Course Syllabus: MC670 Working with Marginalized Groups and the Urban Poor

Similar documents
Syllabus for PRM Planting New Churches 3 Credit hours Fall 2013

Instructor: Dr. Barry D. Jones Spring W/F 9:10-10:25 Appointments:

Multicultural Ministries:

Course Description: Required Course Textbooks:

BE6603 Preaching and Culture Course Syllabus

Syllabus for PRM 553 Ministry in the Urban Setting 3.0 Credit Hours Spring 2015

Grants for Ministries with Youth and Young Adults

Note: COURSE CONTENT MAY BE CHANGED, TERM TO TERM, WITHOUT

01NT601 NEW TESTAMENT STUDIES FOR COUNSELING Reformed Theological Seminary Spring Credit Hours

PM101 SPIRITUAL LIFE SYLLABUS

Dr. Héctor M. Rodríguez Telephone Numbers: (201) and (201) ;

CTH 5520: Christian Theology for the Kingdom of God (Cleveland) I. Course Description II. Student Learning Outcomes

CECM : Introduction to Christian Education Spring 2016

BACHELOR OF ARTS IN INTERCULTURAL STUDIES

LEADING MINISTRY RESILIENTLY

CHTH 511 CHRISTIAN HISTORY AND THEOLOGY I

Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary Hamilton PR917 Cultural Exegesis for Preaching Syllabus: Spring 2014 Thursday 2:00pm 5:00pm

Evangelism (2MS508) Reformed Theological Seminary Orlando Summer 2012

There are no pre-requisites for D. Min. students to enroll in this course.

Rev. Dr. Héctor M. Rodríguez Telephone Numbers: (201) ;

BE6601 Course Syllabus

Wesley Theological Seminary Course of Study Philadelphia Satellite School Fall CS-121: Bible I: Introduction

Phillips CME Church 2500 Main Street Hartford, CT 06120

Your instructor is available for correspondence. If you have a question about the course, you can contact your instructor via .

ELC VITAL SIGNS CHURCH ASSESSMENT SUMMARY. C.A.T. Task Force Team Presentation, March 16th

BE5502 Course Syllabus

ASSEMBLIES OF GOD THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY. PTHM 650 Building the Disciple-Making Ministry

GRANTS FOR MINISTRIES WITH YOUNG PEOPLE United States Applicants

OT Old Testament Survey Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary Charlotte Fall 2012

Syllabus for GTHE 551 Systematic Theology I - ONLINE 3 Credit Hours Fall 2014

Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary Boston Campus The Center for Urban Ministerial Education

Global Church History

Systematic Theology Survey for Counseling Students 2ST501

COURSE SYLLABUS. Course Description

Syllabus for PRM 660- Practical Theology for Charismatic Ministry 3 Credit Hours July 8-12, 2013

WHY DOES IMPACT FOCUS ON PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT?

EXISTENTIALISM. Course Number PHIL Meeting Times MW 2:00-3:15. Instructor John V. Garner, Ph.D.,

Missional Theology: Foundations of Global Engagement M.F.02-U Undergraduate Level Spring 2018

NT501: New Testament Survey Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary

04ST530 : Apologetics Winter 2016 : Course Syllabus

SESSION 5. Caring for Orphans and Vulnerable Children. A Study Guide for Journeys of Faith. Short-Term Missions

CHRM 455/MISS 455 Missional Living: Campus, Church, Community, Commerce 3.0 Credit Hours Spring 2012

PHILLIPS THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY SYLLABUS DISCLAIMER

Philosophy 101: Introduction to Philosophy Section 4152 Online Course El Camino College Spring, 2017

Current Ethical Issues and Christian Praxis Introduction to Christian Ethics (A Pre-doctoral Course) Fall 2014 ET601-DA-o-D (3) Syllabus

COURSE SYLLABUS LIBERTY BAPTIST THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY

Bachelor of Theology Honours

STUDY: Religion and Society

LEADING MINISTRY RESILIENTLY

Philosophy o f. Religion. Course Description

COMPETENCIES QUESTIONNAIRE FOR THE ORDER OF MINISTRY Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in West Virginia

LABI College Bachelor Degree in Theology Program Learning Outcomes

PJ Library Family Survey

Syllabus for GBIB 561-OCT Old Testament Hermeneutics and Exegesis (Hebrew) 3 Credit Hours Fall 2015

