Summer 2016 Course of Study, Claremont School of Theology COS 222: THEOLOGICAL HERITAGE II: EARLY CHURCH

Similar documents
3. Understand the history of the creeds and ecumenical councils.

Emory Course of Study School COS 222 Theological Heritage II: Early Church

2019 Course of Study, Claremont School of Theology

Emory Course of Study School COS 322 Theological Heritage III: Medieval through the Reformation

COURSE OF STUDY SCHOOL Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary 2121 Sheridan Rd. Evanston, IL (847) YEAR TWO

HIST5200 HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY: EARLY - MEDIEVAL New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary

10Syllabus. COS 222 Theological Heritage: Early & Medieval Steve O Malley, Instructor May 21 25, 2018

All precourse assignments should be ed to the Course of Study office by May 1, 2015.

Wesley Theological Seminary Course of Study General Board of Higher Education and Ministry Second Term: July 23 August 1, 2019

Wesley Theological Seminary Course of Study School Summer Intensive Term 1 July 9 - July 19, 2019

By Water and the Spirit (available at

The Kingdom of God: Systematic Theology Syllabus

Wesley Theological Seminary Course of Study School Summer Intensive Term 2 July 22 August 1, 2019

SYLLABUS: THEOLOGICAL INTRO TO THE OLD TESTAMENT 1. Updated: 06/06/2017

All precourse assignments should be ed to the Course of Study office by June 1, 2016.

CT760: Readings in Christian Thought Patristic Theology Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary Charlotte Dr. Don Fairbairn Fall 2013

All precourse assignments should be ed to the Course of Study Office by May 1, 2014.

Emory Course of Study School COS 423 Missions

Emory Course of Study School COS 522 Theology in the Contemporary Church

Emory Course of Study School COS 521 Bible V: Acts, Epistles, and Revelation

Course of Study School Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary 2121 Sheridan Road Evanston, IL 60201

Wesley Theological Seminary Weekend Course of Study: March and April 20-21, 2018

Syllabus for GTHE 571 Church History I - ONLINE 3 Credit Hours Fall 2015

WAYLAND BAPTIST UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY WBUONLINE

Emory Course of Study School COS 321 Bible III: Gospels

E-COS 422 Theological Heritage IV: Wesleyan Movement. Summer 2019

Early Christianity (43.200)

OT 3XS3 SAMUEL. Tuesdays 1:30pm 3:20pm

CH501: The Church to the Reformation Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, Charlotte Dr. Don Fairbairn Fall 2014

COS 122 Theological Heritage I: Introduction Effective beginning Spring 2019 term

Syllabus El Camino College: Ancient and Medieval Philosophy (PHIL-10, Section # 2561, Fall, 2013, T & Th., 11:15 a.m.-12:40 p.m.

GSTR 310 Understandings of Christianity: The Global Face of Christianity Fall 2010

CT760: Readings in Christian Thought Patristic Theology Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary Charlotte Dr. Don Fairbairn Fall 2015

Course of Study School Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary 2121 Sheridan Rd. Evanston, IL (847) YEAR THREE 2018

Emory Course of Study School COS 223 Worship and Sacraments

SYLLABUS. 04HT502: History of Christianity I. Dr. Sean Michael Lucas Chancellor s Professor of Church History

ST 5102 THEOLOGY II: CHRIST, MAN, SIN, and SALVATION

COS 121 Bible I: Introduction Effective beginning Spring 2019 term

The Reformers and Christian Ministry

Syllabus for GTHE 571 Church History I 3 Credit Hours Fall 2010

Reference Texts: Paul Scott Wilson, Editor. The New Interpreter s Handbook of Preaching

COS 524 Theological Reflection: Practice of Ministry Effective beginning Spring 2019 term (rev 11/24/18)

for Biblical Studies A BIBLICAL VISION, PART II: MASTERING THE NEW TESTAMENT WITNESS TO CHRIST COURSE SYLLABUS B2-403

LUTHERAN CONFESSIONS Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary Charlotte Spring 2016

Syllabus for THE 461 History of Christianity I: Early Church 3.0 Credit hours Fall 2014

