2015-2016 GTU Course Schedule - WebAdvisor
Transcription
2015-2016 GTU Course Schedule - WebAdvisor
Course Schedule 2015-2016 2400 Ridge Road Berkeley, California 94709 (510) 649-2400 Summer 2015 Fall 2015 Intersession 2016 Spring 2016 GRADUATE THEOLOGICAL UNION & PARTICIPATING SCHOOLS COURSE SCHEDULE 2015-2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS Summer Information 3 Summer Courses by Field 4 Fall Information 10 Fall Courses by Field Art & Religion (RA) Biblical Studies & Biblical Languages (BS) Old Testament Studies (OT) New Testament Studies (NT) Christian Spirituality (SP) Cultural & Historical Studies of Religions (HR) Ethics & Social Theory [Includes Christian Ethics] (CE) Religion & Society (RS) Field Education (FE) Functional Theology (FT) History (HS) Homiletics (HM) Interdisciplinary Studies (IDS) Liturgical Studies (LS) Philosophy & Philosophy of Religion (PH) Systematic Theology (ST) Religion & Psychology (PS) Theology & Education (ED) Special Courses 11 11 12 14 15 16 18 22 23 25 27 29 31 32 33 34 36 40 42 42 (DM/DR/MA/MDV/MTS/NOV/STD/SRC/UCB/CSR/GTUC) 1 GRADUATE THEOLOGICAL UNION & PARTICIPATING SCHOOLS COURSE SCHEDULE 2015-2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS Intersession Information 45 Intersession Courses by Field 46 Spring Information 49 Spring Courses by Field Art & Religion (RA) Biblical Studies & Biblical Languages (BS) Old Testament Studies (OT) New Testament Studies (NT) Christian Spirituality (SP) Cultural & Historical Studies of Religions (HR) Ethics & Social Theory [Includes Christian Ethics] (CE) Religion & Society (RS) Field Education (FE) Functional Theology (FT) History (HS) Homiletics (HM) Interdisciplinary Studies (IDS) Liturgical Studies (LS) Philosophy & Philosophy of Religion (PH) Systematic Theology (ST) Religion & Psychology (PS) Theology & Education (ED) Special Courses (DM/DR/MA/MDV/MTS/STD/SRC/UCB/CSR/GTUC/STL/WU) 50 50 51 53 53 55 57 60 61 62 65 67 69 69 69 70 71 75 76 76 2 SUMMER SESSION 2015 6/1/15–8/28/15 NOTE: Registration for Summer Session is now available on WebAdvisor. For instructions, please refer to the standard registration instructions. SUMMER 2015 REGISTRATION DATES EARLY REGISTRATION: N/A GENERAL REGISTRATION: Opens 4/11/15 (STUDENTS MAY REGISTER UP TO THE FIRST DAY OF CLASS) LATE REGISTRATION: N/A PLEASE NOTE: • Register for Summer session through WebAdvisor. • If you are using a PDF copy of the course schedule, check the online Searchable Course Schedule for any final course changes prior to registering (e.g., change of time, day, place, or description), as well as new courses, and cancelled courses. • Those using Early Registration should verify their schedules using WebAdvisor in the week before classes begin to ensure that course information hasn’t changed since registering. • Check with your school for policies concerning Summer registration. • You may register up to the first day of the course, but because courses with limited enrollment may fill up during the early registration period, it is to your advantage to register by April 18, 2015. • Courses for which insufficient interest is shown during the Early Registration period may be cancelled. TO AVOID PROBLEMS: • Read the instructions & schedule information carefully. • Courses of varying length are offered from June 1, 2015, through August 28, 2015; please note start and end dates carefully in the description of the course. • Check the online Schedule for all final details. • If the course has a restriction, contact the Instructor for a PIN code. • If taking a Special Reading Course (SRC) be sure to turn in the SRC form to your registrar as well as completing the web-based part of the registration process. In the following listing of courses, course descriptions may continue from the bottom of one column to the top of the next column or from the bottom of one page to the top of the next page. 3 SUMMER 2015 ART & RELIGION BSHS2005-01 LOST GODDESS Grist (PSR) 1.5 units MTWThF 1:30 PM-5:30 PM MUDD:103 LOST GODDESS: THE LIFE AND DEATH OF THE DIVINE FEMININE IN THE BIBLICAL WORLD One of the most vexing problems of the monotheisms of the Western world is their emphasis on an aggressively masculine characterization of the Deity. While most of us nominally accept the Deity as genderless, we are still subject to the millennia-old stereotype: whether God the Judge, God the Warrior, or God in most any other guise, so many of us still consciously or subliminally call the Deity "He". In the early Biblical world, the situation was both more vague and more nuanced. Scanning through the religious lives of Egyptians, Mesopotamians, Hittites, Canaanites and even Israelites, there were a generous number of goddesses. Who were they and what can we learn about them? What were their shared and distinct traits? How did the divine feminine manifest itself in Biblical Israel from its origins to the destruction of Solomon's Temple? And finally: what was the fate of the divine feminine and what were the consequences for Western monotheism? Our course will explore all these questions, integrating both Near Eastern texts and archaeology to search for answers. In a collaborative environment, students will analyze the data to create their own understanding of the character of the divine feminine in Near Eastern/Biblical cultures and the process that led to its disappearance. Course meets daily, 7/27/157/31/15, from 1:30pm-5:30pm, at MUDD 103. NOTE: For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. RARS2001-01 QUEERING CHRIST IN IMAGE/TEXT Tanis/Johnson (PSR) 1.5 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-1:00 PM MUDD:102 QUEERING CHRIST IN IMAGE AND TEXT "Who do you say that I am?" Matthew's Jesus asked that question of his disciples (Mt 16:15). Many different answers in multiple theological approaches have emerged over the centuries since then. The question itself both expands and deepens when accompanied by visual responses which depict the particularities of Christ's body, including gender, color, sexuality, culture and more. Artists and authors can expand our sense of connection with Christ and engage critical social and theological issues. This course combines a variety of modern images and texts in an exploration of how "queer" Christ appears outside "standard" representations and how this queerness can inspire and inform movements of liberating social change. Beyond white heterosexual maleness, who do you say Jesus is? Course meets daily, 7/27/157/31/15, from 9am-1pm at MUDD 102. NOTE: For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. BIBLICAL STUDIES & BIBLICAL LANGUAGES BS1042-01 LATIN I & II: INTENSIVE STUDY Carlson (JST) 6 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-12:00 PM JSTB:216 This six week course (May 25- July 10; no class June 15-19) at JST covers two semesters of Latin. The course offers an introduction to the grammar and syntax of Latin. The goal is to learn Classical and Medieval Latin well enough by the end of Semester II to read accurately, precisely, and without extensive help. Exercises and readings are drawn from original texts of Classical and Medieval authors. There is strong emphasis on etymology, vocabulary, and comparative grammar. The three paperback textbooks are Wheelock's Latin, 7th edition (2011); Workbook for Wheelock's Latin by Paul Comeau and Richard LaFleur (2000); and Thirty-Eight Latin Stories Designed to Accompany Wheelock's Latin by Anne Groton and James May (2004). Grades for each semester are made up of four components: class participation including regular quizzes, written exercises, tests every four chapters (of 40 chapters overall), and a cumulative exam at the end of the semester. The class meets 9:00- 12:00 Monday through Friday. The course fulfills the Latin requirement for the JST or Boston College School of Theology & Ministry S.T.L.degree. Professor Greg Carlson is happy to answer questions about the course. [15 max enrollment; PIN code required] Class meets weekdays, 5/25/15-7/10/15, from 9:00am-12:00pm at JST. BSHS8205-01 LOST GODDESS Grist (PSR) 1.5 units MTWThF 1:30 PM-5:30 PM PSR:ONLINE LOST GODDESS: THE LIFE AND DEATH OF THE DIVINE FEMININE IN THE BIBLICAL WORLD One of the most vexing problems of the monotheisms of the Western world is their emphasis on an aggressively masculine characterization of the Deity. While most of us nominally accept the Deity as genderless, we are still subject to the millennia-old stereotype: whether God the Judge, God the Warrior, or God in most any other guise, so many of us still consciously or subliminally call the Deity "He". In the early Biblical world, the situation was both more vague and more nuanced. Scanning through the religious lives of Egyptians, Mesopotamians, Hittites, Canaanites and even Israelites, there were a generous number of goddesses. Who were they and what can we learn about them? What were their shared and distinct traits? How did the divine feminine manifest itself in Biblical Israel from its origins to the destruction of Solomon's Temple? And finally: what was the fate of the divine feminine and what were the consequences for Western monotheism? Our course will explore all these questions, integrating both Near Eastern texts and archaeology to search for answers. In 4 SUMMER 2015 a collaborative environment, students will analyze the data to create their own understanding of the character of the divine feminine in Near Eastern/Biblical cultures and the process that led to its disappearance. Course meets daily, 7/27/157/31/15, from 1:30pm-5:30pm, at MUDD 103. NOTE: This course is the ONLINE version of BSHS-2005, Lost Goddess. Only students taking the course as an online course should register using this course number; all others should register for BSHS-2005. This course meets at posted course meeting times using Adobe Connect, and you must be available in your corresponding time zone to participate in class. A telephone, webcam, high speed internet connection, and the latest version of Flash are required. For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. atheists/ agnostics) dialogue and understanding. Explorations of mind will include concepts and practices of consciousness, awareness, mindfulness, and presence. Focus is given to the students' integration of meditation concepts and practice into their religious understanding and spiritual formation. Attention given to the value of meditation in developing a peaceful diverse world and enhancement of deep nonviolence toward all of life on earth. Class meets daily, 7/20/157/24/15, from 1:30pm-5:30pm, in MUDD 100. NOTE: For registration, see www.psr.edu/summer. SPRS2008-01 THURMAN SPIRITUAL DISCIPLINES Rankow (SKSM) 1.5 units MTWThF 1:30 PM-5:30 PM MUDD:103 HOWARD THURMAN: DISCIPLINES OF THE SPIRIT Howard Thurman was a 20th century religious leader and thinker whose prophetic vision and quiet mentorship were instrumental to Martin Luther King Jr. and many others in the struggle for freedom and justice. Thurman's text, Disciplines of the Spirit, explores subjects central to spiritual growth and maturity: commitment, suffering, prayer, reconciliation. Through readings, discussion, audio and video resources we will examine the relevance and practical applications of the ideas presented for each participant's life, work, and deepening spiritual journey. Course meets daily, 7/13/157/17/15, from 1:30pm-5:30pm, at MUDD 103. NOTE: For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. NEW TESTAMENT STUDIES NTRS2360-01 MYTHS, GOSPEL, AND HUMAN LIVES Liew (PSR) 3 units MTWThF 1:30 PM-5:30 PM MUDD:102 This intermediate-level course will attempt to evaluate the category of ^myth^ as a lens to read and think about the stories related to the gospel or ^good news^ about Jesus, and how those stories relate to human lives. The majority of the course will seek to acquaint students with both the theories and specifics of myths. We will look at the work of myth critics (Frazer, Eliade, Levi-Strauss, Burke, Ricoeur), several ancient Near Eastern myths and a couple from other cultures and geographical areas, Rudolf Bultmann's demythologizing project, as well as Paul Tillich's understanding of ^broken myths.^ Then we will turn to look at the effects--both sociopolitical and individual--of myths. Issues concerning the relationship of myth to ritual, of myth to history, and of myth to faith and life will also be raised. Class meets weekdays, 7/20/15-7/31/15, from 1:30pm-5:30pm, at MUDD 102. NOTE: For registration, see www.psr.edu/summer. ETHICS & SOCIAL THEORY CE8147-01 INTRO TO CHRISTIAN ETHICS Miller/Motupali (PSR) 3 units PSR:ONLINE INTRODUCTION TO CHRISTIAN ETHICS: MORAL DECISIONMARKING IN A POSTMODERN WORLD Leading churches, social advocacy groups, and nonprofit organizations through processes of moral discernment and decision-making has never been quite so challenging. Over the past half-century churches have been pushed from their once privileged place at the very center of social and public life to the very margins. In addition, ongoing church scandals and what some view as unwarranted intrusions into the political arena have further eroded the moral authority traditionally accorded to churches, clergy, and other religiously identified leaders and fostered a profound skepticism and even hostility towards organized religion. This entry level course takes seriously the challenges and opportunities for doing Christian Ethics in a Postmodern context. Rather than an ^issues^ or ^rules^ -based approach, the class will focus on the key concepts, tools, and skills that students will need to clarify their own beliefs and perspectives, understand the ^art^ of moral reflection and CHRISTIAN SPIRITUALITY SP1145-01 MEDITATION:THEORY & PRACTICE Azevedo (PSR) 1.5 units MTWThF 1:30 PM-5:30 PM MUDD:100 MEDITATION: THEORY AND PRACTICE Meditation has long been used to deepen religious and spiritual experience, and to quiet the mind for clarity and inner knowledge. This course is a practicum, an experiential exploration of the various forms and techniques of meditation and traditions. Buddhist, Taoist, Hindu, Jewish, Christian, Islamic, and non-religious viewpoints are included to broaden our practice, and acting as openings to interfaith (including 5 SUMMER 2015 discernment, and provide ethical leadership and guidance to others. This is a required course for MDiv students. [20 max enrollment] This ONLINE course meets asynchronously using Moodle from 6/15/15-8/7/15. It has no required meeting times. High-speed internet connection required. See http://moodle.gtu.edu/mod/resource/view.php?id=227 17 for full technology requirements. RSFT4017-01 ECO CORE INTENSIVE Lettini (SKSM) 3 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-5:00 PM SKSM Educating to ^Create Just and Sustainable Communities that Counter Oppressions^ (^ECO^) is a core goal of Starr King's M.Div. and M.A.S.C. degree programs. In this required core intensive, M.Div. and M.A.S.C. students' work together to form a framework for counter-oppressive spiritual leadership. We will ask: how can spirituality, ministry, and religious activism respond to the multiple and intersecting realities of injustice, suffering, and oppression in our lives and our world? What models of justice and sustainable community invite our commitment? Drawing on Unitarian Universalist and multireligious sources, we will explore how in the midst of a world marked by tragedy, sorrow and injustice there remain abiding resources of beauty and grace that nourish resistance, offer healing and call us to accountability and community building. Reading and writing assignments to be completed before the course. The list of pre-course assignments will be distributed to students when admitted to the class. This course will include discussion on Moodle before and after the residential week in Berkeley. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] Class meets daily, 8/17/15-8/21/15, from 9:00am-5:00pm at SKSM Fireside. RELIGION & SOCIETY RS2007-01 FAITH ROOTED ORGANIZING Salvatierra (PSR) 1.5 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-1:00 PM MUDD:102 This course will give students an understanding of the emerging discipline and practices of faith-rooted community organizing, in the context of the overall field of congregational/community organizing. Students will learn the core goals and strategies of congregational/community organizing and examine the way that secular or faithful assumptions about the nature of reality impact the theory and practice of organizing. Students will leave the course with a vision for how to incorporate relevant principles of faithrooted organizing in their ministries and/or collaborative initiatives for systemic social change. Course meets daily 7/6/15-7/10/15, from 9am-1pm, at MUDD 102. NOTE: For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. FUNCTIONAL THEOLOGY FTED2100-01 UU MINISTERIAL LEADERSHIP McNatt (SKSM) 3 units MTWThF 10:00 AM-6:00 PM SKSM This intensive course focuses on the theological foundations and habits of mind necessary to be a self-defined leader among Unitarian Universalists, either in congregations or in other UU settings. Students will have the opportunity to test their current skills in a series of real-world challenges likely to be faced in parish or community settings. The goal is to allow student the chance to confront possible issues while the stakes are low. Role playing, small group work and reflection papers will be required. Prerequisite readings will be announced. [PIN code required; 14 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] Course meets daily, 8/24/15-8/28/15, from 10:00am-6:00pm at SKSM Fireside. RS2008-01 FAITH IN LOCKDOWN AMERICA Taylor (PSR) 1.5 units MTWThF 1:30 PM-5:30 PM MUDD:102 RETHINKING FAITH IN LOCKDOWN AMERICA Racialized police violence, mass incarceration, the death penalty and tightening surveillance networks today service an ever more corporatized USA - this being an assemblage of structures often referred to as "Lockdown America." This assemblage is a renewed manifestation of US imperial and European colonial histories, constituted also by forces of white racism, gender and sexual repression. "Lockdown America" is not just a challenge for Christians today, it demands re-thinking and re-creating what Christianity is. This course offers resources for precisely this task of critical reflection and reconstruction. The instructor will share his own critical assessments and theological proposals and welcomes extensive dialogue with class members on rethinking Christian faith, toward the end of forming radical social movements to produce institutions that guard freedom for the majority, especially those locked down in poverty or "near poverty." Course meets daily, 7/13/15-7/1715, from 1:30pm-5:30pm, at MUDD 102. NOTE: For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. HISTORY HS4557-01 HSTRY OF XTNTY IN PACIFIC REGN Muasau/Walker (PSR) 3 units MTWThF 2:00 PM-6:00 PM PSR:OFFSITE HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY IN THE PACIFIC REGION Anyone doing ministry in the Pacific Northwest, 6 SUMMER 2015 California, or Hawaii will have noticed that the usual historical narratives that have helped mainline, ecumenical, and progressive Christians define their identity do not seem as relevant in the Pacific world where so many do not share the cultural and historical experience from which they derive. In this class we will take a different look at the history of Christianity in the Pacific world and work with students to build historical narratives that will inspire and undergird the work of strengthening and re-shaping Christian communities for the future. This course is to be held in Oahu, Hawaii, specific location TBD. Lodging provided for an additional fee; transportation on your own. Contact [email protected] for details. NOTE: For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. liberation in sacred text and the lived experience we learn the language of liberation and can therefore preach it with authenticity and transformative power. Class meets daily, 7/20/15 -7/24/15, from 9:00am-1:00pm, in MUDD 103. INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES IDS4205-01 SKSM SYMPOSIUM Farajaje (SKSM) 1.5 units WTh 9:00 AM-5:00 PM SKSM:OFFSITE SKSM 4TH ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM 2015 . This urban retreat is an annual gathering of our entire student body, faculty, staff and trustees for two days of learning, ritual, celebration, food, music, community-building and service. . This 2015 Symposium is convened by Provost, Dr. Ibrahim Abdurrahman Farajajé in collaboration with other SKSM faculty and community leaders. Starr King students are requested to enroll. . Graduates are warmly invited to participate. . Several public events in connection with the Symposium are open to all. . This course is required for all SKSM students. 