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THEO: Theology (UG)

227-W05
Contexts: Beloved Community
 
MWF 10:55 am - 12:00 pm
B. Heidgerken
Core 
09/07 - 12/21
14/14/0
Topics Lecture 4
CRN 43791
4 Cr.
Size: 14
Enrolled: 14
Waitlisted: 0
09/07 - 12/21
M T W Th F Sa Su

10:55 am
12:00 pm
MCH 232

 

10:55 am
12:00 pm
MCH 232

 

10:55 am
12:00 pm
MCH 232

   

Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)

CRN: 43791

In Person | Topics Lecture 4

St Paul: McNeely Hall 232

2020 Core Requirements Met:
      Phil/Theo
          OR
     Integ/Humanities

Other Requirements Met:
     Writing Intensive

(2020 Core Planning Guide)

  Ben Heidgerken

Theology courses numbered 221-229+300 are reserved for students on the new core curriculum. This course introduces students to central aspects of Christian history, thought, and action concerning ethnicity and race and provides resources to build up what Martin Luther King, Jr., called the “Beloved Community.” The course helps students develop ethical reasoning skills through consideration of various historical and contemporary Christian encounters across lines of racial difference, including examples from monastic communities, papal documents, missionary endeavors, North American churches, and saints from the Catholic tradition.

4 Credits

432-W05
Black Religious Experience
 
MWF 10:55 am - 12:00 pm
B. Heidgerken
FAPXJPMRMUMRCore 
09/07 - 12/21
6/4/0
Lecture
CRN 43891
4 Cr.
Size: 6
Enrolled: 4
Waitlisted: 0
09/07 - 12/21
M T W Th F Sa Su

10:55 am
12:00 pm
MCH 232

 

10:55 am
12:00 pm
MCH 232

 

10:55 am
12:00 pm
MCH 232

   

Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)

CRN: 43891

In Person | Lecture

St Paul: McNeely Hall 232

Old Core Requirements Met:
     UG Core Faith/Catholic Trad
     UG Core Human Diversity

Other Requirements Met:
     Faith and Praxis Minor or Cert
     Justice and Peace Approved
     Music in Faith Minor Approved
     Writing Intensive

  Ben Heidgerken

This course introduces students to central aspects of Christian history, thought, and action concerning ethnicity and race and provides resources to build up what Martin Luther King, Jr., called the “Beloved Community.” The course helps students develop ethical reasoning skills through consideration of various historical and contemporary Christian encounters across lines of racial difference, including examples from monastic communities, papal documents, missionary endeavors, North American churches, and saints from the Catholic tradition.

4 Credits


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