2025-2026 Undergraduate General Catalog

RELI - Religion

 
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RELI 1100 Exploring the Christian Faith

An introduction to the academic study of the Judeo-Christian tradition which acquaints the student with scholarly methods of study as well as central biblical/theological concepts and vocabulary as they relate to, and are in dialogue with, philosophical, historical and theological questions of value and commitment.

Credits

3

Offered

Every Fall, Interim, and Spring in person, every Summer online

Notes

Previously: RELI 110

RELI 2200 Introduction to Hebrew Bible/Old Testament

This course is an introduction to the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament (HB/OT) and is designed to provide the student with the historical, sociological, and religious context of ancient Israel and the broader Ancient Near Eastern context as applicable. Special attention will be given to the interpretation of prose literature, Hebrew Bible theology, and major biblical traditions of the HB/OT. Students will develop strong intellectual practices of ethical reasoning by (1) historically situating the moral absolutes/imperatives as articulated by the HB/OT, (2) understanding moral living as grounded in God’s covenant(s) with his people, and (3) examining how morality as shaped by covenant is wrestled with and expressed among the various traditions in the HB/OT.

Credits

3

Notes

Previously: RELI 201

RELI 2210 Scriptures, Sci Fi, & Fantasy

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

Credits

3

Offered

Every Spring

Notes

Previously: RELI 211, PHIL 211

RELI 2220 Wisdom Traditions

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

Credits

3

Notes

Previously: RELI 212

RELI 2230 Examining the 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.

Credits

3

Offered

Online occasional Summer

Notes

Previously: RELI 213

RELI 2240 Gospels and Transformations

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.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 214

RELI 2250 Reading for Meaning and Truth

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. Classic stories (some of them biblical, some not) will be read, interpretive theories will be explored, and theological implications will be examined. Particular attention will be paid to how historical events like the Holocaust affect (and create and destroy) the reading of classic stories. We will explore how catastrophe changes what we mean when we talk about meaning or truth.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasional Interims

Notes

Previously: RELI 229

RELI 2260 Origins, Myths, and Religions

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

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 250

RELI 2270 Christianity in Chains

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.

Credits

3

Offered

Online occasional Summer

Notes

Previously: RELI 247

RELI 2410 Gender, Sexuality, & Religion

This course addresses the ways that gender and sexuality intersect with religious thought from multiple traditions, exploring the deep connections between religious experience/knowledge and confirmation of one’s own sex or gender identity. The focus is on analyzing religious and cultural traditions to understand historical and contemporary approaches to sex and gender. Students will leave the class equipped with an understanding of and ability to construct helpful approaches to sexual/gender identities and religious traditions, hermeneutics, and practices.

Credits

3

Offered

Every other Fall, even years

Notes

Previously: RELI 235, PHIL 235

RELI 2430 Religion, Science, and Technology

This course emphasizes the theological study of conversations between religion and science. Major topics of the course are: 1) a survey of the historical relationship between religion, science, and technology, 2) the breadth and depth of the conflicts and dialogues between religion, science, and technology, and 3) practical application to big problems in religion, science, and technology.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasional Interims

Notes

Previously: RELI 243

RELI 2440 Religion, 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.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 254

RELI 2450 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.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 255

RELI 2480 Geography, Spirit, Traditions

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 geographies, narratives, and places in Christian theologies, with specific attention to Native American theologies.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasional Interim

Notes

Previously: RELI 260

RELI 2500 Religions Global Context

 This course will engage different living religious traditions worldwide by studying their origins, writings, rituals, beliefs, and contemporary expressions, as well as the emerging non-religious categories of the nones, atheists, and agnostics. The primary questions to be addressed are: How can people engage across religious or worldview differences? What are the things people can learn from each other? How does each address ethical issues in contemporary times?

Credits

3

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 248

RELI 2510 Islam & Christianity

This course examines the similarities and differences between 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.