1.5 units of credit will be given to students who are currently enrolled in a degree program. . Students please note: This is a two (2) step process (1) Complete the registration form on the SKSM Symposium website (www.sksmsymposium.org) for event needs; and (2) Enroll for the Symposium as a course through this SKSM website to ensure course credit. See How to Register for a Starr King Course. . In order to obtain credit, students must read all required readings before Symposium, SIGN the attendance roster for each event, and be active in large and small group discussions. Students please go to the SKSM Symposium website (www.sksmsymposium.org) under Symposium Leaders tab and select "Recommended Reading" section on that website to see what reading is required before Symposium. . In addition, students are asked to work at least ONE work shift before or during Symposium. Making certain that you are signed in is the student's responsibility. . Everyone is required to complete the Registration Form on the SKSM Symposium (www.sksmsymposium.org) website, so we can prepare for your presence and address any special needs. . For further information, please contact Dee Ward, Coordinator of Academic Programs ([email protected]). Course meets 9/2/15 & 9/2/15, from 9am-5pm, at First Unitarian Church of Oakland. [200 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] HOMILETICS HM2244-01 PREACHING:THEOLOGY & PRAXIS Turner (PSR) 3 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-1:00 PM MUDD:103/ONLINE SUMMER 2015 What is preaching and how is it like and different from other forms of public speaking? What does it mean to "bring a word" in your own preaching or speaking context? Exegetical strategies, sermon forms, the person of the preacher, and issues related to authority and the ethics of preaching will be discussed. Students will respond in writing to reading assignments and will preach at least twice in class. Sermons will be recorded and evaluated by professor and peers. PREQUISITE: At least one semester of biblical studies - either Hebrew Bible or New Testament. This is the required preaching course for PSR's MDiv students. This three week class will meet 7/13/15-7/17/15 and 7/27/157/31/15, from 9am-1pm, at MUDD 103. During the week of 7/20/15-7/24/15, this course meets ONLINE asynchronously using Moodle and has no required meeting times. High-speed internet connection required. [20 max enrollment] NOTE: For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. Intended audience: MDiv. HM2731-01 PREACHING LIBERATION Allen (PSR) 1.5 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-1:00 PM MUDD:103 Preaching Liberation will explore the theory and hermeneutics that informs liberation theology with particular interest towards preaching. The course is designed to develop a process for preaching with emphasis on liberation theology for the novice or seasoned preacher. Students will have an opportunity to preach in class. The methodology for sermon construction will include 'listening' or perceiving liberation in diverse cultural context through a critical examination of four movies, ^In Time^, ^La Mission^, ^Rain^ and ^The Encounter^. The premise of the course is that as we listen for IDS8100-01 ART OF ACADEMIC WRITING Fetherolf (PSR) 1.5 units PSR:ONLINE THE ART AND TECHNIQUE OF EFFECTIVE ACADEMIC WRITING This writing course is designed to orient students to the primary types of academic writing they will be asked to do during their years at PSR and the Graduate 7 SUMMER 2015 Theological Union (GTU), including reflection papers, research papers, critical essays and exegetical papers. The course is intended to help students learn or ^dust off^ the writing skills they will need to succeed academically while in seminary. Through online lectures and discussions, extensive exercises, and brief homework assignments, participants will learn the art and technique of composing critical writing in a U.S. academic setting. Among other topics, this course will cover: developing a topic; identifying reliable resources; reading and note-taking; constructing a thesis; writing and revising the outline, body, introduction and conclusion of a paper; formatting footnotes and bibliography; and preparing an audience-oriented summary of a paper. Participants will also learn how to identify and use the online resources of the GTU library. Finally, the course will introduce PSR's Plagiarism Policy and will offer students strategies for avoiding plagiarism. This ONLINE course meets asynchronously using Moodle, 7/6/15-7/31/15 (Summer 2015) or 1/4/16- 1/29/16 (Intersession 2016). It has no required meeting times. High-speed internet connection required. Occasional synchronous class meetings may be scheduled; see syllabus for details. [12 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] See http://moodle.gtu.edu/mod/resource/view.php?id=227 17 for full technology requirements. offer creative work at an open forum that the class will offer to the community and make them available online. Course meets daily, 7/6/15-7/10/15 from 1:30pm-5:30pm, at PSR Chapel and MUDD 100. NOTE: For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. RELIGION & PSYCHOLOGY PS3014-01 HISTORICAL/COLLECTIVE TRAUMA Joh (PSR) 1.5 units MTWThF 1:30 PM-5:30 PM MUDD:206 HISTORICAL & COLLECTIVE TRAUMA: AFFECT, GRIEF & LOSS Affect, most simply put, is the experience of feeling or emotion. This course will examine the affective landscape and afterlife of collective trauma. The emergence of Trauma Studies, while not new, actually saw its proliferation after September 11, 2001 particularly in the U.S. We will conduct a preliminary examination on the study of affect and 'affective remainder' such as grief, loss, mourning and melancholia that while not presuming any kind of full 'recovery' from collective and historical trauma, might open ways for transformation. We will attempt to answer the question of 'what are affects?' and 'what might be political, social, cultural and religious work of affects?' Course meets daily, 7/13/15-7/17/15, from 1:30pm-5:30pm, at MUDD 206. NOTE: For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. LITURGICAL STUDIES LS4002-01 WOMNST/MUJERSTA/FMNST LITURGY Jones/Thorson-Smith/Brock (PSR) 1.5 units MTWThF 1:30 PM-5:30 PM PSR:CHPL/MUDD:100 WOMANIST/MUJERISTA/FEMINIST LITURGIES FOR TRANSFORMING CHURCHES It's time for women to create more new art, music, and liturgies that will transform our churches! Effective worship is crucial to social transformation, and participants will use their experiences of multiple cultural forms, their particular talents, and the ideas of womanist/mujerista/feminist thinkers and researchers to create new liturgical resources for church life. These resources will reflect the liberative work of diverse women and men, with attention to different generations--including music, prayers, poems, visual arts, litanies, and sermon ideas, as well as being informed by the history, context, and theologies of diverse early Christian spiritual practices based in lifeaffirming, this-worldly, communitarian ideas. With opportunities to work individually and in groups, the seminar will create liturgical resources that offer transformation of Christian worship beyond traditional forms. Special attention will be given to how differences in race, age, class, sexuality, ethnicity, abilities, and gender inform theology and biblical interpretation and inspire creativity -- particularly in the spheres of new art forms and rituals. In creating resources for worship, the seminar will focus on the lectionary texts for Lent 2016. Participants will be able to discuss insights and SPECIAL COURSES DMPS6055-01 FAMILY THERAPY Sullender (SFTS) 3 units 8:30 AM-12:30 PM SFTS COUPLES & FAMILY COUNSELING This class is a comprehensive review of the basic concepts, methods and opportunities for ministry with and for couples and families. We will look at the underlying assumptions-theological and psychological-for relationship counseling. We will review some of the assessment and ways of diagnosing dysfunctional relationships. We will review the methods and approaches to couples work, using clinical illustrations and examples wherever possible. We will also use the family systems perspective as a lens through which we can understand congregational dynamics and tensions. This doctoral seminar requires regular student attendance and full participation. While a D Min class, this course is open to M.A. and MDiv. students with special permission/interview with instructor. [PIN code required; 10 max enrollment] 8 SUMMER 2015 DMPS6060-01 ADDICTIONS Sullender (SFTS) 3 units 8:30 AM-12:30 PM SFTS ADDICTIONS AND SPIRITUALITY: This course addresses current understandings of the description, etiology and treatment of addictive disorders including, but not limited to, addictions to legal and illegal substances such as alcohol and drugs, as well as addictions to various activities, commonly called "behavioral addictions." Is there such a thing as an addictive personality? What are the cultural forces that give rise to such addictions? What is the spiritual dimension of addiction diseases and how can pastoral care givers use the resources of various spiritual practices, along with counseling methods, to help people overcome their addiction difficulties? [PIN code required; 10 max enrollment] MDV3015-0 PLTS IN COMPS/THESIS/PROJECT Faculty (PL) 0-6 units n/a n/a- n/a For MCM/MTS/MDiv degree students preparing for comprehensive examinations, writing a thesis, or completing a project. 0.0-6.0 units. 9 FALL 2015 SEMESTER 9/8/15 – 12/18/15 FALL 2015 REGISTRATION DATES EARLY REGISTRATION: April 13-24, 2015 GENERAL REGISTRATION: August 24-September 4, 2015 LATE REGISTRATION: September 5-18, 2015 PLEASE NOTE: • Registration through WebAdvisor is available only during the dates listed above • Access to web registration is not available between the dates for Early and General Registration • After the deadline for Late Registration, all registrations or changes in enrollment must be made using paper forms submitted to the registrar of your school UCB CROSS REGISTRATION FALL 2015 INFORMATION UCB CROSS REGISTRATION FORMS ARE DUE SEPTEMBER 11, 2015 Friday, September 11, at Noon, is the deadline for filing the Cross Registration form in the GTU Consortial Registrar’s Office. There will be no exceptions to this deadline. INSTRUCTION AT UCB BEGINS ON AUGUST 26, 2015 In the following listing of courses, course descriptions may continue from the bottom of one column to the top of the next column or from the bottom of one page to the top of the next page. 10 FALL 2015 3 units F 11:10 AM-2:00 PM MUDD:102 The class will be taught in a workshop format. Following study and discussion of selected dramatic pieces focusing on plot, characterization, and dialogue, students will formulate and submit their own theater projects (either individual or group efforts) directed toward specific goals of social transformation. Projects will focus on theater's ability to vividly portray negative circumstances in society involving violations of commonly accepted conditions of justice. Examples include prejudice or intolerance based on social standing, race, gender preference, or religion. Students will demonstrate how their projects embody human goals and needs. Students will present their projects in various venues, approved by the instructor. ART & RELIGION RA1002-01 THE MANY FACES OF DANCE De Sola Eaton (PSR/CARE)/McCauley (GTU/CARE) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:100 This course prepares students through careful study of the performing arts, particularly dance, toward an in-depth understanding of how art and religion interact, have a transforming effect on our lives, and give evidence of our desire to connect to the divine. Students will view video taped performances and attend a series of live performances and/or symposia chosen for themes that directly or indirectly address the sacred. The course is divided into field trips, lecture, reflection and experiential sessions (including movement warm-up and elements of composition) to better understand the process of creation. Students may choose to submit a paper or create and present an original five-minute performance piece as their final project. RALS1692-01 PLTS CHOIR Faculty (PLTS) 0-1 unit PLTS:GRHL Participants will attend rehearsals and sing in the choir for PLTS chapel on Wednesdays. A variety of musical styles will be represented in each semester's selections. Participants will be given the opportunity to select music appropriate to the day's worship, and to direct the choir on that day if they choose. This course emphasizes the importance of music and singing in Lutheran worship and offers opportunities to be a liaison to the PLTS worship preparation group. Credit/No Credit only. Choir will have an initial meeting on Wednesday, September 9 at 9:30 in the chapel. Subsequent meeting time and day will be determined at the first meeting. RAHS1200-01 IMAGING THE DIVINE Schroeder (CARE) 3 units T 8:10 AM-11:00 AM MUDD:102 In this lecture course we will study how people of various faith traditions represented the divine. The students will write short papers and will take in class exams. {Auditors with faculty permission] RALS1220-01 COMPOSING SACRED SPACES Barush (GTU/JST) 3 units F 12:40 PM-3:30 PM JSTB:217 ^Art soothes pain! Art wakes up sleepers! Art fights against war & stupidity! ART SINGS HALLELUJA!^ - Peter Schumann, Glover, VT 1984 Art within the context of a Christian worship space has the potential to be transformative and healing, inspirational and meditative, educational and democratizing. It can be a powerful way to bring us closer to God. The goal of this part-workshop, part-art history course is to prepare and empower students to make aesthetic decisions for their churches and worship spaces by providing historical background and practical tools for locating and commissioning ecclesiastical artists. We will consider the iconographic content, use, and reception of chapel and shrine decorations, religious statues, icons, Stations of the Cross, textiles such as altar cloths and banners, and windows. Seminar format with in-class discussion and weekly reading assignments. Students will be evaluated through a project detailing their own ^mock-up^ design of a worship space (70% of final grade), class participation (10% of final grade), and an oral presentation on a historical issue relating to liturgical art and/or the spiritual role of matter (20% of final grade). Intended audience: MDiv, ThD, MTS, STD. RA1700-01 CHORALE Haynes (PSR) 1.5 units M 6:40 PM-9:30 PM, T 10:10 AM-12:00 PM PSR:CHPL Students explore the role of music in worship and in the life of faith through rehearsing music from a variety of cultures and stylistic periods and singing in worship services. The course emphasizes vocal development, theological reflection, building community through music, and music as a spiritual practice. Meets Mondays 6:40-9:32pm and Tuesdays 10:10am -12:00pm in the PSR Chapel. PSR community members encouraged to join. Open to the general public without registration. RA1765-01 HANDEL'S MESSIAH IN CONTEXT Dotson (GTU/CARE) 3 units M 7:10 PM-9:40 PM MUDD:102 Using Handel's "Messiah" as a foundation for considering other works, this course focuses on the history of the oratorio and works from other choral genres. Through active guided listening of selected works, students will also become familiar with the different style traits and practices from the Baroque, Classical, and Romantic eras, and the historical use of these RARS1500-01 THEATER AND SOCIAL CHANGE Cronin (GTU/CARE) 11 FALL 2015 works in liturgy or as concert pieces. The class will conclude with attendance at a local performance of Handel's "Messiah." participate in class, and to present and write a paper on a topic of their choosing. [Auditors with faculty permission] RA1814-01 SACRED ARTS: MANDALA Sjoholm (PAOI) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM JSTB:217 The mandala is an ancient sacred symbol that interweaves spiritual, psychological, and physical aspects of personal and cultural beliefs. In many traditions, the mandala diagrams the origins of creation and is an organizing force through which spiritual energy is accessed. In contemporary times, the psychologist Carl Jung explored this potent form as the central energy from which an individual's grown and movement toward wholeness originate. This course focuses on a personal exploration of the mandala through a variety of experiential exercises. Coursework includes meditative practices such as mindfulness and centering prayer, and a variety of creative practices including collage, mixed media, the use of two- and three-dimensional materials, and poetry. A modest materials fee will be assessed for this course. RA4945-01 TOLKIEN & THE VISUAL ARTS Barush (GTU/JST) 3 units Th 12:40 PM-3:30 PM JSTB:217 This course will map the relationships between religion, literature, and the visual arts through the lens of J.R.R. Tolkien's epic trilogy, The Lord of the Rings (1954). We will begin with a critical reading of Tolkien's texts, considering questions of intertextuality and influence, religion, mythography, cultural context, and belief. In conjunction with the readings, we will examine his little-known watercolor illustrations in the collection of the Bodleian Library, Oxford, and assess the compelling relationship between text and image. Using reception aesthetics as a critical approach, the second half of the course will investigate a wide variety of visual art that has evolved out of Tolkien's works, including Peter Jackson's blockbuster films. Major themes will include the legacy of 20th-century literature, the relationship between text and image, and the notion of the Catholic Imagination as conceived by Andrew Greeley, Wendy Wright, and others. Seminar format with film screenings and weekly reading assignments. Students will be evaluated through final research papers on an original topic of their choice (70% of final grade), class participation (10% of final grade), and an oral presentation (20% of final grade). RAHR2020-01 AMER POETRY & RLGS IMAGINATN De Leon (GTU) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:204 AMERICAN POETRY AND RELIGIOUS IMAGINATION This course will consider questions surrounding the relationship between the poetic imagination and the religious imagination in six American poets, of various religious perspectives--Marianne Moore, Wallace Stevens, Adrienne Rich, George Oppen, Fanney Howe, and Dana Gioia--writing during the twentieth- and twenty-first centuries. While the class will consider the biographical information surrounding the poets' relationships with Protestantism, Judaism, and Catholicism, the primary focus of the class will be on how these religious imaginations, whether actively practiced or culturally absorbed, influence, imbue, and interact