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 |
3:25 pm |
3:25 pm |
Subject: Catholic Studies (UG) (CATH)
CRN: 44372
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: John Roach Center 126
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Faith/Catholic Trad
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Integ/Humanities
Martin Schlag, Michael Sarafolean
This course provides an investigation into the ways in which Catholicism is inherently social and ecclesial. Its specific focus is on the Christian engagement with the world. The course's framework will be taken from the analysis of society into three spheres of action (culture, politics, and economics) as described in Centesimus annus. We will examine the ways that Revelation, the sacramental life, and the teachings of the Church call Catholics to seek holiness and to witness to their faith in the world. Specific topics may include social and economic justice, politics and public policy, lay and religious apostolates, education, and marriage and family. Course materials may include resources from philosophy, theology, history, economics, and political science.
4 Credits
09/08 - 12/22 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
3:25 pm |
3:25 pm |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 44294
In Person | Topics Lecture 1
St Paul: John Roach Center 126
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Phil/Theo
OR
Integ/Humanities
Martin Schlag, Michael Sarafolean
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.”
4 Credits
09/08 - 12/22 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
3:25 pm |
3:25 pm |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 45399
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: John Roach Center 126
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Faith/Catholic Trad
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Phil/Theo
OR
Integ/Humanities
Martin Schlag, Michael Sarafolean
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. What is a good manager and how does he or she contribute to the common good? This course pursues these questions within the Christian social tradition broadly understood through an exploration of the theological relationship between work as a vocation and leisure as contemplation. Within this theological context, the course examines the financial, organizational, technological, and cultural forces that managers and organizations encounter daily. Prerequisite: one 200-level or 300-level THEO course
4 Credits