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

Current Ethical Issues and Christian Praxis Introduction to Christian Ethics. Spring 2015 ET512-DA-t-D (3) #

Annual Assessment and Action Plan

Through class assignments, students will demonstrate the following:

TH 501 Semlink+: Theology Survey I Spring 2019 All Campuses

Church Readiness Discernment Tool

02PSY573 Sexuality and Sex Therapy Reformed Theological Seminar January 30 February 3, 2017 Sharon A. Hersh, M.A., LPC

Grace Communion Seminary Doctrine of the Trinity (TH505) Short Syllabus Instructor: Dr. Gary W. Deddo, PhD. Course Description

NT/OT 795: Biblical Theology Seminar Syllabus

Transition Summary and Vital Leader Profile. The Church Assessment Tool 5/3/16

Syllabus. Our Mission: To Live According to a Biblical Worldview and Serve

STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS

1. Explore historical and biblical understandings of ethics and morality in pastoral ministry.

MN 382 PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF PREACHING

Philosophy 2: Introduction to Philosophy Section 4170 Online Course El Camino College Spring, 2015

Why The Christmas Store?

Northern Seminary NT 301 Jesus and the Gospels Summer 2018

Required Texts: Fowler, Larry Rock-solid kids: Giving children a biblical foundation for life. Ventura, CA: Gospel Light.

MINISTRY LEADERSHIP. Objectives for students. Master's Level. Ministry Leadership 1

The Work of the Minister of Youth CEYH5344 New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary Christian Education Division

Master of Arts Course Descriptions

Syllabus for GBIB 507 Biblical Hermeneutics 3 Credit Hours Spring 2015

Jackson College Introduction to World Religions Philosophy Winter 2016 Syllabus

May Parish Life Survey. St. Mary of the Knobs Floyds Knobs, Indiana

A Syllabus for GTHE 561 Systematic Theology II - ONLINE 3 Credit Hours Spring 2014

ST540 Christian Encounter with Islam Reformed Theological Seminary Orlando Keith Johnson, Ph.D. Spring 2018 Mondays, 3:00-5:00pm

TH/WM 659 Evangelical Theology and World Religions Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary Charlotte Summer I 2012

ENDS INTERPRETATION Revised April 11, 2014

Christopher B. Zeichmann (only one n in address)

Mission, Vision, Values

Missional Outreach Workbook. v3.0 WHOLE CHURCH

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

1) Complete readings, weekly assignments and inventories. (Around 800 pages of reading for the course)

Religious Belief and Practice in Urban Latin America: Key Findings from Buenos Aires, Mexico City, São Paulo and Lima

* * * * * 1. A permanent stream of income for capital expansion (campus multiplication) is different from a one-time building fund drive.

04ON504 Advanced Biblical Exegesis

King and Kitchener Packet 3 King and Kitchener: The Reflective Judgment Model

Horizon College and Seminary PASTORAL THEOLOGY

Houston Graduate School of Theology I. Course Description II. Student Learning Outcomes III. Textbook Required Textbook

APPENDIX C DOING A SELF-STUDY OF YOUR CONGREGATION'S LIFE, MINISTRY AND MISSION

New York School of Ministry An Ecumenical, Educational Program of the NY Conference of the UCC

USF MASTERS OF SOCIAL WORK PROGRAM ASSESSMENT OF FOUNDATION STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES LAST COMPLETED ON 4/30/17

Section One. A Comprehensive Youth Ministry Mindset

COURSE OF STUDY SCHOOL

2PT510 Preaching Lab IB

Nazarene Theological Seminary 1700 E Meyer Blvd Kansas City, MO /

Transcription:

Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, Boston 90 Warren Street Roxbury, MA 02119 (617) 427-7293 Course Syllabus: MC670 Working with Marginalized Groups and the Urban Poor Instructor: Mark G. Harden, PhD Email: mharden@gordonconwell.edu Class Room: 213, 6 to 10:00 p.m. Office Hours: Monday, 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. COURSE DESCRIPTION: This course will explore how the church can be effective in the context of pervasive economic and social conditions that often lead people to adapt to a culture of survival in many urban communities around the world. The Bible is replete with principles for ethical practices around working with and on behalf of the marginalized and the poor. Understanding the universal need to survive, helps one to understand how Scriptures illuminate practices for righteous treatment of the widows, orphans, stranger, and fatherless. Principles for assessing and interpreting human behavior for the purpose of preaching, worship, teaching, service, and discipleship are discussed in light of understanding how to work with the marginalize and poor in the urban context. Students will be provided with the necessary tools for using a cultural analysis to guide their actions and inform their ministry. Models and best practices will be discussed in light of social, cultural, political, and economic urban realities. BRIEF COURSE DECRIPTION Students will also learn biblical principles and how to develop practical skills for engaging crossculturally with various social and ethnic groups and individuals in an urban environment. Particular attention is on understanding how the church can minister to the marginalized and urban poor in ways that empower them to overcome adverse social and economic conditions in their environment. This is an elective course that fulfills the requirement for the Master of Arts in Urban Ministry and Master of Divinity at the Boston Campus. 1

STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES Students will be able to: Demonstrate self-awareness and understanding of barriers related to how one interacts and lives among marginalized groups and the poor. Articulate a biblical and/or practical theology based upon biblical themes related the person and ministry of Jesus Christ and the question of what it means to live out one s faith in service to others. Understand the role of social and cultural factors in how people at-risk live and survive in a diverse and underserved urban environments. Demonstrate the ability to have compassion and engage according to perceived strengths of and what the marginalized individuals and the poor can bring to the ministry setting. REQUIRED READINGS: Anderson, Elijah. 1999. Code of the Street: Decency, Violence, and the Moral Life of the Inner City. New York: W. W. Norton and Company. ISBN 0393320782. (352 pp.) Price: $12.21 at Amazon.com Fikkert, B., Corbett. S., Perkins, J. (2009). When Helping Hurts: Alleviating Poverty without Hurting the Poor. New edition. Moody: ISBN-10: 0802457053 (232 pp.) Price: $8.49 at Amazon.com Lupton, Robert D., (2011). Toxic Charity: How Churches and Charities Hurt Those They Help (And How to Reverse It). New York: HarperOne. ISBN-10: 0062076205 (208 pp.) Price: $10.19 at Amazon.com Lupton, R., (2007). Compassion, Justice and the Christian Life: Rethinking Ministry to the Poor. Ventura, CA: Regal Books ISBN-10: 0830743790. (144 pp.) Price: $9.59 at Amazon.com RECOMMENDED READINGS: McKnight, J. 1995. The Careless Society: Community and its counterfeits. New York: Basic Books. Pohl, Christine. 1999, Making Room: Recovering Hospitality as a Christian Tradition. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company. Shipler, David K. 2004. The Working Poor: Invisible in America. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 2

COURSE PAPERS: Matthew 25: Critical Reflection Papers Third Session of Class: February 11th You must write a 6 to 7-page critical reflection paper based upon as participant observers in one ministry situation of your choosing and the readings. The situation must be based upon a literal and intentional engagement with other as indicated in Matthew 25: 31-45. In other words, you must literately serve the poor and learn via reflection of your experience in light of the readings in Fikkert, et al., Lupton, (2011 and 2007). This means that you must engage in a ministry of feeding the hungry, providing a drink for the thirsty, visiting someone incarcerated, or visiting the sick stranger, and link the significance to your readings. An approach that is recommended is that you provide a one to two-page brief summary of each book and highlight key points the author(s) are making, and respond to the authors in reference to your ministry situation assignment. No more than two is expected for this initial part. More Detail Instructions: Locate an agency, church, or outreach event where you can participate from within a faith-based agency as a volunteer to complete this assignment. The individual(s) you meet must be stranger(s) to you. The balance of the paper you write (5 to 6 pages) should include describing facts about the event, making a critical self-assessment of your first perception, indicating what you have learned (i.e., externalize for the reader what you have reflected upon), and describe the relevance of the insight for future ministry. A concise paper in narrative form is expected. Seek to develop a brief practical theology of ministry as a part of the process, but the emphasis is on allegorical usage of theological themes and biblical images for reflection purposes. Do not proof text or read too much into the Scriptures or the situation. Vision and Application Paper: A Church-Based Ministry Perspective: Due February 25th Write a brief 3 to 5-page proposal for how you can provide leadership in improving a ministry at your church or within your Christian organization integrating what you have learned in the readings and course. Reference 3 or more points in each of the book (you may use the ones identified in first paper) that illustrate your rationale or thinking around compassion and charity issues in a church of which you are familiar. Include the following: (1) a rationale for your approach; (2) one or more strategies based on the challenges; (3) a brief description of the community context; (4) how the initiative will happen; and (5) outcomes that you would expect as a result of the initiative. This paper should be written with a title of your choosing, headings, and in narrative form. 3