with the poets' poetic imaginations. Grades will be determined by class participation (10% of final grade), a presentation essay with questions (15% of final grade), a short essay (15% of final grade), and a research paper (60% of final grade). Inteneded audience: MA/MTS, MDiv students. This course is taught by PhD student Nicole De Leon with a Newhall Award, under the supervision of Naomi Seidman. BIBLICAL STUDIES & BIBLICAL LANGUAGES BS1020-01 NT GREEK I: AN INTRODUCTION Fetherolf (GTU/PSR) 3 units TF 8:10 AM-9:30 AM PSR:6 This is the first half of a year long course introducing the basic grammar of biblical Greek. The course focuses on the basics of phonology (sounds), morphology (forms), and syntax (word order and function) for biblical Greek. The primary purpose of this course is to establish a foundational understanding of biblical Greek for students pursuing further study of the language. Issues of exegesis and interpretation will be discussed where appropriate, but the main focus of this course will be learning the grammar of biblical Greek. NOTE: This course is taught by PhD student Christina Fetherolf with a Newhall Award. RAHS4642-01 ICONOCLASMS Schroeder (CARE) 3 units Th 6:10 PM-9:00 PM MUDD:204 The main subject of this course will be the destruction of images and the theological justifications for it. We will begin in antiquity, will consider the theological underpinning of the Byzantine and Protestant iconoclasms, and will end with contemporary examples of purposeful obliteration of visual representations. The students will be expected to actively BS1036-01 ECCLESIASTICAL LATIN I Anderson (JST) 3 units TF 8:10 AM-9:30 AM JSTB:216 This first half of a year's course aimed at preparing students to read (with a dictionary) Latin from Vulgate to recent Vatican documents. No prerequisites except rediness to come to class 12 FALL 2015 and study two/three hors in preparation. Daily recitation,occasional quizzes, midterm and final. Text: J.F. Collins, ^A Primer of Ecclesiastical Latin^ (CUA Press). understanding of biblical Hebrew for students pursuing further study of the language. Issues of exegesis and interpretation will be discussed where appropriate, but the main focus of this course will be learning the grammar of biblical Hebrew. [20 max enrollment] NOTE: This course is taught by GTU PhD student Cesar Melgar with a Newhall Award. BSSP1066-01 BASICS: BIB STUDIES &SPIRTALTY Green (DSPT) 1.5 units n/a This module is the first of three 1.5 unit modules that may be taken individually or in sequence: BSSP 1066, BSSP 1067, and BSSP 1068. It covers the basic storyline as presented by the Bible. Please consult with the professor before registering. [PIN code required] BS2002-01 INTERMEDIATE HEBREW I Green (DSPT) 3 units MTh 8:10 AM-9:30 AM DSPT:18 Students in the course review study of morphology, syntax and vocabulary from Elementary Hebrew courses, and attend to the reading of biblical prose narrative. Attention given also to oral reading of the texts. Assessment by regular class participation and by two examinations. [PIN code required; Interview required; Auditors with faculty permission] BSSP1067-01 BASICS:BIB STUDIES/SPRTLTY B Green (DSPT) 1.5 units n/a This module covers the basic methods for reading biblical material at the academic and graduate level; it presumes familiarity with the biblical storyline. It is one of three 1.5 unit modules that may be taken individually or in sequence: BSSP 1066, BSSP 1067, AND BSSP 1068. Please consult the professor before registering. [PIN code required] BS2008-01 INTERMEDIATE GREEK I Racine (JST) 3 units TF 8:10 AM-9:30 AM MUDD:103 This course is designed to develop proficiency in reading and translating New Testament Greek. For that purpose, it includes a revision of some elements of morphology and grammar. It nevertheless mostly consists in translating and analyzing sections of Luke, Acts, letters from the Pauline corpus, one document from the Apostolic Fathers paying special attention to syntax. The course also introduces the student to the usage of the critical apparatus found in UBS4 and NA28. Prerequisite: Two semesters of Greek or equivalent. Quizzes/Midterm and Final. [One year of Greek; more detailed prerequisites are available from the instructor; 20 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] BSSP1068-01 BASICS:BIB STUDIES/SPRTLTY C Green (DSPT) 1.5 units n/a This module covers some hermeneutical considerations and also some of the early rabbinic and patristic interpretation of biblical texts, with emphasis on why and how interpreters make choices. You must have taken not only BSSP 1066 and 1067 but also other Bible coursework at the 2000-3000 level. It is one of three 1.5 unit modules that may be taken individually or in sequence: BSSP 1066, BSSP 1067, and BSSP 1068. Please consult with the professor before registering. [PIN code required] BSHR3700-01 HEBREW:POST-BIBLICAL RDINGS I Aranoff (CJS) 3 units W 9:40 AM-12:30 PM GTU:HDCO In this course we will examine selections from post-Biblical Hebrew writings. We will focus on the Hebrew exegetical works to emerge in the rabbinic and medieval periods. The primary goal of the class will be to comfortable reading postBiblical Hebrew texts that are viewed as central to the Jewish exegetical corpus. BS1120-01 BASIC HEBREW I Kramish (PSR) 3 units MTh 10:20 AM-11:50 AM SFTS An introduction to the basic phonology and morphology of biblical Hebrew. This course or the equivalent is a prerequisite for Basic Hebrew II, the intensive course given in January Intersession. This course is offered by SFTS. BS4430-01 DEAD SEA SCROLLS & SCRIPTURES Endres (JST) 3 units T 11:10 AM-2:00 PM JSTB:217 Survey of the Dead Sea Scrolls (DSS), their discovery, archaeology and publication. Contents will include: sectarian writings, pseudepigrapha, apocrypha and biblical texts found in the Qumran `library'. Special focus on Jewish interpretations of Scriptures and their significance for understanding Judaism of the Second Temple / New BS1127-01 ELEMENTARY BIBLICAL HEBREW I Melgar (GTU) 3 units MTh 9:40 AM-11:00 AM MUDD:206 This is the first half of a year long course introducing the basic grammar of biblical Hebrew. The course focuses on the basics of phonology (sounds), morphology (forms), and syntax (word order and function) for biblical Hebrew. The primary purpose of this course is to establish a foundational 13 FALL 2015 Testament eras. Lecture / seminar format; student presentations/ book review/ research paper; intended for Advanced Students (M.A., S.T.L., PhD, ThD, STD); texts read in English (special sessions for students who read Hebrew). [Courses in OT and NT; PIN code required; 15 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] OT2095-01 METHODS:PENTATEUCH & HISTORIES Hens-Piazza (JST) 3 units MTh 8:10 AM-9:30 AM JSTB:216 A socio-historical and literary survey of the Pentateuch and Histories with attention to the effects of culture upon both the composition and reception of these writings in faith communities. The course provides a foundation in critical methodologies and in the theory and practice of exegesis. In addition, we will wrestle with pastoral dimensions of our study--i.e. what is the relationship of these biblical criticisms to the kinds of interpretations made of the Bible in pastoral places outside the academy; what kinds of ethical, social, and ideological impact does the Bible and its interpretation have in our world? [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] BS6005-01 TEXTS AND METHODS Racine (JST) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:103 The graduate seminar is required of all doctoral students in Biblical Studies. It is designed for PhD and ThD students in their first or second year of study. The course focuses upon relevant hermeneutical theories for biblical interpretation and upon a range of interpretive approaches/methods for biblical texts. The course will focus on the Gospel according to Luke. It will be conducted as a seminar, with both student leadership and active participation expected. Grades will be determined on the basis of seminar participation, short written assignments, and a major research paper. [Doctoral students only; Auditors excluded] OTSP2503-01 PSALMS Endres (JST) 3 units MTh 11:10 AM-12:30 PM PSR:6 The Psalms have nourished the spiritual and theological life of the Christian and Jewish communities for centuries. Their vitality is manifest in liturgy/worship, in theological studies, in personal spirituality. This course will pursue such connections by studying psalms as part of the Old Testament and ways in which psalms impact the life of the early Christian writings in the New Testament. We will explore different "types" of psalms, moods of sadness and joy, hope and disappointment in them. Other literary questions, including their "ordering" in the Book of Psalms will contribute to our study. Course will explore spirituality of the Psalter by considering: relationship to individual and communal prayer, worship, music, and the Sunday lectionary, and history of Psalm reception in Jewish and Christian communities of faith. Course is designed primarily for ministry students ('praxis' course for J.S.T. M.Div. students). Lectures/discussions;midterm exams papers [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] OLD TESTAMENT STUDIES OT1070-01 INTRODUCTION TO THE OT Schellenberg (SFTS) 3 units TF 8:30 AM-10:00 AM SFTS This course offers a critical introduction to the Old Testament/Hebrew Bible. Students will learn about the ancient Near Eastern context of the OT/HB, the history of ancient Israel, the different parts and books within the OT/HB, the processes from oral original to canonical books, different streams of tradition (theologies) within the OT/HB, etc. Evaluation method: classroom participation, several short exams, three short papers. OT1115-01 CRITICAL INTRO TO HEBREW BIBLE Brody (PSR) 3 units F 9:40 AM-12:30 PM PSR:6 This course gives an overview of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, particularly the history, archaeology, societies, religions, and various cultural and political forces that shaped and influenced the preserved text. The geographic focus of the lectures will focus on the southern Levant (Holy Land) in its Near Eastern contexts, the temporal range will be approximately 2000-333 BCE. Themes will be stressed that echo PSR's core values, with special focus on leadership in its biblical forms, critical thinking, contexts (both ancient and modern), race/ethnicity, sexuality, and gender. This course is the in-class version of OT 8114 Critical Introduction to Hebrew Bible. Students wishing to take the online version of this class should register for OT 8114. OTRS4050-01 CHILDREN OF SARAH, HAGAR &MARY Hens-Piazza (JST) 3 units T 6:10 PM-9:00 PM JSTB:217 This course explores scriptural stories, histories, and interreligious issues concerning women across the three great traditions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. It considers common and distinctive topics that characterize these religious cultures and how they might be addressed in the context of dialogue among the women of these communities. Finally, it offers a two week immersion experience in Jerusalem, Israel during January 2016 whereby students visit the significant religious sites associated with their study. During this time they will participate in learning opportunities with Jewish, Moslem and Christian women living there. (A 14 FALL 2015 minimum number of students is required for the immersion component with a maximum of 12 students). Estimated Cost of Immersion Component $1800. Interview with the professor required for registration. Course satisfies either either a Biblical Studies or Interreligious Requirement for JST students. [Foundation course in OT and NT; PIN code required; 12 max enrollment; Interview required] rhetoric. There will be an emphasis on the continuity between the two biblical testaments. The basic critical tools of modern biblical study will be utilized. The format will be lecture and discussion, with prepared participation expected and occasional short written assignments anticipated. [PIN code required; Max enrollment 20; Auditors excluded] NT1016-01 CRITICAL INTRO TO NT Lin (PSR) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM PSR:6 This introductory course to the New Testament begins by familiarizing students with some basic issues of the text (manuscript transmission, translation, and canon) and the Greco-Roman and Judaic context of its writing. We will then focus on the diverse body of texts that form the NT itself, paying special attention to various methodologies of interpretation and the perspectives they represent. OT4123-01 THEOLOGIES IN THE OT Schellenberg (SFTS) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:206 TOPICS OF THEOLOGICAL DISCUSSIONS IN THE OLD TESTAMENT/HEBREW BIBLE This course is about topics (like presence of God; revelation; monotheism; creation; history; humanity; good and evil; sin and redemption; election; covenant; land; king and messiah; justice and peace) that are crucial in the OT/Hebrew Bible. The goal is not to reconstruct the (one) theology of the OT/Hebrew Bible but, rather, to become aware of the diversity of theologies (plural!) mirrored in it and the differences between these theologies in crucial questions. NT1074-01 READING NT TEXTS IN GREEK Pence (PLTS) 3 units T 12:40 PM-3:30 PM PLTS:GH1 Part two of a two semester course sequence designed to enable students to read the Greek New Testament. Some attention will also be given to the Septuagint. With the aid of Accordance Bible software, students learn Greek vocabulary and grammar inductively by reading each week one or more pericopes assigned by the Common Lectionary to the following Sunday. Non-PLTS students enrolled in the course may purchase the required software at a considerable discount through PLTS. Required for PLTS MDiv students who have not elected the Spanish alternative or have not otherwise fulfilled the language requirement. OT8114-01 CRITICAL INTRO: HEBREW BIBLE Brody (PSR) 3 units PSR:ONLINE This course gives an overview of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, particularly the history, archaeology, societies, religions, and various cultural and political forces that shaped and influenced the preserved text. The geographic focus of the lectures will focus on the southern Levant (Holy Land) in its Near Eastern contexts, the temporal range will be approximately 2000-333 BCE. Themes will be stressed that echo PSR's core values, with special focus on leadership in its biblical forms, critical thinking, contexts (both ancient and modern), race/ethnicity, sexuality, and gender. NOTE: This course is the ONLINE version of OT 1115 Critical Introduction to Hebrew Bible. Only students taking the course as an online course should register using this course number; all others should register for OT 1115. This course meets asynchronously using Moodle (http://gtu.edu/library/students/moodle-help). High-speed internet connection required. (Occasional synchronous class meetings maybe scheduled; see syllabus for details.) NT2523-01 PAUL'S LETTERS-CONTEXT & THLGY Racine (JST) 3 units MTh 12:40 PM-2:00 PM MUDD:103 Exegetical and theological study of Paul's letters as expressions of an early Christian contextual theology. Location of each letter in the whole Pauline corpus. Survey of theological themes with emphasis on their contemporary relevance. Lectures/assignments/presentation/research paper.[20 max enrollment] NT4577-01 INTERPRETING THE BODY Peters (PLTS)/Weissenrieder (SFTS) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM n/a This course will engage the following questions: How is the body, its gender and sexuality imagined? How is it related to purity code and law? Is the dichotomy between body and soul actually biblical, and what other ways of conceptualizing the human being can be found? What is meant when biblical texts speak about the inner and outer human being? How is this distinction related to the distinction of body and soul? NEW TESTAMENT STUDIES NT1003-01 INTRO TO NEW TESTAMENT Green (DSPT) 3 units MTh 2:10 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:18 This course will introduce the issues basic to the study of New Testament texts, reviewing the historical and social contexts, surveying the literature in terms of its referents and 15 FALL 2015 How is the body portrayed as affected by death and resurrection? The course will engage texts from New Testament, ancient medical and philosophical sources, as well as Jewish sources. The theological discussions will include materials from a variety of theological sources, philosophical discussion. This course is related to a conference in cooperation with the University of Heidelberg. Audience: M.Div., M.A., Ph.D., certificate students. We recommend introductory New Testament and Theology classes as helpful prerequisites 1.5-3 units T 5:40 PM-8:30 PM MUDD:102/103/104/204/205/206 This required course for first semester PSR MDiv (take for 1.5 credits) and CSSC (take for 3.0 credits) students initiates the professional leadership formation process by engaging students in experiential practices, small group interactions, and critical reflection. Selected spiritual practices from the Christian tradition will be explored in their social and historical contexts and examined critically for their role in contemporary leadership formation. This course is the in-class version of SPFT 8182 Spiritual Formation for Leadership. Students wishing to take the online version of this class should register for SPFT 8182. NT8113-01 HISTORICAL JESUS - THEN & NOW Czire (SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE This course provides a general introduction through the Quest of the Historical Jesus to the life and activity of the first century revolutionary prophet. Who was Jesus before he became an object of belief and worship? Why did his movement happen right there and then? What was the ^good news^ that turned the ancient world upside down? We will consider the best available canonical as well as non-canonical literary and other evidences, will examine assumptions underlying the discipline (politics of interpretation), discuss methodologies and the limits of the historical investigation and also consider and evaluate several fascinating scholarly reconstructions. We keep a heavy emphasis on the social sciences in this class, that helps us understand how Jesus himself was embedded in a specific history and culture, and how is he and his counter cultural message relevant today in a postcolonial setting? [PIN code required; 13 max enrollment] SP1500-01 ORIENTATION TO THEO EDUCATION Liebert (SFTS) 1.5 units M 2:00 PM-5:00 PM SFTS This course is based on the underlying presupposition that the quality of your whole person is your greatest gift and tool for ministry. During your theological study, you will be challenged, many of your preconceptions deconstructed and, ideally, reconstructed in ways more adequate to the challenges of ministry in the 21st century. This course does not seek to eliminate these challenges, but rather to assist you in using them to greatest profit in service to your call. To achieve this end, participants will be invited to form a peer cohort and together look at four disciplines (Biblical Studies, Theological Studies, History and Preaching) and the impact that these have on spirituality in general and their own spiritual lives in particular. Spiritual practices include the act of reading itself (which will occupy many hours in the upcoming semesters!), contemplative listening (to undergird your listening to others), Lectio Divina (ruminative reading of Scripture), spiritual autobiography (how God has been at work in your life), theological reflection (making theological sense of daily life), spiritual direction (connecting with a soul friend) and rule of life (how can I live in a balanced way in the midst of the stresses of seminary). Learning strategies include reading, discussion, brief Moodle postings, theological reflection (form given) and creation of a personal rule of life suitable for the remainder of the school year. Required of all entering SFTS MDiv students (MATS students are also warmly welcomed!) NT8450-01 GOSPEL OF MATTHEW IN CONTEXTS Park (SFTS) 3 units SFTS:ONLINE This is an on-line course on the Gospel of Matthew in its historical setting in the first century Mediterranean world. The class will introduce the current status of Matthean scholarship and discuss a major shift of perspectives among contemporary Matthean scholars regarding the author's relation with Judaism. Then important passages in Matthew will be interpreted through standard exegetical methods and major themes of Matthew's theology will also be discussed accordingly. Along with the historical critical method(s), which is the primary interpretive tool in this course, the class will explore some of the newer reading strategies that constitute part of the rubric of postmodern hermeneutics to see how the ancient text could come alive and shed light on contemporary issues. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] SP2077-01 DYNAMICS IN THE SPIR. EXER. Pham (JST) 3 units Th 7:10 PM-9:40 PM JSTB:216 This course offers in-depth studies of various spiritual dynamics found in the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius of Loyola. Such a dynamic will be examined both in each individual week of the Spiritual Exercises as well as the Exercises as a whole. The core reading materials will come from Ignatius' own writings, including the Autobiography, the Spiritual Diary, the Spiritual Exercises, the Constitutions of the Society of Jesus, and some of his personal correspondences, as well as the writings of Ignatius' CHRISTIAN SPIRITUALITY SPFT1082-01 SPIRITUAL FORMATION LEADERSHP Lee (PSR) 16 FALL 2015 companions. The course is organized as a seminar, and class participation is expected and highly valued. Built upon what have been presented in the course, students will have a chance to reflect and work on various spiritual dynamics that have been part of his/her life journey. The course is organized as a seminar. Thus, class participation is required. Student evaluation consists of 3 short reflection papers (1 - 3 pages) coming out from either assigned reading or group discussion and a final research project ( ~10 pages). [20 max enrollment; Auditors with Faculty permission] individual and corporate prayer that rely on thoughts, words, and images. During the time of Centering Prayer, our intention is simply to rest in God's presence and consent to God's action within. At other times, our attention and intention moves outward to discover and respond to God's presence in the world. Centering Prayer is a discipline to be learned and practiced regularly as an integral part of our spiritual life in the community of faith.During this semester, we will practice Centering Prayer in plenary and small groups, exploring the importance of silent listening to God for our daily lives and our ministry in the church. Reading and reflection papers complement the practice. [PIN code required; 24 max enrollment] FALL 2015: CONTEMPLATIVE LISTENING. The primary act of ministry is listening: to God, to oneself, to others. This class will introduce basic listening skills, but from a grounding in the contemplative tradition, rather than from psychology or communication theory. The semester will open with several weeks in which we investigate and practice contemplative prayer, understanding that contemplation invites us to a whole contemplative life-style. We will then learn a simple model for contemplative listening (one week) that we will practice for six subsequent weeks. Participants will take turns relating three meaningful experiences. We will also introduce other conversation skills (summaries, questions, and other probes), and conclude with pastoral applications and connections to other semesters of Spiritual Life and Leadership. Complements but does not replace the basic Pastoral Care and Counseling course. Limited to SFTS ministry students (MDiv, DMin and MATS students), particularly those electing the Spirituality Concentration. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] SPRING 2016: DISCERNMENT: SYSTEMS AND STRUCTURES. Social Discernment is a process of prayerful reflection and small group sharing that helps individuals (and, by extension, groups) to become more clear about how God is at work in systems and structures and might be calling them to respond. This process can lead to action on behalf of more just systems and to a clearer understanding of the relationship between one's spirituality and action on behalf of justice. Learning strategies include: reflection and weekly written response to a series of questions, small group sharing, reading, two brief reflection papers. Participants must commit themselves to the weekly class and to the whole discernment process in order to receive credit. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] SP2130-01 SALESIAN IDENTITY AND CHARISM Boenzi (DSPT) 3 units TF 8:10 AM-11:00 AM DSPT:ISS As a platform for understanding specific charism of St John Bosco and the various branches of the Salesian Family, students unpack the Christian concept of charism especially with reference to vocation and mission. The course begins with a survey of biblical concepts and follows theological developments. Emphasis shifts then to consecrated life. Methods for identifying the charism of the founder will be explored along with the question of expressing the spirit of the founder in new cultural realities. Format: Class meets only during the first half of the semester. Lecture/discussion. Evaluation: Group work, class presentation/paper. SP2492-01 EXPERIMENTS PRAYER & MEDITATN Murphy (JST) 3 units F 9:40 AM-12:30 PM JSTB:216 To explore ways of prayer and meditation within the western Christian tradition. Through these experiments in prayer one hopes to develop his or her relationship to God and one's sensitivity to the religious dimension of one's everyday life. The course aims to help people notice and articulate their religious experience as a ground and test of their theological reflection. Class participation, practices and journaling required. Combination audience with varying requirements [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; Interview required] SP2527-01 SPIRITUAL LIFE AND LEADERSHIP Yi (SFTS) 1 unit W 8:30 AM-10:10 AM SFTS SPRING 2015: CENTERING PRAYER Centering Prayer is a spiritual discipline designed to facilitate our ability to listen and respond to God's presence more fully in our lives. It develops an ancient prayer form of meditative prayer (as presented in The Cloud of Unknowing) in a contemporary idiom. Centering Prayer is an apophatic form of prayer that can help us to co-operate with God's gift of grace by moving beyond thoughts, words, images and feelings into the silence of our hearts. It is there, at the center of our being, that we learn to attend to the Spirit of God who dwells within. It is not meant to replace other kinds of prayer, and it in fact depends upon the regular practice of cataphatic forms of SP2811-01 SPIRITUALITY & SOCIAL CHANGE Anderson (GTU) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM GTU:HDCO SPIRITUALITY & SOCIAL CHANGE: EXPLORING THE INTERSECTION THROUGH INTERCULTURAL DIALOGUE AND ACTION This course offers an opportunity for a community of learners to explore meeting points between Christian spirituality and movements for social change. The proposed curriculum seeks to engage knowledge from the lived experiences of all class members 17 FALL 2015 and supports action for justice as the primary educational outcome. The class will be structured based on transformative pedagogical ideas developed by the Highlander Research and Education Center, and the learning community itself will attempt to model transformative social change through our learning activities. We will focus on learning about and learning from each other, and we will design the course cooperatively. Assignments and the format of class sessions will depend on the learning community's course plan. This course is taught by PhD student Beth Anderson with a Newhall Award, under the supervision of Elizabeth Liebert. [12 max enrollment] CULTURAL AND HISTORICAL STUDIES OF RELIGIONS HRST1100-01 INTRO TO HINDUISM Sherma (GTU) 3 units T 7:10 PM-9:40 PM JSTB:216 This course will introduce Hinduism, the world's third largest faith with about a billion adherents, and a five-thousand-year history in a way that is accessible to MA and MDiv students who are interested in a multi-disciplinary study of the Hindu world. The course will use a lecture & discussion format. Requirements include reflection papers on readings, one book review, and a seminar paper. We will explore the Hindu experience of the sacred through a theological lens with particular attention to principal doctrines, ethics, and elements of praxis. The theological significance of sacred art, ritual, symbol-systems, music, dance, and contemplative practice will be examined through audio-visual presentations and guest lectures. SPHS4920-01 TRANSLATORS/CONVERTS/MIGRANTS Seidman (CJS)/Najarro (GTU)/Wiser (GTU) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM n/a The circulation of texts, movements of people, and transformations of spirit are parallel and often simultaneous operations. The risks of such operations for individuals and communities are perhaps only visible when considered within the larger framework of asymmetrical power relations, governance, and labor. This course will trace the productive and dynamic tensions that emerge when considering the lives and textual productions of translators, converts, and migrants. We will begin by engaging the political and ethical dimensions of language in the negotiation of identity and transformation. Theory and practice, including one in-class translation workshop, will ground our investigations of Jewish-Christian difference as well as a historical trajectory that includes conflict and cohabitation (as well as anxiety, conquest, and conversion) in colonial, postcolonial, and decolonial contexts. This seminar is intended primarily for advanced MA/MTS students. Evaluation will be based on attendance, careful preparation for seminar discussion, and final research paper (15-20 pages). [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment] This course is co-taught by PhD students Mauricio Najarro & Marvin Wiser with a Newhall Award. HRHS1515-01 BUDDHIST TRADTNS OF SOUTH ASIA Faculty (GTU) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM IBS Introduces Buddhist traditions as they originated in India and developed in South and Southeast Asia. We will start by looking at the foundations of Buddhism and the formation of the early schools. Then we will turn to the arising of the Mahayana or Great Vehicle and Vajrayana or Diamond Vehicle. First half of the required yearlong introductory survey of the entire Buddhist tradition. Course format: Seminar/lecture. Evaluation method: Participation/term paper. HRPH1614-01 INTRO TO SHIN BUDDHIST THOUGHT Matsumoto (IBS) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM IBS Introduces the major ideas of Shin thought in the context of contemporary religious and philosophic discussions. Evaluation based on participation in discussion forums and final research paper. Intended for MA/MTS and MDiv students. [HR 1510, HR 1550 or instructor's permission; PIN code required] SP5090-01 DOCTORAL SEMINAR: XTN SPIRTLTY Pham (JST) 3 units M 12:40 PM-3:30 PM JSTB:217 This seminar will introduce students to the research field of Christian Spirituality, and to the structure and content of the Doctoral Program in Christian Spirituality at the GTU. It will also initiate students into the techniques of research, some methodologies appropriate to the interdisciplinary field and promote skills in organizing and writing. The seminar will be specifically geared to the needs and interests of doctoral students in Christian Spirituality but doctoral students from other fields who are interested in the field are welcome. Discussion, lecture, presentation and term paper. [PIN code required; 10 max enrollment] HR1615-01 READINGS EARLY BUDDHIST TEXTS: Clark/Fronsdal (IBS) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS MIDDLE LENGTH DISCOURSES OF THE BUDDHA The Middle Length Discourses is one of the most important anthologies of the teachings and religious practices attributed to the Buddha. Often presented in a narrative account including the circumstances and people that prompted the 18 FALL 2015 Buddha's teachings, these rich and dynamic discourses provide context for better understanding the content and nature of early Buddhist teachings. The course is organized around particular themes found in the text such as faith, karma, the path of practice, happiness, meditation, wisdom, and enlightenment. Evaluation: class participation, midterm paper, and final paper. 3 units TF 2:10 PM-3:30 PM n/a THE SELF AND "I" IN INDIC THOUGHT ^Who am I?^ Is there a singular idea of the self in the Indian tradition? There appears from its history and literature (theology, philosophy to anthropology) to be a variety of competing ideas on the nature of the self, and the related question of personal identity, that the tradition has had to deal with, challenged to bring them together under a unitary conception. Not until the emergence of the conception of Atman - as Transcendental Self - with the Upanishads (or Vedanta) that a stable unitary metaphysics is settled upon. But this view at the same time creates problem for the mundane experiential self, its consciousness and identity: who or what is the ^I^ in our waking life? This course draws on hermeneutical reading of Indic textual traditions, from ancient, classical, epic-medieval to modern discourses on self, no-self, non-self, selflessness, personal identity, self as Divine, Atman as Brahman, in the Hindu tradition. The horizons of the self as a moral individual in relation to community and the world will also be examined with comparative attention to Jain, Indian Buddhist, Arabicfalasifa, medieval Judeo-Christian, the Enlightenment and contemporary critiques of the nature of the self. Evaluation methods will include research papers. The course is appropriate for MDiv, MA/MTS, as well as doctoral students with additional research. HRHS1851-01 MORMONISM:A NEW WORLD RELIGION Rees (GTU) 3 units Th 7:10 PM-9:40 PM LDS Mormonism, or the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is a distinctly American religion that also claims to be the restoration of original Christianity. Since its organization in 1830, it has grown from six members to world-wide population of 14.5 million with congregations in nearly 180 countries and territories. Mormonism is a decidedly Christian religion but has distinctive doctrines on the Trinity, the preexistence of souls, the purpose of life, and the post-mortal world, including unique teachings about heaven and hell. Mormons believe in modern prophets, continuing revelation, and additional sacred texts besides the bible, including the Book of Mormon which contains an account of Christ's visit to ancient America. In temples that dot the globe Mormons marry for eternity and perform other sacred ordinances. This course examines the origins, history, and evolution of Mormonism, including the religious and cultural context out of which it emerged, the foundational visions and experiences of its first prophets, and its reflection of the stresses and strains within the dominant American religious culture. Topics include such subjects as the persecution of Mormons, their exodus to the Great Basin Kingdom, polygamy and family life, the Latter-day Saint Plan of Salvation, race and gender, the "Mormon Moment," and the future of Mormonism. NOTE: This course meets at the LDS Berkeley Institute of Religion, 2368 LeConte Ave. HR2990-01 MEDITATION IN THERAVADA TRDTN Clark (IBS) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM IBS MINDFULNESS AND MEDITATION IN THE THERAVADA TRADITION Meditation practice has a large role in the path of liberation taught in Theravada Buddhism. The core meditation practices of this tradition, mindfulness, concentration and loving-kindness have their origin in the early Buddhist discourses. This class will examine the context, teachings, and practices of meditation found in these discourses as well as in later Theravada Buddhism, including the modern West. Evaluation: class participation, mid-term essays and final paper. HR1902-01 INTRODUCTION TO ISLAM Pourfarzaneh (CIS) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:103 This course will give an introduction to the Islamic tradition in its religious, historical, and cultural contexts, paying particular attention to the diversity of expressions of Islam within each of these categories. The course will discuss the theological foundations of the tradition, the history of its development, and different expressions of its praxis that have evolved out of Muslim cultures and societies. It will also present contemporary issues related to Islam and Muslims, particularly in their representation throughout different types of media. Course format and evaluation: seminar, with final research paper/presentation on a specific topic or theme. HRPH3011-01 INDIAN BUDDHIST PHILOSOPHY Payne (IBS) 3 units W 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS Yogacara thought will be examined in relation to abhidharma and Madhyamaka, but with special attention to the works of Asanga, Vasubandhu and Maitreya. [Some background in Buddhism: check with instructor if you have any doubts; Auditors with faculty permission] HRPS3016-01 PSYCHLGCL ASPECTS BUDDHISM II Kinst (IBS) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS HRPT2000-01 SELF & "i" IN iNDIC THOUGHT Bilimoria (GTU) 19 FALL 2015 PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF BUDDHISM II: DIALOGUES WITH CONTEMPORARY WESTERN PSYCHOLOGY This course will explore the interface of traditional Buddhist and contemporary Western psychological perspectives on the nature of human experience, the self, suffering and how it is addressed, as well as the relationship of self and other. Fundamental Buddhist teachings, including Abhidharma, Yogacara and Madhyamaka teachings, will be covered and writings of contemporary authors will be used to clarify points of contact, divergence, misunderstanding and mutual benefit. Course format: Seminar, lecture/discussion. Evaluation: Weekly 1-2 page paper or class presentation. [Auditors with faculty permission] sources, we will examine the historical development of various forms of koan literature, study, practice and teaching. Course format: Seminar/lecture. Evaluation method: Participation/term paper. HRIR4000-01 ECOLOGY & WORLD RELIGIONS Sherma (GTU) 3 units Th 6:10 PM-9:00 PM n/a ENVIRONMENTAL THOUGHT, PRACTICE, AND ECOTHEOLOGY IN THE WORLD'S RELIGIONS This seminar, appropriate for MA, MDiv and PhD/ThD students will examine the resources-conceptual and practical-available within the world's religions for engaging the environmental crisis. Evaluation methods will include reflection papers, a journalistic internet survey of environmental activism in a religion, and a research paper. Our study begins with contemporary writings on ecological thought, activism, and examines recent developments--both local and global--in sustainable practices across faith traditions. We will then learn how religions employ central doctrines, practices, and sustaining perspectives on nature to construct new systematic ecotheologies from traditional resources. Guest faculty speakers with expertise in different religious