COURSE OF STUDY EXTENSION SCHOOL Indiana Area, United Methodist Church Spring August 17-18, October 13, November 10, 2018

Course Assignment Descriptions and Schedule At-A-Glance

Course Description. Required Texts (these are the only books you are required to purchase)

CH/TH668: The Trinitarian and Christological Controversies Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary Dr. Don Fairbairn Spring 2018

BI 541 Eschatology Fall Syllabus Instructor: Gary Spaeth

Nipawin Bible College Course: BT224 Hermeneutics Instructor: Mr. David J. Smith Fall Credit Hours

HT511 PATISTIC AND MEDIEVAL MONASTIC THEOLOGY. Professor: Dr. Daniel Burns Class: HT 511

TH 628 Contemporary Theology Fall Semester 2017 Tuesdays: 8:30 am-12:15 pm

Christian Spirituality I Fordham University GSRRE Chad Thralls, Ph.D.

Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago

Residential GBIB-512 Course Syllabus. Bethesda University of California

2012 Summer School Course of Study School ~ Emory University COS 511 New Testament II Session B: July 23 August 3, 2012: 8:00am-10:00am

REL 011: Religions of the World

LUTHERAN CONFESSIONS Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary Charlotte Spring 2015

BI 541 Eschatology. Fall 2015 Syllabus Brother Gary Spaeth. I. Course Description

This course is designed specifically for advanced transfer students - if you are not an advanced transfer student, you should take Religion 100.

POLITICAL THEOLOGY. Reformed Theological Seminary Washington, D.C. Summer Mark I. McDowell

CH/TH 3XV3/6XV6: CHRISTIANS AND VIOLENCE

Syllabus God s Mission in the Early Church: The Time of Christ-1500AD

Wesley Theological Seminary Course of Study School Weekend Winter- Hybrid 2016

Christian Spirituality BTS-5300M (3 credit hours) Canadian Mennonite University: Graduate Course Syllabus Fall, 2013

Systematic Theology Doctoral Seminar Christian Theology and Philosophical Analysis

Syllabus for GBIB 777 Exegesis of Romans (Greek) 3 Credit hours Fall 2012

Advanced Biblical Exegesis 2ON504

MCMASTER DIVINITY COLLEGE FALL SEMESTER, 2016 MS 3XP3 / 6XP6 PREACHING PAUL

Course introduction; the History of Religions, participant observation; Myth, ritual, and the encounter with the sacred.

BE6601 Course Syllabus

Syllabus BIB120 - Hermeneutics. By Larry Hovey. BIB120 - Hermeneutics Instructor: Larry Hovey Rochester Bible Institute

Boyce College. Spring Semester, 2008 Monday 11:30 AM-2:15 PM Monday 6:30 PM-9:15 PM

CT760: Readings in Christian Thought Patristic Theology Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary Charlotte Dr. Don Fairbairn Fall 2018

SL 210 THEOLOGY 1: AUTHORITY, TRINITY, CREATION, ANTHROPOLOGY, CHRISTOLOGY AND SOTERIOLOGY

Prentice Hall U.S. History Modern America 2013

REL201 A: Jesus of Nazareth

Foundations for Ministry Series Church Matters: Retrieving the Great Tradition T2-640

ET/NT 543 New Testament and Christian Ethics

Dr. Jeanne Ballard and Instructional Team HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF CHRISTIAN EDUCATION

OTTAWA ONLINE PHL Basic Issues in Philosophy

GB 5423 Historical Theology I Fall 2014 (Online) Dr. John Mark Hicks

CMN 3010 Introduction to Christian Theology May 16-19, 2016

POS 308 Theorists and Theorizing Machiavelli ED 125 T, TH 8:45-10:05

Syllabus PHIL 1000 Philosophy of Human Nature Summer 2017, Tues/Wed/Thurs 9:00-12:00pm Location: TBD

AP601 Introduction to Apologetics Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, Charlotte Summer

NT506 GREEK EXEGESIS Dr. Dennis Ireland Fall Credit Hours

INDIANA AREA EXTENSION COURSE OF STUDY SCHOOL The United Methodist Church Meeting at the University of Indianapolis Spring 2018

COURSE SYLLABUS - ST5534 Systematic Christian Theology 1

History of Christian Thought and Practice I Course 501X Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary Course Syllabus: Spring 2019

Course Description: Required texts:

2. reflect on the Old Testament as an ancient document and its implications for interpretation.