Credits

3

Offered

Every other Fall, even years

Notes

Previously: RELI 251

RELI 2540 Manga, K-Drama, and Religion

The influence of Asian popular cultures in the contemporary world is enormous. Animes, mangas, manhwas, K-dramas, Bollywood movies have become commodities attractive to people beyond their original loci. Religious and spiritual values are ubiquitous in Asian popular cultures. This course will examine how religious and spiritual traditions of Asia, such as Shinto, Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism, and Christianity, are represented in the products of Asian popular cultures, especially in Manga and Korean dramas/movies, in order to understand their presented values and ethical insights.

Credits

3

Notes

Previously: RELI 265

RELI 2560 Jesus in Islam and Christianity

This course will study how Islam and Christianity understand Jesus Christ as an essential figure in connection to God's revelation to humanity. We will survey the Scriptures, tradition, spirituality, and contemporary views of Jesus in those religions, as well as several points of encounters in the history of Muslim-Christian relations, where Jesus became a contentious point through polemics and apologetics. While we address this reality and examine it critically, the course will utilize the comparative theology method to generate constructive reflections that can enrich dialogue and mutual understanding in today's pluralistic society.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 256

RELI 2570 Exploring Judaism

This course will seek to understand and examine the religion of Judaism and the history of the Jewish people. The history of Judaism will be given major emphasis along with the basic beliefs and rituals. The Jewish philosophical and mystical traditions will be discussed. Judaism in America and the State of Israel will be a central concern. Attention will also be given to why so much hatred has been directed historically toward the Jewish people.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 330

RELI 2610 Atheisms & Secularism

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.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 216

RELI 2620 Hope, Apocalypse, 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.

Credits

3

Offered

Every Spring

Notes

Previously: RELI 218

RELI 2630 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.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 219

RELI 2640 Justice, Race, Religion

This course is devoted to concentrated study in liberation theologies and philosophies. Liberation theologies grow out of a wide variety of historical situations spanning the globe. Specific attention will be given to understanding the differences between a variety of schools of liberation thought and applications of those schools to historical or contemporary situations.

Credits

3

Offered

Every other Fall, odd years

Notes

Previously: RELI 242

RELI 2650 Religious Nationalisms

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.

Credits

3

Offered

Occaasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 245

RELI 2710 Reformations/Christianity

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

Notes

Previously: RELI 261

RELI 2970 Topics:

Special Topics in Religion.

Credits

3

Notes

Previously: RELI 297

RELI 3200 Seminar in Biblical Studies

A concentrated study of a particular topic in biblical studies. Possible topics include studies in: the Pentateuch; the Dead Sea Scrolls; the Fourth Gospel; and Apocalyptic writings.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 320

RELI 3580 Conversation in Hinduism and Buddhism

This course examines and works to understand the scriptures, philosophical/mystical traditions, rituals, holy days and holy places that are central to the religions of Hinduism and Buddhism. We will also explore the historical and geographical diversity of each tradition. A significant part of the course will be an examination of the many ways the two traditions have interacted with each other. Throughout the course students will explore how Hinduism and Buddhism differ from the monotheistic religions.

Credits

3

Notes

Previously: RELI 341

RELI 3600 Conversation in Religions/Theologies

A seminar devoted to reading 20th and 21st Century theologians.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 1100

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: RELI 332

RELI 3950 Internship

An internship provides work experience under an ordained supervisor with a department member as advisor. Limited to students who are pre-seminary or considering seminary.  Additional fees may apply.

Credits

3- 4

Offered

Every Spring

Notes

Previously: RELI 395

RELI 3970 Topics

Special Topics in Religion.

Credits

3

Notes

Previously: RELI 397

RELI 4000 Senior Experience

In consultation with a faculty member, a second semester senior will select a research topic. With supervision from the faculty member, the student will research and write a paper during the semester. At a final senior thesis forum, the student will present his/her paper to fellow seniors as well as the faculty of the Religion and Philosophy Department.

Credits

3

Prerequisites

RELI 3200; RELI 3600; Senior Status

Offered

Via Independent Scholarship as needed

Notes

Previously: RELI 400