traditions, and field trips to eco-villages will complement our exploration of the intersection of religion(s) and ecology. HRED3030-01 ISLAMIC EDUCATION Faculty (GTU) 3 units MTh 11:10 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:206 The goal of this course is to introduce students to Islamic Education, theoretically and contextually. In our journey through Islamic Education, we will begin by briefly contextualizing Islam through the ^5 Media Pillars of Islam^ and contextualizing Education through our shared experiences and conversation. We will then journey to the first station , where we will explore and engage Islamic Educational Philosophy as presented in the Quran and Hadith, as well as through the work of Muslim scholars such as Al-Ghazali (past) and Al-Attas (present). We will then journey through the development of Islamic schools in North America as a specific example of Islamic Education, focusing on Indigenous and Immigrant Muslims. The development of Islamic schools will be examined in relation to each group's specific sociocultural reality within the United States, as well as in conversation with Islamic Educational Philosophy as presented in the first half of the course. We will culminate our journey by examining issues in Islamic Education, specifically focusing on women. Students of other faith traditions are welcome to take the course as there are several opportunities for interfaith parallels and conversations throughout this journey. Format: Seminar and Mini-Lectures. Evaluation Method: Class Participation, Regular Moodle Posts, Research Paper or Revised Syllabus Presentation. Intended Audience: MA/MTS, MDiv. This course is taught by PhD student Reem Javed with a Newhall Award, under the supervision of Judith Berling. [10 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] HRST4050-01 THE HINDU VISION OF GOD Doherty (GTU) 3 units MTh 11:10 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:104 INTRODUCTION TO VEDANTA, A FOUNDATION OF HINDU THEOLOGY Veda, the foundational Hindu scripture, has at its end (anta), a wisdom section, known as Vedanta. In a series of teacher-student dialogues, reminiscent of the Socratic Method, Vedanta examines the nature of humanity & creation in relation to God. What is their connection to one another? How does the vision presented by Vedanta speak to the human problems of suffering and isolation? The Vedantic set of sacred texts that address these questions about the human quest for freedom & meaning is known as Upanishads. Through a close study of one of the foundational dialogues on these themes, in the Mundaka Upanishad, with the help of its most important extant commentary, that of the theologian Shankara, we will explore ontological and epistemological dimensions of these teachings, and their implications for the individual's struggle for wholeness and self-understanding. The course is appropriate for MDiv, MA/MTS, PhD/ThD, and will require critical-constructive reflection presentations and a research paper. HRPH3242-01 TOPICS BUDDHIST TRDTNS E. ASIA Pokorny (IBS) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM IBS This course will explore the Zen Koan in Chinese, Korean and Japanese Buddhism. A koan is typically a dialogue or saying that has been cited as exemplifying or embodying some aspect of awakening, practice or teaching. Koans became the essential and most basic spiritual literature of the Zen tradition. They served as dynamic pivots for unfolding expositions of Zen practice. Using primary and secondary HR4350-01 EVERYDAY JEWISH LIFE Aranoff/Seidman (CJS) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM GTU:HDCO 20 FALL 2015 This course will explore everyday Jewish life from the medieval period through the end of the nineteenth century. We will mine such primary sources as responsa, memoirs, letters, and folklore in an attempt to understand what day-today life was like in a variety of locations throughout the Jewish world. Topics we will discuss include family life, education, sickness and health, economic concerns, communal politics and the ordinary interactions between Jews and non-Jews. We will also ask methodological questions about how to read different varieties of texts for their contributions to a Jewish Alltagsgeschichte (everyday history). The course is intended for advanced M.A. and doctoral students. familiarity with Buddhism or prior Buddhist studies experience; Auditors with faculty permission] HRRS5785-01 TOPICS IN ISLAMIC STUDIES Jiwa (CIS) 3 units T 6:10 PM-9:00 PM PSR:6 FRAMES, THEORIES, METHODS IN CONTEMPORARY ISLAMIC STUDIES This is an advanced seminar in which we will discuss frames, theories, methods, approaches and themes in the study of Islam and Muslims in contemporary contexts. Topics covered include: conceptual frameworks in the study of Islam; public Islam in secular contexts; modernity and power; Muslim majorities/minorities; citizenship and identity; and Islamophobia. Case-studies in the global media representation of Islam will serve to expand theoretical concepts, and students will have an opportunity to apply some of these frames, theories and methods to their own research projects. HR4568-01 WORKS OF SHINRAN III Matsumoto (IBS) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS TEACHING, PRACTICE AND REALIZATION, CONTINUED Continuation of the study of Shinran's major treatise, which was taken up in HR 4567 Works of Shinran II. Course is recommended for ministerial aspirants. Fulfills the Area Distribution Requirement for Area I. [HR 4567 or equivalent as determined by the instructor; PIN code required] HRHS8307-01 HSTRY OF SHIN BUDDHIST TRDTN Amstutz (IBS) 3 units IBS:ONLINE HISTORY OF THE SHIN BUDDHIST TRADITION: PREMODERN A survey of themes and problems in the history of Jodoshinshu Buddhism, from Honen into the nineteenth century, including doctrine but also other associated issues (institutionalization, women's roles, evolution of teachings, interaction with political and economic regimes, etc.). Online course, with readings and written interactions among students and instructor. Evaluation based on weekly student writings and a final paper. Primary aim is to establish basic knowledge, which may serve as foundation for subsequent studies. For all students concerned with Shin Buddhism's interaction with Japanese history, but assumes some general familiarity with Buddhist traditions. HR4822-01 AN INTRODUCTION TO ISLAM Chadly (SKSM) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM SKSM This experiential course is an introduction to the history and theology of Islam. It will introduce the student to Islamic religious teaching and practices. It will explore the diversities of Islam among Sunni, Shi'a and Sufi groups from multiple cultural perspectives. Students will be invited to participate in spiritual practice and community events in hopes that the combination of study and practical experience will deepen their experience. [15 max enrollment (Spring 2015); PIN code required; 12 max enrollment (Fall 2015); Auditors excluded (both terms)] HR8401-01 GLOBAL RELIGIOUS TRADITIONS Lipowitz (SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE This course will examine the major global religions from a cross-cultural, multi-religious perspective. Taking into consideration that a course that explores many religions cannot be comprehensive, we will consider the religions from a thematic perspective by analyzing fundamental beliefs and practices in the various religious traditions. In addition, we will also examine assumptions underlying the discipline of religious studies. Students will engage through weekly readings and forum discussion, as well as other interactive learning activities, as part of the online learning community. Students of all faiths and backgrounds are invited and encouraged to enroll. Priority given to off-campus SKSM students. This course is taught by GTU PhD student Cassie HRHS5526-01 TPCS IN BUDDHISM IN THE WEST Mitchell (IBS) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM IBS TOPICS IN BUDDHISM IN THE WEST: BUDDHISM IN MEDIA AND POPULAR CULTURE This course examines representations of Buddhists and Buddhism in media and popular culture as well as Buddhist use of media both as propagational tool and as personal expression. We will analyze case studies from film and visual media, music and the performing arts, and online and social media from a variety of methodological perspectives such as ritual theory, postcolonial studies, and media studies. Course format: seminar discussion. Evaluation: participation in class, reflection papers, final research paper. [Course assumes a basic 21 FALL 2015 Lipowitz with a Newhall Award, under the supervision of Ibrahim Farajaje. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] from historical sources. Previous knowledge of Orthodox theology will be helpful, but not required. CERS2056-01 FUNDAMENTAL MORAL THEOLOGY Fullam (JST) 3 units MTh 9:40 AM-11:00 AM PSR:6 This course explores fundamental concepts of Roman Catholic moral theology, including: moral anthropology; the use of Scripture in morals; the nature and function of moral norms; conscience and its formation; natural law; fundamental option and sin; virtue and the telos of human life, and modes of moral reasoning. Moral theology is fundamentally a discipline of practical reasoning: these concepts will be addressed in the context of concrete cases and issues as well as at the abstract and theoretical level. Format is lecture/discussion in a "flipped" classroom: students will watch short lectures, take short quizzes and participate in online discussion forums outside class. Class sessions will include q&a, developing topics raised in discussion forums, and small-group work. Student evaluation will be based on 3 essay examinations, with the option of writing a research paper in place of the second two exams, a group wiki project, and participation in on-line and in-person discussions. HRPH8455-01 TOPICS IN BUDDHIST THOUGHT Grumbach (IBS) 3 units IBS:ONLINE WOMEN, FAMILY, DHARMA This course challenges several generalized notions about Buddhism (e.g., that it is largely male, monastic, and requires the practice of individual meditation) by examining the roles women have played in the development and spread of Buddhism and by looking at the family as the locus of practice. Women in the history of Buddhism will be the primary focus of the course, but we will also examine issues relating to men (as sons, husbands, fathers) and children. Topics will include women's roles in the formation and continued success of Buddhism; the relationships of nuns/monks to their families; the role of marriage in Buddhist ^monasticism^; gender symbolism; and practice within the family. Lecture and discussion will be held online in real time using a voice/video application (such as Skype). Please contact the instructor as soon as possible for details. Format: Online voice lecture and discussion; term paper. [Assumes some knowledge of Buddhism; Auditors with faculty permission] CE2065-01 INTRO TO CHRISTIAN ETHICS Faculty (PLTS) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM n/a This course introduces the field of Christian ethics by (1) studying major theoretical approaches, in particular focusing upon Anglican and Lutheran conceptions, and (2) exploring how Christians might address contemporary ethical issues. The course thus aims to advance students' historical and theoretical knowledge but to do so in a way that provides resources for contemporary moral decision-making and pastoral leadership. The structure of the course will combine lectures with class discussions throughout. Evaluation will be based upon a vocabulary quiz, a mid-term paper, a final paper, and class participation. [30 max enrollment] NOTE: this course is jointly offered by CDSP & PLTS. ETHICS & SOCIAL THEORY CE2003-01 ROMAN CATHOLIC SEXUAL ETHICS Farina (DSPT) 3 units M 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:2 This lecture/discussion course will examine human sexuality from the perspective of the Roman Catholic tradition. We will explore the Church's teaching on marriage and family, religious life, and single life vocations. Central to these investigations will be Aquinas' teaching on the virtues. Students will also read the work of contemporary theologians on the topics in discussion. Short papers and presentations will be incorporated into the study and evaluation. Intended audience: MDiv, MTS, and MA. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] CEFT2107-01 CNFSSIONAL RITES & PRACTICES Janowiak (JST) 3 units W 9:40 AM-12:30 PM JSTB:GESU This course will examine the Roman Catholic Sacrament of Reconciliation from its historical, theological, moral, pastoral, liturgical and canonical perspectives. It is designed for those who will preside at the Sacrament of Reconciliation as presbyters. The emphasis will be an ongoing practicum on reconciliation rites and practices, utilizing role-playing of a variety of confessional cases and issues. The course will also involve an in-depth discussion of moral, liturgical and pastoral theology as it is related to the Sacrament. Attention will be paid to pastoral care in a variety of different contexts of sacramental confession, as well as related pastoral, moral and CERS2020-01 THE ETHICS OF THEOSIS Woods (GTU)/Nikitas (PAOI) 3 units T 12:40 PM-3:30 PM MUDD:102 This course will explore the Orthodox Christian approach to ethics, based on the doctrine of theosis. The focus will be on understanding the basic vocabulary, tools, and sources of Orthodox ethics, with opportunities for students to investigate specific issues in their written work. Readings will draw primarily on contemporary authors with some readings 22 FALL 2015 canonical issues which often surface in the celebration of the Rite of Reconciliation. This course fulfills the Society of Jesus' requirements for confessional rites and includes the ad audienda requirements of the Church for all candidates for ordination. [15 max enrollment; PIN code required] Greenstein (SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE This anti-oppression course is designed for those of us who are called to be with people who live with mental disorders. We will spend the semester together exploring the complex world of mental "illness" and its associated problems, pains, and sometimes successes. We will companion each other through the weeks as we scrutinize the ways in which our culture treats people who have been given the label "mentally ill." We will gain an understanding of the new DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) - and the implications of definitions of what behavior is, and now isn't, considered pathological. We will use race/ethnicity; class; age; gender; institutional power as the anti-oppression framework to examine cultural definitions and treatments of people who live with "mental disorders." We will take specific issues (e.g. therapies; treatments; pharmaceuticals; criminal justice; mental health policies; children; youth; veterans) to examine the frameworks' intersections. [PIN code required; 32 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] CERS2507-01 INTRO TO BIOMEDICAL ETHICS Fullam (JST) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:204 An introduction to major methodological and practical questions in biomedical ethics. In this course, we'll consider topics including methodologies, beginning of life issues, (e.g., reproductive technologies, stem cell research,) conscience conflicts in medical issues, end of life issues, (e.g., assisted suicide and euthanasia,) justice in public policies concerning medicine and research, research ethics, and issues of pastoral care in the hospital setting. Topics may change if students wish to pursue a particular interest. Grades will be based on class participation, weekly reflection papers, and a final project. [Fundamental Moral Theology or another graduate Introductory course in ethics; PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] CERS4400-01 ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS & LIBERTN Betancourt (SKSM) 3 units SKSM This seminar grounds its exploration in the fundamentals of environmental ethics, starting with the work of Aldo Leopold's Land Ethic and the following generations of ethical systems based in notions of an earth community, and progressing to debate over whether nonhuman nature has natural rights. From these fundamentals the class will expand its scope to specific liberation traditions within environmental ethics, covering moral questions posed by ecofeminism, indigenous human rights debates, liberation theology, and issues of environmental racism. ATTN: This course is HYBRID (Residential with Skype participation). [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] RELIGION & SOCIETY RSSP2470-01 SPRTLTY/NONVLNT SCL TRNSFRMTN Blake (PSR) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM PSR:6 SPIRITUALITY AND NONVIOLENT SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION: GANDHI, KING, DAY, AND CHAVEZ This course will explore quests for social transformation through the methodology of nonviolence as exemplified in the lives of Mahatma Gandhi, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Dorothy Day, and Cesar Chavez. Critical to the course will be an emphasis on the connection between spirituality and social action. What were the influences that shaped the zeitgeist of the times in which they lived? How were strategies determined and employed? What is essential to an effective nonviolent campaign? What were the faith foundations of these extraordinary leaders? What were their relationships to their communities? How did they manage to keep their resolve in times of disappointment? These are some of the questions the course will explore. CE5002-01 METHODS IN ETHICS O'Neill (JST) 3 units M 9:40 AM-12:30 PM JSTB:217 This doctoral seminar will explore the predominant methods used in ethics today and apply them to contemporary issues. This course will draw upon the core bibliography in Ethics and Social Theory to help the student prepare for comprehensive exams. Format uses lecture, discussion, and independent research. Evaluation is by weekly reflection papers and a final major paper. Intended audience: PhD/Thd; STL/STD [PIN code required] RS2478-01 SEXUALITY:ETHICS,CLTR, FAITH Tanis (PSR)/Moles (PLTS) 3 units W 6:10 PM-9:00 PM MUDD: 102 This course will offer students a comprehensive look at human sexuality from a variety of disciplines, including theology, ethics, education, pastoral ministry, economics, and LGBTQ studies. The course will be grounded in knowledge about the human body and the ways in which sexuality and intimacy play an important role in human development and CEPS8499-01 MENTAL DISORDERS & OPPRESSION 23 FALL 2015 well-being. Students will have the opportunity to learn about sex education practices, including curricula, in use in progressive communities of faith, as well as engage with current issues relating to sexuality, such as reproductive health care, LGBTQ rights and more. The course will also include panels and field trips, giving students an opportunity to engage directly with the sexual communities and service providers in the Bay Area. O'Neill (JST) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM JSTB:217 This seminar will consider theological and philosophical questions posed by the ethics of reconciliation in the social and political realms: In what respects is the reconciliation of peoples related to the themes of justice, liberation, reparation, and forgiveness? What are the appropriate forms of moral discourse invoked in assessing genocide, ^ethnic cleansing,^ institutional racism, or the systematic rape of victims? In what respects are distinctively theological interpretations possible or necessary? We will first explore the ethical dimensions of