Enrollment and waitlist data for current and upcoming courses refresh every 10 minutes; all other information as of 6:00 AM.
01/03 - 01/27 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:00 am |
9:00 am |
9:00 am |
9:00 am |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 11079
Online: Sync Distributed | Lecture
Online
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Faith/Catholic Trad
Other Requirements Met:
CommGood/Community-Engaged
Writing to learn
This section introduces systematic theology, a discipline that tries to understand how Christian doctrines are interrelated with each other and with other beliefs about the world. It explores both traditional and contemporary interpretations of the most significant doctrines in Catholic and Protestant traditions, emphasizing the relationship of scripture, tradition, experience, and reason as sources for Christian theology. The course is structured on the classical "system" of the Nicene Creed, and will focus on the ongoing formation of the doctrines of God, Christ, the Spirit, creation, sin, salvation, and Church. Special emphasis will be given to the role of grace in history and human experience.
4 Credits
01/03 - 01/27 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:00 am |
9:00 am |
9:00 am |
9:00 am |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 11078
Online: Sync Distributed | Topics Lecture 1
Online
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Phil/Theo
OR
Global Perspective AND Integ/Humanities
Other Requirements Met:
CommGood/Community-Engaged
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.” This section introduces systematic theology, a discipline that tries to understand how Christian doctrines are interrelated with each other and with other beliefs about the world. It explores both traditional and contemporary interpretations of the most significant doctrines in Catholic and Protestant traditions, emphasizing the relationship of scripture, tradition, experience, and reason as sources for Christian theology. The course is structured on the classical "system" of the Nicene Creed, and will focus on the ongoing formation of the doctrines of God, Christ, the Spirit, creation, sin, salvation, and Church. Special emphasis will be given to the role of grace in history and human experience.
4 Credits