined) so as to yield meaning. This course will study the foundational (origin) stories of both the Old Testament and the New Testament in order to observe how these origin stories shape the faith of confessing communities and yield important conversations about divine and human nature and the meaning of life.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 251 Judaism, Islam and the Christian Faith

This course examines the similarities and differences between Judaism, Islam and Christianity. We will analyze the beliefs, scriptures, rituals, history and cultural contexts of each tradition. We will also discuss the risks, dangers, and benefits of studying somebody else's religious tradition. Tradition and Culture course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 253 Living the Questions, Practicing the Faith

This course is both a theological study and critical examination of the practices, acts, rituals, and embodied experiences of the Christian faith. Important historical and contemporary texts and traditions will help students develop their own practices and theologies. Contemporary Issues course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 254 Theology, Medicine and Ethics

This course is a study of theological perspectives on issues in contemporary medicine.  Rigorous intellectual attention will be given to the ways in which religious practices, beliefs, and institutions form and are formed by experiences of illness, health, and medical sciences.  Contemporary Issues Course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 255 Religion, Politics and Violence

This course examines the relationship between religion, violence and the Christian Faith. From the pacifism of Jesus and the early Christians to scriptural stories about God commanding and using violence to the Crusades to the Just War Theory, and to contemporary discussions about religion and violence, we will wrestle with why certain religious believers feel compelled to use violence. Tradition and Culture course.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 257 The Incarnation of Creation: Composing Worlds, Composing Lives

This course introduces students to constructive theology by utilizing the metaphor of the arts to interpret the practice and formation of the Christian faith.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 260 The Geography of God's Incarnation: Landscapes and Narratives of Faith

What does geography have to do with our spirit, with God's Spirit? The course is a theological and pastoral response to that question. We will explore the doctrine of the incarnation through the lens and metaphor of geography and place in Christian theologies, with specific attention to Native American theologies.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 261 Reformation and Revolution: Confessing Movements in the Church Catholic

This course explores the Lutheran traditions in conversation with other theological, historical, and cultural movements within the Church catholic. Specific emphasis will include theological doctrines and beliefs, confessional documents, organization, practice, history, and the location of Lutheran traditions within an ecumenical context.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 110

RELI 299 Independent Study

Research in a special area, supervised by an instructor.

Credits

3- 4

Prerequisites

Permission of Department Chair