Urban Ministry Planning Paper: Due March 25th The application paper must be based on analyses of one of two specific cases according to you understanding of the Poor and Anderson s Book. You must filter out anything that is counter to the lessons you have learned through a critical reading of Anderson s book. The point of this paper is to utilize Anderson s descriptions and case studies to conduct an analysis that reflects what you have learned in this course as it relates to core values or survival intelligence. The application paper must include the following: (1) a description of a deficit view of the behavior that is exhibited in the case study; (2) a counter description using the core survival cultural value you have identified; (3) a description of the significant challenges faced individuals may face based on what people in poverty may face; and (4) a vision that expresses the hope you have regarding the person in the case study. Overall, the paper must demonstrate that you have an understanding of the challenges related to poverty, the perceptions and realities typically associated with the marginalized in urban life, and ministry that can empower. Among the Anderson cases you must select one of the following: Case Study #1 Review Anderson s report on pages 80 through 106 about a young man named Tyree. (Examine his history, the life context, his household, and community situation. Think about what this young man should be doing with his life, in a normal life, as you would see it. Imagine that Tyree s grandmother has brought him to church. She is telling you that her grandson is a good person, but he sometimes gets into trouble. Pretend that gender difference [if this is the case] is not an issue, you have done some homework about his life, and that Tyree has agreed to come out to your church for some reason at your invitation. Imagine that there are a few young people like Tyree coming to your church. What should be done for these young people?) Case Study #2 Review Anderson s report on pages 219 through 236 about Betty Washington, an inner-city grandmother. (Examine the grandmother s story, the life context, household, and community situation. Put yourself in the story at the point in which Betty goes to work as a grandparent to raise her grandchildren. That is, think of becoming involved at one point in time rather than across several years. However, you are aware of her history as Anderson describes it. Also, imagine that there are several grandparents in your church s community raising their grandchildren due to absent or negligent parents. What are the needs of this group? Using Betty as an example, think about what can be done or how can you or your church intervene?) 4

Session Topic Covered Readings and Assignments 1 Biblical and Theological Perspectives Old and New Testament Concepts Fighting Poverty and Serving the Poor Read: When Helping Hurts Perceptions of the Poor 2 The Church and the Poor: Who is Poor Voices of the Poor Data Defining Poverty and the Poor 3 Urban Cultural Patterns and Values Universal Cultural Dimensions Asset based Approaches Read: Toxic Charity (Lupton) Urban Values Survey Identifying Patterns of Poverty Discussion Groups on Visitation Identifying Urban Culture 4 Cultural Values and Behaviors in Urban Context Case Study Exercises 5 Cultural Values and Behaviors in Urban Context Continued Read: Anderson s Code of the Streets Case Study Exercises 6 Urban Ministry Development Best Practices in Context Relational Ministry Model & Assumptions 7 Wrap up: Common Strategies and Best Practices For Urban Discipleship Read: Compassion, Justice, and the Christian Life (Lupton) Case Studies: Developing Strategies SQ Values Identification Exercise 5

Expected Work Quality All written work must be of the highest quality in accordance with graduate level standards of Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary. Since writing skills are particularly important, it is stressed that you communicate in a clear, complete, concise, and logical manner. You must provide references and due credit to outside sources that can be verified. All papers must be submitted in class or directly to the professor unless prior permission is given for an alternative submission for the assignment. Course Grading In this course there will be several assignments that will contribute to a final grade. The categories for these assignments, class participation, and their percentage points are as follows: Matthew 25 Reflection Papers 30% Vision and Application Paper 30% An Urban Ministry Planning 30% Class Participation 10% Grading Scale A 95-100 A- 92-94 B+ 88-91 B 85-87 B- 82-84 C+ 78-81 C 75-77 C- 72-74 D+ 68-71 D 65-67 D- 62-64 F Below 62 Note: A final grade of B (85-87) is reflective of an average demonstrated level of quality graduate studies. A final grade of C (75-77) is reflective of a below average demonstrated quality level for graduate studies. 6