Enrollment and waitlist data for current and upcoming courses refresh every 10 minutes; all other information as of 6:00 AM.
09/08 - 12/22 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
1:35 pm |
||||||
+ asynchronous coursework |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 40563
Blended Online & In-Person | Topics Lecture 2
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 204
Online
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Phil/Theo
OR
Diversity/Soc Just AND Integ/Humanities
Other Requirements Met:
CommGood/Changemaking
Faith and Praxis Minor or Cert
Writing to learn
Theology courses numbered 221-229+300 are reserved for students on the new core curriculum. If this section of the class appears to have very few seats, it is because the rest of the seats in the classroom will be occupied by students in the equivalent course on the “old core.” In the last half century religious diversity in the West has rapidly increased, bringing people from different religious traditions into daily contact. This has resulted in new conflicts, sometimes in violence, but also in new collaborations and friendships. Drawing on several approaches to interreligious conflict and relations, this course will examine the dynamic encounters that take place between and among people of different religious identities and ask students to reflect on their own role in religiously complex situations. Students will consider this interreligious reality and their role in it against the backdrop of their own individual relationship to spirituality, faith, and theology. To foster interreligious understanding beyond the classroom, students in this course will spend significant time outside the classroom directly engaging religious diversity.
4 Credits
09/08 - 12/22 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
1:35 pm |
||||||
+ asynchronous coursework |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 40564
Blended Online & In-Person | Topics Lecture 2
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 204
Online
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Phil/Theo
OR
Diversity/Soc Just AND Integ/Humanities
Other Requirements Met:
CommGood/Changemaking
Faith and Praxis Minor or Cert
Writing to learn
Theology courses numbered 221-229+300 are reserved for students on the new core curriculum. If this section of the class appears to have very few seats, it is because the rest of the seats in the classroom will be occupied by students in the equivalent course on the “old core.” In the last half century religious diversity in the West has rapidly increased, bringing people from different religious traditions into daily contact. This has resulted in new conflicts, sometimes in violence, but also in new collaborations and friendships. Drawing on several approaches to interreligious conflict and relations, this course will examine the dynamic encounters that take place between and among people of different religious identities and ask students to reflect on their own role in religiously complex situations. Students will consider this interreligious reality and their role in it against the backdrop of their own individual relationship to spirituality, faith, and theology. To foster interreligious understanding beyond the classroom, students in this course will spend significant time outside the classroom directly engaging religious diversity.
4 Credits
09/08 - 12/22 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
1:35 pm |
||||||
+ asynchronous coursework |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 40004
Blended Online & In-Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 204
Online
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Faith/Catholic Trad
UG Core Human Diversity
Other Requirements Met:
CommGood/Changemaking
Faith and Praxis Minor or Cert
Writing to learn
NOTE: This course is for students on the “old core.” Students on the new core should take any THEO 221-229 if they are choosing to take the third required course on philosophical and theological reasoning in Theology. In the last half century religious diversity in the West has rapidly increased, bringing people from different religious traditions into daily contact. This has resulted in new conflicts, sometimes in violence, but also in new collaborations and friendships. Drawing on several approaches to interreligious conflict and relations, this course will examine the dynamic encounters that take place between and among people of different religious identities and ask students to reflect on their own role in religiously complex situations. Students will consider this interreligious reality and their role in it against the backdrop of their own individual relationship to spirituality, faith, and theology. To foster interreligious understanding beyond the classroom, students in this course will spend significant time outside the classroom directly engaging religious diversity. Prerequisites: and one 200-level or 300-level THEO course
4 Credits
09/08 - 12/22 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
1:35 pm |
||||||
+ asynchronous coursework |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 44081
Blended Online & In-Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 204
Online
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Faith/Catholic Trad
UG Core Human Diversity
Other Requirements Met:
CommGood/Changemaking
Faith and Praxis Minor or Cert
Writing to learn
NOTE: This course is for students on the “old core.” Students on the new core should take any THEO 221-229 if they are choosing to take the third required course on philosophical and theological reasoning in Theology. In the last half century religious diversity in the West has rapidly increased, bringing people from different religious traditions into daily contact. This has resulted in new conflicts, sometimes in violence, but also in new collaborations and friendships. Drawing on several approaches to interreligious conflict and relations, this course will examine the dynamic encounters that take place between and among people of different religious identities and ask students to reflect on their own role in religiously complex situations. Students will consider this interreligious reality and their role in it against the backdrop of their own individual relationship to spirituality, faith, and theology. To foster interreligious understanding beyond the classroom, students in this course will spend significant time outside the classroom directly engaging religious diversity. Prerequisites: and one 200-level or 300-level THEO course
4 Credits