SYLLABUS. 1HT504: History of Christianity II. Dr. Sean Michael Lucas

Early Christianity (HIST 2000)

221 Bible II: Torah and Israel s History. Course Goals Books Advance Assignments

NBST 515: NEW TESTAMENT ORIENTATION 1 Fall 2013 Carter Building 164

Syllabus for THE 103 Spirit-Empowered Living 3.0 Credit hours Fall 2015

History 500 Christianity and Judaism in Greco-Roman Antiquity 2018 Purpose

COS 423 Mission CLASS DESCRIPTION:

Transcription:

Summer 2016 Course of Study, Claremont School of Theology COS 222: THEOLOGICAL HERITAGE II: EARLY CHURCH Session II: July 7, 2016 July 17, 2016 from 8:30-11:30 A.M. Instructor: Dr. Catherine Tinsley Tuell Email: cttuell@cs.com NOTE: Please contact me before class begins if you have questions regarding this syllabus. All pre-course work should be emailed to the Professor by June 9, 2016. Course Description: This course focuses on the history and theology of the Church through the first five centuries. Using primary sources, students will reflect on significant individuals, events, and the articulation of the Christian faith during this period. Students will be able to: 1. Understand and articulate the doctrine of the Trinity, and the historical debates in the early Church around the person and nature of Christ. 2. Understand and articulate a doctrine of salvation in light of the controversies of the early church. 3. Understand the history of the creeds and ecumenical councils. 4. Appropriate historical theology for pastoral ministry Required Textbooks: Bondi, Roberta. To Love as God Loves. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1987 (ISBN 9780800620417) Gonzalez, Justo. The Story of Christianity, Volume 1: The Early Church to the Dawn of the Reformation. 2 nd ed. New York: HarperCollins, 2010. (ISBN 9780061855887) Course Expectations and Grading: 1. Pre-Course Work [50% of total grade] 2. Class participation and preparation [10%] 3. Reading Reflection papers [30%] 4. Final Project [10%] Pre-Course Work [50% of total grade] A. Hermeneutical Reflections on History (no more than four typed pages) Tinsley Tuell Page 1

Read Parts I-II (pages 1-261) in the Gonzalez book. For each of these two parts of the book, write two one-page reflections on a specific historical event or individual that is covered in that part of the book. (In total, this is four reflections and four pages in total.) Each of these four reflections should focus on a specific aspect of early Christian history and its potential meaning for contemporary life and/or ministry in the church. These four reflections must be typed, double-spaced, in 12 pt Times New Roman font (or something comparable). Please have 1 inch margins on all four sides of the 8 ½ x 11 paper. (no need to justify the text to fit the right margin) Each reflection must include the following: 1. A brief description, based on your reading, of the event/individual from Christian history that you are considering. (Use your own words, with no quotations from the book.) 2. A citation to a page in the textbook describing the event or individual. 3. Your assessment of the historical significance of this event or person, based on your reading. 4. A thoughtful and critical reflection on the contemporary significance of this aspect of Christian history within the United Methodist Church, whether in your local church, or a broader application. B. Creedal Statement (no more than 4 typed pages) 1. After you have completed the assigned reading from the textbook, type a 1-2 paragraph statement of your personal beliefs about either: 1) the relationship between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, or, 2) the relationship between the divine and the human in Jesus Christ. Your textbook and traditions should inform this statement, but avoid explicit citation/quotation of printed sources in this personal statement of your own belief. You may cite the Bible by Book, chapter and verse as a reference, but avoid lengthy quotations from it. 2. Think of one or more objections to a specific part of your creedal statement. Describe and then explain the objection(s) in 1-2 paragraphs, beginning with the following phrase: It may be argued that... 3. Finally, defend and reaffirm your initial statement of belief against the argument(s) that you have raised (1-2 paragraphs). Give at least one persuasive reason for your audience to believe your creedal statement in the face of the objection(s) that you have described. (This creedal assignment should be a minimum of 3 paragraphs and a maximum of 6 paragraphs.) Tinsley Tuell Page 2

C. Sermon on Loving as God Loves in the Early Church (6 pages) Read all of Roberta Bondi s book, To Love as God Loves. Bondi states that being a Christian means learning to love God s love, and that this is what all that we have talked about up until this point has been about. (107). With a focus of learning from the early Church to love as God loves, write a sermon that purposes to provide information and inspiration to your audience to love with the type of love taught and lived by the early Christian monastics described by Bondi. You may use other sources in sermon, including the Bible, but it must satisfy the following requirements. 1. It must be six (6) full pages in length, and no more than seven (7) pages (doublespaced, one-inch margins, standard font type and size- see above). 2. Provide a specific and detailed (at least one paragraph in length for each of these terms) discussion of the importance of the following terms and ideas for Christian love as described by Bondi and the early monastics. a. Love b. Humility c. The Passions d. Prayer e. God 3. As part of the focus and purpose of your sermon, quote at least two of the monastic sources quoted by Bondi in her book. 1) name the ancient monastic in your sermon, 2) cite the original source in an endnote or footnote (see abbreviations and bibliography of sources cited on pp. 110-11), and, 3) also cite the page in Bondi where the ancient monastic is quoted and cited. Here is an example of a footnote using the Chicago citation style: 1 Epiphanius 4, in Sayings of the Desert Fathers, trans. Benedicta Ward, S.L.G. (Oxford: A.R. Mobray. 1981), 57, quoted in Roberta Bondi. To Love as God Loves (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1987), 21. Also include a bibliography at the end of your sermon (this is NOT part of the 6-7 page count). The Bible does not need to be included in your bibliography although you may cite it in your sermon, but avoid lengthy quotations from it. Course assignments A. Reading reflection papers [30%]. There are six reading reflection papers assigned in the class schedule. For each assignment, prepare a one-page reflection paper that includes the following: 1) the author and title of the reading{this should NOT make up the bulk of the reading reflection}, 2) a brief, 1-2 sentence summary of the reading, 3) identification of an especially important assertion, attitude, or action that you see present in the reading, and 4) a specific, concrete application of this assertion, attitude, or action within your local church or civic community. Your paper will be graded on your ability to succinctly summarize the main purpose of the reading, recognize a historically or theologically significant aspect of the writing, and to apply this insight in a practical way to present-day circumstances and challenges in your particular community. The first of these reading reflection papers is due the first day of class. Please print each paper and bring it to class. (6 papers at 5 points each =30pts) 1 Tinsley Tuell Page 3

A. Final Project [10%] due on Friday, July 15, 2016 For the last day of class, create a list that addresses the following statement in ranked order with #1 being the most important (two (2) typed pages): The top ten reasons that Early Church History shapes or challenges my theology are: This project will be graded based on the extent to which it accurately and specifically refers to aspects of Early Christianity (for example, a person, event, idea, teaching, or action), and explicitly describes the effects on your theology. Additional explanation and instructions will be provided during the first day of class. Course Schedule: 7/7 Introduction and Review of Pre-Course Work 7/8 Christian People and Early Christian Worship 7/11 Constantine, the Fourth Century and the Rise of Christendom 7/12 Early Monasticism, Donatism and Trinitarian Controversies 7/13 Augustine 7/14 Christological Controversies and the Early Medieval Period 7/7 Sacraments, Monastics and Class Review Course Reading and Writing Schedule 7/7 Introduction and review of pre-course work (reflection paper due today) Read the three assigned texts but complete a reading reflection for only one (your choice). Read: The Epistle to Diognetus http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/01_diognetus_mathetes.pdf Perpetua & Polycarp: Two Heroic Martyrs http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/02_perpetua_polycarp.pdf The Gospel of Thomas (100-200 CE) http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/03_gospel_of_thomas.pdf 7/8: Christian People and Early Christian Worship Assignment due today: Complete a reading reflection for one of the texts (read all five pages but chose only one): Early Glimpses: Historical documents describing Christians at worship. http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/04_earl_glimpses.pdf Tinsley Tuell Page 4

7/11: Constantine, the Fourth Century, and the Rise of Christendom Assignment due today: Read the following text and complete a reading reflection. Eusebius, The Conversion of Constantine: http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/05_conversion_of_constantine.pdf John Cassian, On the Method of Continual Prayer: http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/06_conference_abbot.pdf 7/12: Early Monasticism, Donatism and Trinitarian Controversies Assignment due today: Read these three texts and complete a reading reflection on only one of them (your choice). John Cassian, On the Method of Continual Praye http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/07_method_continual_prayer.pdf Excerpts from the Rule of St. Benedict http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/08_rule_of_benedict.pdf Comparison of Nicaea Creed (325 C.E) and Creed of Constantinople (381 C.E.) http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/09_nicene_creed.pdf 7/13: Augustine Assignment due today: Read the following texts, but complete a reading reflection for only one of the readings (your choice) Augustine, Excerpts from Confessions http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/10_augustine_conversion.pdf Augustine, Excerpts from a Sermon on 1 John 4:2 http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/11_augustine_sermon.pdf Pelagius, Extracts from Defense of the Freedom of the Will http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/12_pelagius_defense.pdf 7/14: Christological Controversies and the Early Medieval Period Assignment due today: Read the following three texts and complete a reading reflection for only one of them (your choice). Excerpts from The Chalcedonian Definition of the Faith (451 C.E.)) http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/13_defining_moment.pdf Council of Orange (529 CE) http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/14_council_of_orange.pdf Leo the Great, The Petrine Doctrine http://localpastor.org/2016cos/222/15_petrine_doctrine.pdf Tinsley Tuell Page 5

7/15: Class Review Assignment: Final Project of the Top Ten List is due today Guidelines for Written Assignments All papers should be typed, double-spaced, on 8 1/2 by 11 paper. Font should be either times New Roman or something similar and no larger than size 12 font. Please use 1 inch margins on all four sides All papers must include a page number and the last name of the student in either header or a footer on each page. Please note the question you are answering at the beginning of each new section. All papers should provide citations for all quoted material. MLA, Turabian, APA or Chicago style may be used. Punctuation should be consistent. Clarity of prose is the goal of punctuation. Please carefully check spelling before turning in papers. DIRECTIONS FOR EMAILING PRE-COURSE WORK 1. Any pre-course work received after 9 June will be subject to a late penalty. Any pre-course work NOT received by the first day of class will receive a reduced grade. 2. The course number and the phrase pre-course work should be the subject of your email: Example Pre-Course Work 222 3. Pre-course work must be sent as an attached document and not in the body of the email. 4. Your FULL name, phone number and email, should all be clearly included at the beginning of your email. 5. Make copies of your papers and bring them to class. We will be using them during class discussions. 6. Academic Integrity: Please reference the standards delineated in the Course of Study Handbook and pay particular attention to the section on plagiarism. Plagiarism is the use of any material in your papers that is not original to you and for which you do not give credit to the source. The use of plagiarism usually means failure of the course. Please use only the assigned course materials and, except for the assigned online documents do NOT use the internet as a resource. Professors are required to report all instances of plagiarism to the Director of Course of Study. -A good website to refer to regarding the use of quotations, summarizing and paraphrasing in your writing is: unitproj.library.ucla.edu/col/bruinsuccess/03/09.cfm (also pages /10, /11) Tinsley Tuell Page 6

More on Grading: 1. Please refer to the Course of Study Handbook in your Registration packet for an explanation of the grading policy. A copy of the above handbook is available in the faculty office. 2. A grade of A means that the student was error-free in describing the materials, identified key themes, thoroughly covered them and engaged in a critical evaluation of the various positions with a persuasive, well-written narrative. 3. A B grade means that the student did the work, was error-free in describing the material, and recognized the key arguments in the readings. 4. A grade of C means that the student did the reading, but it was not described accurately. 5. Less than a C means that the student was not able to convey that she or he read the material. Guidelines: 1. As the course progresses, the syllabus may be changed or adapted at the instructor s discretion to facilitate students reaching the goals of the stated learning objectives. 2. The Writing Center offers students assistance as needed. 3. If you do not turn in your work, you will fail the class... Tinsley Tuell Page 7