reconciliation, examining the interrelated aspects of justice, reconciliation, reparation, historical memory, and forgiveness. We will then examine and assess recent attempts at public reconciliation. Regular attendance and participation in seminar; final research paper of 20 pages. Intended audience MDiv, MA/MTS, PhD/ThD, STL/STD. [Introduction in Christian ethics; PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] RSCE2701-01 SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION Baggett (JST) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM JSTB:216 Religion is an enormously important and, despite all the talk about us living in a ^secular^ society, persistent component of human experience. This course will introduce students to the sociological study of religion and provide them with the requisite theoretical tools for assessing the ongoing (and ever changing) salience and functions of religion in the modern world. Among the topics to be addressed are: the ways in which religion shapes individual meaning systems; processes of religious conversion and commitment; types and dynamics of religious collectivities (e.g., denominations, cults, sects, etc.); secularization theory; the impact of religion on social cohesion, conflict and change; and the connection between religion and popular culture. Format: Lecture and discussion sections. Requirements: Classroom participation, short papers and a written final exam. [25 max enrollment; Auditors with Faculty permission] RS4600-01 THE NEW ATHEISM IN AM CULTURE Baggett (JST) 3 units F 2:10 PM-5:00 PM JSTB:216 One could say about prognostications about the decline of religion in the United States (and elsewhere) what Mark Twain once quipped upon learning of newspaper reports of his own death - they are greatly exaggerated. Nonetheless, in recent years we have seen the emergence - within scholarly (and not-so-scholarly) books, the mass media, small groups, and so forth - of a self-confident and self-consciously public atheism. This course is designed to explore this reality and interrogate its meaning. Among topics we will address are: the mutually influencing processes of secularization and sacralization; ideological and cultural change; the historical roots of atheism in the West, small groups and social movements devoted to promoting atheist, humanist, and "free thinker" political agendas; and theories of high and postmodernity. Format: lecture and discussion sessions. Requirements: classroom participation, choice between multiple short papers or a longer final paper. [25 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] RSED4036-01 THEATRE OF THE OPPRESSED Chung (SKSM) 3 units W 7:10 PM-9:40 PM SKSM Theater of the Oppressed is a collection of games, techniques, exercises for using theater as a vehicle for personal and social change. It is a method of using the dynamized human body and the charged theatrical space as a laboratory for exploring power, transforming oppression, and finding communitybuilding solutions to the problems of inequality, conflict, injustice and suffering. Based on the radical pedagogy of Paolo Freire and Augusto Boal, it is a collective artistic exploration into the fullest expression of our human dignity, potential, and creativity. This is an introductory workshop covering the theory, application and facilitation of TO, including: . Demechanization . Dynamization . Image Theater . Forum Theater . Rainbow of Desire/Cop-in-the-head . Theory & Pedagogy The workshop will be 80% experiential and 20% reflective/didactic. No prior theater or performance experience is required. Elements and theories of related counter-oppressive approaches will also be introduced as an adjunct to TO, and prominent practitioners of TO or popular education may be invited as guest facilitators. Opportunities to facilitate workshops and classes outside of the class will also be provided [35 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] RSSP8410-01 MYSTICISM & SOCIAL CHANGE Rankow (SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE This course will explore the powerful synergy between mystic spirituality and social activism. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote, ^Only through an inner spiritual transformation do we gain the strength to fight vigorously the evils of the world in a humble and loving spirit.^ In the urgent and troubling context of current world events, we will look to the example of ^mystic-activists^ from diverse cultures and faith traditions for inspiration. Readings and class explorations will include Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim, and Indigenous sources. Through a holistic approach of both head and heart, RSCE4294-01 ETHICS OF SOCIAL RECONCILIATN 24 FALL 2015 we will consider specific tools and practices to nourish and sustain us in our ongoing commitment to anti-oppression work and ministerial service. [14 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] scholars. Students engage foundational texts and empirical research relevant to religious tradition and experience in order to develop theoretical and substantive bodies of knowledge as well as interpretive skills. Focus areas include feminist theory, affect, postcolonial thought, biopower, social movements, and critical race theory, among others. In each weekly unit, central questions address the nature of human action; the role of State power and ideology; notions of self, "other," and agency; and systemic oppression and social change. The course requires weekly on-line discussion and live video sessions. Students may complete a final research paper or a community-engaged research project. [PIN code required; 25 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] RSFT8416-01 SUSTAINABLE RESILIENT LEADERS Rueters-Ward (SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE How do those called to bless the world - to engage with the suffering and healing of others, and of the planet - ground and sustain themselves? Students will link theory, practice, and personal experience to develop their personal theologies for sustainable, resilient leadership - and learn practical tools to serve their vocations "for the long haul". Together, we will explore concepts including compassion fatigue, measuring emotional and spiritual health, vocational burnout, trauma stewardship, boundary setting, and care for self and community. Participants will also explore how to positively influence organizational culture and build healthy, sustainable congregations and other collectives. This interactive, multifaceted course combines multimedia, readings, class discussion, a praxis (action/reflection) component, and more, and is open to all interested in spiritual leadership for social change. [PIN code required; 16 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FIELD EDUCATION FE1005-01 CONCURRENT FIELD STUDY I Lockwood-Stewart (PSR) 3 units W 9:10 AM-12:00 PM MUDD:103/104/204/205/206 3 hours per week on-campus class and 15 hours per week onsite basic field education. 2-semester long course. Must take both semesters in sequence to get credit. Fulfills Basic Field Education requirement. Pass/Fail only. To enroll, students must have made arrangements for an approved field education placement with the Director of Field Education. Class meets in MUDD 103, 104, 204, 205, and 206. (NOTE: Section 02 meets Monday evening, 6:10-9pm, in MUDD 104. First class session 9/14/15). [Auditors excluded] RSHR8427-01 PROMISED LAND AND IMMIGRANTS Videla Cordova Quero (PSR/SKSM) 3 units W 9:40 AM-12:30 PM SKSM:ONLINE This online course will focus on the cases of Latina/o immigrants in the United States and Japan in relation to their experiences of faith, ethnicity and gender. The approach is interdisciplinary as we will draw from several fields for the analysis of the class topics. The goal of the course is to provide grounds for students to acquire tools for understanding the different realities of immigrants. Issues of faith, race/ethnicity, gender and migration will be constantly connected to pastoral reflection throughout the course, especially since our world is increasingly becoming multicultural, multiethnic and multi-religious. ATTN: This course is HYBRID and will be taught remotely by professor and students will have the option of attending the course residentially at SKSM and/or via online using Skype or Fuze. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FE1005-02 CONCURRENT FIELD STUDY I Lockwood-Stewart (PSR) 3 units W 9:10 AM-12:00 PM MUDD:104 3 hours per week on-campus class and 15 hours per week onsite basic field education. 2-semester long course. Must take both semesters in sequence to get credit. Fulfills Basic Field Education requirement. Pass/Fail only. To enroll, students must have made arrangements for an approved field education placement with the Director of Field Education. Class meets in MUDD 103, 104, 204, 205, and 206. (NOTE: Section 02 meets Monday evening, 6:10-9pm, in MUDD 104. First class session 9/14/15). [Auditors excluded] FE1040-01 FIELD EDUCATION LEVEL I Faculty (DSPT) 1.5 units W 9:40 AM-11:00 AM DSPT:2 This course introduces students-both lay and those preparing for ordination-to those fundamental skills required for supervised ministry. Students will learn the process of theological reflection for pastoral ministry. Reading Conciliar and post-Conciliar documents will help the students develop their ministerial identity in light of Catholic Church teaching on pastoral theology. They will also develop basic skills for RS8450-01 COUNTEROPPRESSIVE SOCIOLOGIES Dowdell (SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE Rich sociological traditions offer tools and knowledge for dismantling systems of oppression, creating social change, and building just faith communities. This course offers an introduction to critical analysis of social behavior, organization, and institutions for faith leaders and religious 25 FALL 2015 identifying spiritual gifts in themselves and others. These skills will then be used for selecting a ministry which will allow them to explore further those identified gifts, and to practice theological reflection skills. Finally, students will learn fundamental concepts and skills for evangelization and collaborative ministry. The format is a combination of lecture, discussion, and group theological reflection. Written and oral theological reflections and participation in discussions and the completion of learning contracts are the methods of evaluation. The course is required for M.Div students at the DSPT. [Auditors excluded] FE2152-01 MDIV INTEGRATION SEMINAR II Ross (JST) 3 units W 8:10 AM-9:30 AM JSTB:216 This course consists of a two-semester supervised field practicum and a concurrent two-semester supervision and theological reflection group. Second year JST MDiv. students only. Seminar format: reflection papers/presentations. [25 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] FE2153-01 CONTEXTUAL MINISTRY PRACTICUM Ross (JST) 0.5 units n/a This course offers the opportunity for students enrolled fulltime in a degree program to complement their studies with supervised ministry in a parish, school, or other setting. Students must perform a minimum of approximately four hours of ministry each week. Through reflection on this practical experience, students will deepen their understanding of how faith is inculturated and how culture shapes one's approach to ministry. JST students may enroll in this class only while being concurrently enrolled in the following degree programs: STD, STL, ThM, MTS, and MA. This course is offered on a P/F basis and will be supervised by the Director of Ministerial Formation. In addition to their ministry, students will engage in relevant academic work as assigned by the Director of Ministerial Formation. Class day/time TBA. [PIN code required; Auditors excluded] FE1152-01 MDIV INTEGRATION SEMINAR I Ross (JST) 1 unit W 12:40 PM-2:00 PM JSTB:216 This three-term course - fall and spring semesters and an intersession immersion experience - is required of all first year M.Div. students at JST. The M.Div. Integration Seminar provides an opportunity for students to integrate their academic studies and ministerial experience. During the course students will reflect upon their vocational and ministerial identity within the church; students will be introduced to pastoral theological methods for reflecting upon ministerial experience; and students will prepare for their ministry placement for the Second Year of the M.Div. program. (January 2016 Intersession dates to be confirmed.) [JST 1st year M.Div. students; PIN code required; 25 max enrollment] FE1810-01 SHIN BUDDHIST SERVCS/CERMNIES Bridge (IBS) 3 units M 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS:130 SHIN BUDDHIST SERVICES AND CEREMONIES Teaches chanting and ceremonial required for ministerial service in the Jodo Shin Hongwanji-ha tradition. Offered every other semester. FERS3000-01 SOC CHG FIELD/IMMERS ELECTIVE Lockwood-Stewart (PSR) 0-3 units n/a CSSC program field work arranged in consultation and with approval of the Field Education faculty. To enroll, students must have had consultation with the Director of Field Education for an approved broad sector or area of interest focus and mentor active in that field. [PIN Code required; Auditors excluded] FE2150-01 PASTORAL MINISTRY INTERNSHIP Renz (DSPT) 1.5 units n/a This course involves a year-long experience of supervised pastoral ministry. The student is required to arrange for regular supervisory sessions with an on-site supervisor at an approved ministry site. These sessions must include discussions of human, intellectual, spiritual, and formation issues. The supervisor must submit written summary reports of these meetings, and the student must write learning goals, and two theological reflection papers which demonstrate an integration of theological learning with pastoral experience. Qualified MDiv students may substitute this course for FE 2140/2141 (Field Education Level II). Permission of both the director of Field Education and academic dean is required. DSPT MDiv students only. FE4012-01 CLINICAL PASTORAL EDUCATION Lettini (SKSM) 1-10 units SKSM This course is for Starr King students engaged in part-time or full-time Clinical Pastoral Education. Participate in ministry to persons, and in individual group reflection upon that ministry. Theoretical material from theology, the behavioral sciences, and pastoral care. Integrates theological understanding and knowledge of behavioral science into pastoral functioning. Upon completion, a written evaluation from the program supervisor will be placed into the student's permanent files. Discuss first with your advisor and then faculty. Final evaluation from CPE supervisor needs to be sent to faculty by the last day of the semester to receive credit. Every year SKSM offers an orientation to CPE and to 26 FALL 2015 the application process; students are responsible for applying and securing a place in a CPE program. Please check the SKSM Student Handbook for more information. [20 max enrollment] agreement before the official beginning of the internship. Midterm and final student/supervisor evaluations will also be required by midterm and the last day of SKSM classes. All forms available from the professor at the beginning of the semester and SKSM Website. Please see Student Handbook for more information.[30 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FE4060-01 COMMUNITY FIELDWORK FALL Lettini (SKSM) 0.5-5 units n/a Field work describes an involvement in community work for up to 15 hours a week with the ongoing support of a mentor. Community Field Work includes work in gender, racial and economic justice, queer activism, disability advocacy, immigration issues, environmental responsibility, civil liberties protection, HIV response, youth at risk, peace building, participating in a fundraising campaign for a non for profit or grassroots organization, chaplaincy, teaching and more. Students should discuss the field work opportunity with their advisor before making arrangements with the professor. Student and community mentor should discuss and sign a learning agreement before the official beginning of the field work experience. Midterm and final student/mentor evaluations will also be required by midterm and the last day of SKSM classes. All forms available from the professor at the beginning of the semester and on the SKSM Website. Please see Student Handbook for more information. [30 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] FE4222-01 COMMUNITY INTERN REFLECTN FALL Faculty (SKSM) 2 units SKSM All SKSM students involved in community internships will meet together for reflection on their work, as it is only through the processes of theological reflection and critical reflection on experience that field work becomes field education. This class includes readings, discussions and writings and is designed to broaden and to deepen students' analytic perspective on their field site contexts and on their roles as religious leaders and professionals. Students will be grow in their ability to think and learn in a praxis oriented way, that is, allowing situations of practice to deepen and challenge their academic knowledge about theo/alogies, and allowing their academic knowledge of theology to deepen and challenge their practice of leadership. In field-based experiences the depth of students' learning depends entirely upon how well they can implement praxis oriented learning. [13 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FE4210-01 PARISH INTERNSHIP FALL Faculty (SKSM) 5-10 units n/a This is a 10 month full-time (one year) or part-time (two year) experience in a teaching congregation under the supervision of a Minister in final Fellowship, an intern committee, and a professor at the school. Those who register for this course must also register for Parish Intern Reflection Fall. [PIN code required; 25 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FUNCTIONAL THEOLOGY FT1854-01 SPANISH FOR WORSHIP II Faculty (PLTS) 3 units MTh 5:10 PM-6:30 PM PLTS:GH2 Classroom, face-to-face course. Continuation of Spanish for Worship I. Course focuses on liturgical, ministry, biblical, and theological resources to build language proficiency and confidence in the proclamation of Word and Sacrament liturgies in Spanish-speaking or bilingual contexts. Prerequisites: Spanish for Worship I. Students not having taken Spanish for Worship I could petition professor to enroll if having taken a minimum of two years of college Spanish. [15 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FE4220-01 COMMUNITY INTERNSHIP FALL Faculty (SKSM) 5-10 units n/a Community Internships involve engagement at a field site from 16 to 40 hours a week, under weekly supervision at the site and the support of the SKSM Community Intern Reflection class (an integrative seminar). Community Internships include a variety of settings, such as supervised placements in a non-profit service agency or grassroots organization, hospice work, chaplaincy, teaching and more. They can also entail creating new projects such as starting a new organization or planning a national conference with a board of mentors. Those who register for this course should also register for Community Intern Integrative Reflection Fall. Students should discuss the internship with their advisor before making arrangements with the professor. Student and supervisor/mentors should discuss and sign a learning FT2204-01 MINISTRY ACROSS CULTURES Faculty (PLTS) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM PLTS:GH1 In this course the student will gain increased awareness of diverse socio-cultural values and contextual theological interpretations; discuss the intersection of ethnicity/race and socioeconomic class, and its repercussions for ministry; reflect theologically on our role as church leaders in the multicultural society of the U.S.; explore ways of practicing anti-racism in 27 FALL 2015 our Church; discern specific issues impacting ministry with African Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans, and Anglo Americans in the mixed multicultural ministry setting of the United States. Lecture/discussion/films/guest speakers/research presentation/exam. [Auditors with faculty permission] based community organizations. Students preparing to lead in religious congregations or other ministry settings will develop personal skills, analytic perspectives, and strategic knowledge needed for cultivating their own effective leadership style for religious and political-social change through: conversations with guest leaders from diverse ministry contexts; action/reflection leadership labs in community; readings; lectures; class discussion; practical trainings; and small group work. The purpose of this course is to introduce students to basic concepts and practices of theology, theory and practice of spiritual leadership for social change. Audience: MDiv. FTST2336-01 CANON LAW:INTRO & MARRIAGE McCann (JST) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM PSR:6 This course is a combination of two aspects of the field of canon law. The first half of the course presents an overview of the 1983 Code of Canon Law, giving its origins and the legal traditions on which it is built. Special emphasis is on the pastoral application of the foundational principles of law and an examination of the rights and obligations of the Christian Faithful. The second half of the course covers the seven sacraments with an extended time on the sacrament of marriage. Both the celebration of marriage as the law prescribes and the work of marriage tribunals when a marriage ends in divorce are studied in detail. In Spring 2015, the course meets in the Loyola Room at JST. [25 max enrollment] FTRS2974-01 CHANGEMAKER FELLOWS SEMINAR Lee (PSR) 3 units W 8:00 AM-5:00 PM MUDD:100 Enrollment in the Changemaker Fellows (CMF) Seminar is required for and limited to PSR students who have been accepted into the year-long Changemaker Fellowship program. The seminar consists of two sequential 3.0 credit classes offered in the fall and spring semesters respectively. The purpose of this seminar style course is to assist Changemaker Fellows to critically reflect on the link between spirituality and social change and to better integrate their academic and other learning experiences with their selfunderstanding of themselves their vocation and roles as spiritually-grounded, theologically-rooted changemakers and social justice leaders. Course activities include participation in monthly cohort meetings, attending the Rockwood Art of Leadership, taking part in a day-long spiritual retreat, and traveling as a group on a nine-day immersive learning journey. Spring 2015: Day and time TBA Fall 2015: Sep. 9, Oct. 7, Nov. 4, Dec. 2 Spring 2016: Feb. 3, Mar. 2, Apr. 20, May 18. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] FTCE2572-01 PRISON MINISTRY Williams (JST) 3 units W 8:10 AM-11:00 AM JSTB:217 SPRING 2016 Course offers a theoretical and experiential introduction to prison ministry to prepare ministry students for possible careers as prison chaplains. The course emphasizes the theological, psychological and pastoral needs of the incarcerated and examines the current state of corrections in the United States. The course explores the historical roots of correctional chaplaincy in the United States, punishment theory, prison culture, racism, restorative justice and alternatives to incarceration. Format includes both lecture and seminar discussion of reading materials as well as theological reflection based on both the reading and the students' (required for course) experience of spending 2 hours per week at San Quentin State Prison under supervision of the instructor. While the context is Catholic prison ministry, the course encourages collaborative, ecumenical and interfaith ministry. [20 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] FT8227-01 READING CONGREGATIONS Jacobson (PLTS) 1.5 units PLTS:ONLINE This online course assists M.Div. students in establishing and integrating observational skills and tools of critical theological reflection for the purpose of discerning the socio/political, historical, liturgical, and theological ^cultures^ of selected congregations. We observe and analyze a variety of congregations at Sunday worship in order to identify the particular cultural and contextual dynamics operative within these congregations. We identify and reflect upon how worship space is organized and utilized in these communities; how the worshiping community integrates itself into the contexts in which it is located what worship means to both clergy and lay members in these communities; and how worship embodies and expresses a particular community's understanding of who God is and how God works in the world. Central to the course are the development of effective observational and reflective skills; preparation of written summaries of site observations; and identifying needs and goals for each student's future teaching parish site [Lutherans FT2923-01 ORGNZTNL LEADRSHP CH & COMMNTY Griffin (PSR) 3 units M 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:204 "HOW DO I LEAD CHANGE AND CREATE A MORE JUST WORLD IN COMMUNITY?" In this course students will engage and generate questions, vision and practice as creative and compassionate spiritual leaders of social change in congregations, chaplaincies, campuses, and diverse faith- 28 FALL 2015 only] in consultation with the PLTS Office of Contextual Education. Graded coursework consists of written reflections and a final oral exam. [PIN code required] century, and the Luther Renaissances of the 20th and 21st centuries. The course is also intended to assist students with their work in core courses that deal with questions of Lutheran identity and mission and for the kind of theological integration and reflection that takes place in the teaching parish. This course meets in a blended format. Content for the course will be delivered online. The online format will cover 49% of the class experience. The remaining 51% of the course will occur in weekly face-to-face sessions. HISTORY HS1080-01 HISTORY I Ocker (SFTS) 3 units TF 10:20 AM-11:50 AM SFTS CHRISTIANITIES: FROM JEWISH SECT TO COLONIAL RELIGION An introduction to Christianity in the context of world history and religions, from the second century to 1700. Particular emphasis on the Mediterranean world, Central Asia, North Africa, and Europe as pluralistic social and cultural environments. Lectures, work with and discussion of primary sources, including materials drawn from the visual arts and music. Midterm examination, final examination. Term papers may be substituted for each. Extra-credit book reviews also possible. HS1750-01 HSTRY XIANITY & SOCIAL CHANGE Walker (PSR) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:103 HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY & SOCIAL CHANGE This is a basic history of Christianity course focused on Christianity in times of rapid social, economic, and/or political change from the second century CE to the present. Students will learn basic skills for the study and interpretation of history and the application of historical study to the concerns of the present and future. Students will use primary sources focused both on Christian participation and shaping of social change and Christian resistance to such change. The students will consider practical institutional activity and theological and intellectual foundations. This course will satisfy the History requirement for PSR MAST, MTS, MA and some MDiv students (MDiv students seeking ordination should consult a denominational advisor to make sure this course is sufficient preparation in history). [Auditors with faculty permission] HS1102-01 HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY I Faculty (PLTS) 3 units T 11:10 AM-12:30 PM PLTS:GH1 This course will trace the history of Christian communities from their inception through the late medieval period. Emphasis on close reading of primary texts and issues of power, authority, the nature of discipleship, and the social and political contexts of Christian witness. Lecture/discussion; four 3-5 page papers and either a written take-home or oral final exam. HS2012-01 AMERICAN LUTHERANISM Faculty (PLTS) 1.5 units M 12:40 PM-2:00 PM PLTS:GH1 What has it meant to be a Lutheran in ^America,^ i.e., in the United States? What might it mean to be one now? How might we develop an understanding of ^American^ Lutheranism as a cultural process whereby individuals and groups map, construct, and inhabit worlds of meaning? In addressing these questions, we will consider significant aspects of ^American^ Lutheran life--immigration and ethnicity, belief and identity, theology and confession, institutional arrangements, gender, religious practice and piety. Evaluation will be based on participation in class discussion, written assignments, and a final paper. [At least one course in church history plus HS 1220 and HSST 2902] HS1105-01 HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY I Thompson (DSPT) 3 units TF 9:40 AM-11:00 AM DSPT:3 History of the Church from the Apostolic Period until the end of the Middle Ages, focusing, in particular, on its transformation from a small Jewish sect into the international Church of the middle ages. Some attention will be paid to the development of doctrine, but more emphasis will be placed on piety and worship, dissent, missions, mysticism, ecclesiastical organization, and Church relations to secular government. [25 max enrollment; Auditors with Faculty permission] HSFT2058-01 ETHOS,POLITY,MINISTRY OF UCC Barriger (PSR) 3 units Th 8:10 AM-11:00 AM n/a HS1220-01 LIVING TRADITION Schiefelbein (PLTS) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-11:00 AM PLTS:GH1 A introduction to theology and ministry in the Lutheran context with special attention given to Martin Luther's life and basic theological writings, the subsequent influences of Orthodoxy and Pietism, the Neo-Lutheranism(s) of the 19th HSFT2064-01 GRACE UPON:UMC HISTORY/POLITY Oliveto (PSR) 3 units 29 FALL 2015 M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM n/a GRACE UPON GRACE: UNITED METHODIST CHURCH (UMC) HISTORY & POLITY Restoration. It discusses his vocational choices and his work on behalf of young people at risk, as well as his subsequent expanded apostolic commitments, especially in the field of education. It examines the growth of the work, and the founding and initial development of the Society of St. Francis de Sales created to continue that work (1859), in the context of the liberal revolution and the unification of Italy. Format: Lecture; reflection papers. [12 max enrollment] HSST2310-01 HSTRY OF CHRISTIAN ESCHATOLOGY Thompson (DSPT) 3 units TF 12:40 PM-2:00 PM DSPT:1 This course will examine Christian speculation on the End Times from the first century to the year 2000 and beyond. Special emphasis will be paid to Biblical interpretation and apochryphal sources for such speculation. Lectures will focus on ancient Christian millenarianism, medieval and Reformation apocalypticism, 19th- and 20th-century Dispensationalism, and contemporary images of the End in literature, film, and popular culture. Required readings will be taken from original sources. Grading will depend on discussion participation, a 15-page thematic paper, and a final exam. [25 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] HSST4157-01 ORTHODOX XTN CH:HISTORY/THLGY Nikitas (PAOI) 3 units Th 12:40 PM-3:30 PM MUDD:205 This course is an introductory survey of the history and theology of the Orthodox Christian Church. Beginning with the Church's pre-Byzantine roots, the course will sketch the development of Orthodox Christianity through the Christological, Trinitarian, and iconoclastic controversies. Historical inquiry will be given to topics such as sin, salvation, and eschatology, as well as Byzantine art, music, and liturgy. The course combines lecture and seminar formats. Evaluation based on classroom participation, one short paper, a classroom presentation, and a final synthesis paper. HS2498-01 CHURCH TO 1400 Dohar (JST) 3 units MUDD:103 This lecture/discussion course is an historical survey of Christianity from the 1st century CE to the 15th and the eve of Modernity. As surveys go, it's meant to lend an impression that lingers-one that informs broadly but also relies on occasionally closer scrutiny of select topics. The course is studiously multi-disciplinary, approaching major developments in the Christian churches from a variety of historical perspectives and original sources. Requirements include two short essays (5-7 pages): an analysis of one of our assigned original sources and a non-textual analysis--some work of art or architecture from the historical periods covered. Each student will present for discussion one of the original sources in the syllabus. Finally, students will participate in small group 'Pastoral Application Projects' which entail communicating historical material in particular pastoral settings. HSST4222-01 REFORMATIONS Ocker (SFTS) 3 units T 2:00 PM-5:00 PM SFTS Survey of all aspects of cultural. intellectual, religious change in Europe from 1300 to 1700, with particular emphasis on the controversy over Luther and the papacy in Central Europe and in its broad international dimensions. Tutorial and seminar format. [PIN code required; 10 max enrollment] HS5057-01 AM RLGS HISTORY GTU ARCHIVE Walker (PSR) 3 units M 12:40 PM-3:30 PM MUDD:104 This is an archival workshop and seminar focused on the source materials in American Religious History found in the GTU Library Archives. Students will choose an archival collection for the focus of their work and students will create a set of narratives of American religious history as religious groups developed and religious people faced issues of social change, particularly on the West Coast. Social justice, racial justice and new religious movement history, gender and queer history, Asian and Asian American religious history, denominational history, religious biography, theology, and other important topics can be explored in this class. It is a good class for students wanting to learn the techniques of archival research, the art of applying theory and method to the interpretation of archives, and the craft of writing historical essays. Students seeking dissertation topics or creative ways of approaching topics in American religions or Pacific religions will find this course helpful. [Auditors with faculty permission] HS2881-01 DON BOSCO FOUNDER: Lenti (DSPT) 3 units MTh 8:10 AM-9:30 AM DSPT:ISS This course surveys the life and times of John Melchior Bosco (1815-1888), up to 1861 (1862), with particular attention to 19th century social, political and religious history. The better part of Don Bosco's life is set in the turbulent period of the post-Napoleonic Restoration and of the liberal evolutions, the times of the Risorgimento and national unification of Italy. Hence, the historical context, as events affected Don Bosco's life and work as well as Church and society at large, acquires important biographical significance. This survey looks at Don Bosco's education, at his spiritual and theological formation leading to his priestly ordination (1841) in the times of the 30 FALL 2015 HS8010-01 HISTORY I Ocker (SFTS) 3 units SFTS:ONLINE CHRISTIANITIES: FROM JEWISH SECT TO COLONIAL RELIGION An introduction to Christianity in the context of world history and religions, from the second century to 1700. Particular emphasis on the Mediterranean world, Central Asia, North Africa, and Europe as pluralistic social and cultural environments. Lectures, work with and discussion of primary sources, including materials drawn from the visual arts and music. Midterm examination, final examination. Term papers may be substituted for each. Extracredit book reviews also possible. This course is the online section of HS 1080 for students who do not live on the SFTS campus. Mostly asynchronous format. Weekly reading in primary sources, lectures by audio file, and written posts to a discussion forum on Moodle. Three live-streaming conferences. Mid-term and final examinations. [20 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors with faculty permission] HOMILETICS HM1073-01 FOUNDATIONS OF PREACHING Propst (DSPT) 3 units DSPT:CHPL In this course, the student is given the fundamental elements of preaching, preparation of Scriptural text for proclamation, the study and prayer over the text of Scripture, the composition of a homily founded upon and flowing from the text to facilitate an encounter with Jesus and His saving grace and the actual practice of proclaiming the Scriptures and preaching upon them. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment] HM2230-01 LITURGICAL PREACHING Propst (DSPT) 3 units DSPT:CHPL In this course, the student is given the fundamental elements of preaching, preparation of Scriptural text for proclamation, the study and prayer over the text of Scripture, the composition of a homily founded upon and flowing from the text to facilitate an encounter with Jesus and His saving grace and the actual practice of proclaiming the Scriptures and preaching upon them. In this course, the student will explore the elements of preaching within the context of the liturgy of the Church and its celebration of the sacraments. [PIN code required; Interview required; 12 max enrollment] HS8102-01 HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY I Faculty (PLTS) 3 units PLTS:ONLINE This online course will trace the history of Christian communities from their inception through the late medieval period. Emphasis on close reading of primary texts and issues of power, authority, the nature of discipleship, and the social and political contexts of Christian witness. Lecture/discussion; four 3-5 page papers and either a written take-home or oral final exam. Required for PLTS MTS and MCM students not taking HS 1112 or HS 2012. [PIN code required] HM2244-01 PREACHING:THEOLOGY & PRAXIS Fennema (PSR) 3 units Th 5:40 PM-8:30 PM MUDD:102 SUMMER 2015 What is preaching and how is it like and different from other forms of public speaking? What does it mean to "bring a word" in your own preaching or speaking context? Exegetical strategies, sermon forms, the person of the preacher, and issues related to authority and the ethics of preaching will be discussed. Students will respond in writing to reading assignments and will preach at least twice in class. Sermons will be recorded and evaluated by professor and peers. PREQUISITE: At least one semester of biblical studies - either Hebrew Bible or New Testament. This is the required preaching course for PSR's MDiv students. This three week class will meet 7/13/15-7/17/15 and 7/27/157/31/15, from 9am-1pm, at MUDD 103. During the week of 7/20/15-7/24/15, this course meets ONLINE asynchronously using Moodle and has no required meeting times. High-speed internet connection required. [20 max enrollment] NOTE: For registration & summer session policies, see www.psr.edu/summer. FALL 2015 This basic course will introduce students to a variety of theologies and understandings of preaching so that they can critically evaluate preaching in their own contexts. Exegetical strategies, sermon forms, the person of the preacher, and issues related to authority and the ethics of preaching will be discussed. HS8122-01 LIVING TRADITION Schiefelbein (PLTS) 3 units PLTS:ONLINE An online introduction to theology and ministry in the Lutheran context with special attention given to Martin Luther's life and basic theological writings, the subsequent influences of Orthodoxy and Pietism, the NeoLutheranism(s) of the 19th century, and the Luther Renaissances of the 20th and 21st centuries. The course is also intended to assist students with their work in core courses that deal with questions of Lutheran identity and mission and for contextualized theological reflection. Class format includes online presentations by the instructor, threaded discussions, and individual and group writing. [PIN code required] 31 FALL 2015 Students will respond in writing to weekly reading assignments and preach at least twice in class. These sermons/homilies will be recorded and evaluated by classmates and professor. Intended audience: MDiv. in particular are deployed through various media, including the tele- and audio-visual, with the aim of expanding the pedagogical possibilities for talking about race in academic and ministerial contexts. The course therefore provides students with an opportunity to critical examine their own assumptions about the raced, classed, gendered, and sexualized ^other^ and thus expand their individual capacities to create charged, dialogical spaces within their respective ministries for anti-racist education-one enriched by an engagement with popular culture as a viable site of and medium for prophetic theologizing, social criticism, and solidarity across cultural difference. [PIN code required; Auditors with faculty permission] HM2525-01 BIBLICAL PREACHING Hannan (PLTS) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM PLTS:GH1 This course uses lecture/discussion to explore strategies regarding sermon content, design, and delivery. Each student prepares sermons and preaches them in class. Evaluation is based on written assignments, sermon preparation, and sermon delivery. Required for PLTS MDiv students prior to internship. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment] IDS4210-01 ANTIRACIST THEOLOGIES/PRAXIS Mann (SKSM) 3 units M 6:00 PM-8:30 PM SKSM This course is taught by a Hilda Mason Fellowship Recipient. This interdisciplinary course will deeply engage our stories of oppression and privilege to unpack and integrate all parts of our identity and understand how our social location impacts our ministries and future vocational roles. We will explore the intersectionality of oppression and privilege to discern how each part of who we are informs the whole. We will engage in dialogue across stories of race, gender, sexuality, spirituality, ability, culture, class, language, nationality, immigration and refugee identity. Students will be asked to offer their own creative responses to the most important anti-racist/antioppression issues facing the future of our faith. Guest lecturers, identity based caucuses, class field trips, integrative reflective statements, group multimedia presentations and a final project/paper will supplement weekly discussions and chevruta/small group dialogue. Previous experience with SKSM's Educating to Counter Oppression courses is encouraged but not required. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] HM4031-01 PREACHING PUBLIC ISSUES Hannan (PLTS) 3 units MTh 9:40 AM-11:00 AM PLTS:C1 Through readings, seminar discussion, preparation and preaching of sermons, oral and written sermon responses, students will investigate and present homiletical possibilities for and challenges of preaching on public issues. Students will preach four sermons focusing on a variety of issues; e.g., food ethics, economic justice, natural disaster. Throughout the semester, students will intentionally engage the task of keeping the Bible in one hand and the newspaper in the other. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES IDS2040-01 CRITICAL WHITENESS & POP CLTR Peach (GTU) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM GTU:HDCO As part of a concentrated effort within the supremacy which produce structures of racialized oppression that cut across lines of class, gender and sexuality, this seminar functions as a counter-discourse oriented toward understanding history from the perspective of the oppressed. Grounded in key texts in the literature of Critical Whiteness Studies-an offshoot of Critical Race Theory-to produce a pedagogy predicated on cross-racial solidarity, it seeks first to name Whiteness as a racial category; map and problematize its complicity in systems that produce prejudice along various lines including, but not limited to, race; and finally rearticulate Whiteness as oppositional to those systems. Taking cultural production seriously for the ways in which it either contributes or attempts to deconstruct discourses of racialized oppression, this course isolates popular culture as a key site of analysis. Indeed, the contemporary moment finds us in an age of ^intercultural flow^ mediated in large part by mass media and its various technologies of production. This course therefore pays particular attention to how race in general and Whiteness IDS6000-01 SEMINAR ON INTERDISCIPLINARITY Berling (GTU)/Farajaje (SKSM) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM SKSM Seminar in which students and teachers learn together, collaboratively working to explore critical issues and develop criteria for sound interdisciplinary scholarship. Student presentations and a final paper developed throughout the course. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment] IDS8450-01 SOWING THE SEEDS OF GLADNESS Favreault (SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE This on-line seminar is designed for students interested in new church planting and entrepreneurial leadership in congregations and beyond. Course material will include historical and theological reflections on when and how new faith communities have been seeded and cultivated in 32 FALL 2015 Unitarian Universalist contexts. Participants will design a research project that could take the form of a comprehensive plan and prospectus for their own future church plant project, a survey of recent UU church plants and best practices, a comparative theology of progressive and evangelical church planting; all which would add to a growing body of knowledge in this field. Students interested in enrolling should submit a brief introduction and project proposal with PIN request. Meetings of the course will take place online. ATTN: This course is HYBRID (Residential with Skype participation).[PIN code required; 15 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] Mondays from 5:15-6:30pm in the small dining room of D'Autremont Hall, and with Chapel services on Tuesdays from 10am-12pm in the PSR Chapel. 3-4 other discussion sessions will be arranged in consultation with the professor and other students. [Auditors with faculty permission] LSFT2525-01 REFORMED WORSHIP Childers (SFTS) 3 units Th 2:00 PM-5:00 PM SFTS This course is designed to introduce students to the nature and practice of worship and the sacraments in the Reformed Tradition. Worship and the sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper are studied biblically, historically, and theologically, as well as in contemporary settings. Worship ad pastoral issues attendant to the celebration of weddings and funerals are examined. Skills necessary to leading worship effectively are rehearsed. Preparation for the PCUSA Ordination Exams included in lectures and discussion materials. LITURGICAL STUDIES LS1010-01 PLTS WORSHIP PREPARATION Faculty (PLTS) 0-1.5 units PLTS:GH1 Worship preparation for PLTS chapel. Pass/Fail only. FALL 2015: First meeting on Wednesday, September 9 at 12:30PM. Subsequent meeting time and day will be determined at that first meeting. LSST4015-01 ECOLOGY AND LITURGY McGann (JST) 3 units T 8:10 AM-11:00 AM JSTB:217 This seminar explores the vital connection between human concern for the Earth and its creatures, and worship of the living God. Readings and discussion will focus on scientific, liturgical and theological writings from a broad range of authors that illuminate the convergence of ecology and worship, and that propose a path toward deeper ethical and liturgical response to the global ecological crises that mark our times. Special attention will be given to perspectives of Ignatian spirituality and mission. Students will develop research papers or annotated bibliographies related to their specific interests. (MDiv, MA, MTS, DMin) [15 max enrollment; PIN code required] LSFT2141-01 CHAPEL WORSHIP DESIGN PLANNIN Fennema (PSR) 1.5 units M 5:15 PM-6:30 PM, T 10:00 AM-12:00 PM PSR:CHPL SPRING 2015 This course consists of working as a team to design, plan, and carry out worship for weekly chapel and other occasional services. Students will gain experience with planning and carrying out worship in a variety of styles through a small group process. We will explore the nuts and bolts of designing meaningful, multisensory, and creative worship while reflecting on the historical, cultural, theological, embodied, and practical aspects that shape the experience of worship in contemporary communities of faith. Meets Mondays 5:10-6:30pm in the small dining room in PSR's D'Autremont Hall and Tuesdays 10:10am -12:00pm in the PSR Chapel, with discussion sections TBD. FALL 2015/SPRING 2016 Planning and Crafting Chapel Worship This practicum course consists of working as a team to design, plan, and carry out worship for weekly chapel and other occasional services at the Pacific School of Religion. Students will gain experience with planning and carrying out worship in a variety of styles through a small group process. We will explore the nuts and bolts of designing meaningful, multisensory, and creative worship while reflecting on the historical, cultural, theological, embodied, and practical aspects that shape the experience of worship in contemporary communities of faith. Evaluation is based on attendance, participation, evaluation of chapel services, curation of chapel service(s) and a final critical reflection paper. It is geared toward MDiv. students, but all are welcome. Course meeting times coincide with Chapel Planning Committee Meetings on LSHS4050-01 XTN INITIATION:HSTRY & LITURGY Klentos (PAOI) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:205 Designed for MA and MDiv students, this course will explore the history and theology of becoming a Christian from the time of the early church into the present. Primary sources (in English translation) from a variety of genres (biblical, homiletic, historical, liturgical, hagiographical) will be used together with modern studies of the topic. The format will combine lecture and seminar elements. Evaluation will be on the basis of attendance and participation, two written reflections, one in-class presentation, and a final synthesis paper (approx 10 pages). LSST4400-01 PERFORMING THE BODY Fennema (PSR) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM PSR:CHPL/MUDD:102 33 FALL 2015 SEX, GENDER AND DESIRE IN CHRISTIAN WORSHIP This seminar with praxis lab investigates the ways in which the practices of Christian ritual practices both shape and are shaped by the complex intersections that are bodies. We will reflect critically on how feminist, womanist, and queer theories and theologies impact the ways in which worship is both performed and understood, with a focus on how these performances construct human bodies, the Body of Christ, and notions of embodiment. Students will leave the course with analytical and practical tools for reading and crafting worship materials in their own contexts which take account of bodies, gender, sexuality, and desire as categories of analysis and practice. Evaluations will be based on attendance, preparation, reflection papers and worship design and a final synthesis project. MDiv., MA/MTS, DMin and PhD/ThD students are welcome. [12 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] happiness, obligation, the good, and so forth). Through a careful reading of great philosophical works, important ethical theories will be presented within their historical context, including utilitarianism or consequentialism, deontological ethics, virtue theory, and natural law. Class discussion will center on the philosophical merit of these ethical approaches as well as their relevance to contemporary issues. Student evaluation will be based on class participation, short written assignments, and a final exam. [15 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] PH1056-01 PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE Dodds (DSPT) 3 units M 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:1 A philosophical account of the nature of change, exploring classical insights (Aristotle, Aquinas) and contemporary issues in cosmology, the methods of empirical science and philosophy, the nature of causality, time, infinity. Lecture/discussion. 15-20 page research paper, or three 4-5 page essay papers on assigned topics. Intended audience: MA/MTS,MDiv. LSST4511-01 CHRIST & SPIRIT IN LITURGY Klentos (PAOI) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:205 Theology and Liturgy are related --intrinsically related-- to one another. What a people believe about God influences how they praise, pray, and worship; how a people praise, pray, and worship influences what they believe about God. This course will concentrate primarily (but not exclusively) at how Christian liturgies from diverse times and places reflect particular Christological and Pneumatological understandings. Who are the Christ and the Spirit depicted in liturgy? What is the place of Christ in liturgy? What is the place of the Spirit in liturgy? Historical investigation and theological reflection will help students better understand the connections between worship & Christology and worship & Pneumatology, allowing them to better address modern questions concerning God and Christian worship. Besides reading modern theologians and liturgiologists, students will encounter a variety of liturgical texts (prayers, hymns, homilies) reflecting Eastern (& Oriental Orthodox) and Western (Catholic & Protestant) traditions, ranging from the 2nd century into the early 21st century. Class format will be mainly seminar with some lectures. Students will be evaluated on classroom participation (reflecting careful reading of assignments and synthetic reflection), and four short (5-7 page) papers. PH1115-01 ARISTOTELIAN LOGIC Gable (DSPT) 3 units TF 8:10 AM-9:30 AM DSPT:1 This course focuses on the fundamental principles and techniques of classical logic first articulated in Aristotle's Organon and further developed by ancient, medieval, and modern thinkers. The course is loosely organized around the traditional distinction of the three operations of the mind: simple apprehension, judgment, and reasoning. The course will conclude with an examination of logical fallacies and a brief excursus into modern symbolic logic. Student evaluation will be based on regularly submitted problem sets and three in-class exams. [15 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] PHHS2000-01 HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY: MODERN Ramelow (DSPT) 3 units M 9:40 AM-12:30 PM DSPT:1 The class will give an overview over the development of Western philosophy from Descartes and Bacon to Schopenhauer. This will include Continental Rationalism, British Empiricism, Kant and German Idealism. Lecture/discussion. There will be a short mid-term and final exam (non-comprehensive) and a term paper. Intended audience: MDiv, MA/MTS, PhD/ThD. PHILOSOPHY & PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION PH1008-01 GENERAL ETHICS Gable (DSPT) 3 units MTh 8:10 AM-9:30 AM DSPT:1 This course is an introduction to the study of ethics, focusing on key ethical questions (e.g., how we are to live, what we are obliged or permitted to do, etc.) and concepts (virtue, PHST2500-01 PASSION OF THE WESTERN MIND Krasevac (DSPT) 3 units MTh 11:10 AM-12:30 PM DSPT:3 34 FALL 2015 This seminar will center around a careful reading of Richard Tarnas' The Passion of the Western Mind, a landmark onevolume narrative intellectual history of the West which stresses the discovery, loss, and recovery of the concept of form, as well as most of his recent Cosmos and Psyche (a scholarly retrieval of elements of the astrological tradition which stresses its archetypal, indicative, and participatory nature). The goals of this course are for you to attain a broad, synthetic understanding of the western intellectual tradition from its origins in ancient Greece to the present, and for you to critically ponder Tarnas' theory of the religious, cultural, philosophical, and archetypal dynamics that have shaped this history. There will also be other, supporting readings, particularly Louis Dupre's Passage to Modernity. [PIN code required; 8 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] functions to bring humans towards a deeper (connatural) knowledge of transcendent aspects of key human issues, including suffering, death, resurrection, and stewardship of the environment. Students will engage the material through seminar discussion; a research paper and class presentations will be used to assess student mastery of the material. [10 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] PHST4410-01 HERMENEUTICS & RC THEOLOGY Krasevac (DSPT) 3 units MTh 11:10 AM-12:30 PM DSPT:3 This course will examine some of the influences that the hermeneutic thought of Gadamer (and to a lesser extent, Ricoeur) has had on Roman Catholic theology, especially as it impacts the study of Scripture and other authoritative texts. After a study of some key texts of Gadamer and Ricoeur, we will examine those influences on three RC theologians: Edward Schillebeeckx (systematics and Scripture), Sandra Schneiders (Scripture), and Francis Sullivan (Doctrinal Texts). [PIN code required; 8 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] PH4002-01 METAPHYSICS SEMINAR Vega Rodriguez (DSPT) 3 units Th 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:3 This seminar is a review of Contemporary and Thomistic Metaphysics with special attention to topics that relate to causality, ontology, cognition and personhood. Format: Seminar; Evaluation: Presentations and discussions; Audience: MAPH, MAPH/TH, PhD/ThD. [Auditors excluded] PH4710-01 PHILOSOPHY OF MIND Vega Rodriguez (DSPT) 3 units Th 8:10 AM-11:00 AM DSPT:2 The course studies the main contemporary theories and philosophical questions about the mind. We will review topics like intentionality, mental causation, dualism, physicalism, biological naturalism, qualia. The course will also draw ideas from Aristotle and Aquinas that can bring new nuances to current issues in the philosophy of mind. Format: Seminar. Evaluation: Research paper and presentations. [Auditors excluded] PH4230-01 ARISTOTLE'S POLITICS/COMENTRS Caruana (DSPT) 3 units M 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:3 ARISTOTLE'S POLITICS AND ITS MEDIEVAL COMMENTATORS This course intends to offer (a) an analysis of the arguments in Aristotle's Politics while also looking at (b) the major themes developed by his medieval commentators (Albert and Thomas in particular). Important criticisms of contemporary liberalism turn to this work for support, especially because it advocates participatory democracy as well as because it is sympathetic to the rule of a virtuous or philosophic elite. However, is this the only correct hermeneutical platform behind his theory of the state? Themes from Albert's and Aquinas's political commentaries, such as the ruling function of practical reason and the elaboration on the concept of a common good will help provide a more complete and possibly fairer reading of this work. Intended audience: MA and PhD students PH4950-01 MEDIEVAL THEORIES OF ACTION Caruana (DSPT) 3 units F 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:3 The first major task of this course will be to offer an analysis and interpretation of self-motion in both Classical and Medieval philosophy. Secondly, the impact of the patristic account of the psychology of action on medieval theories of action and freedom needs to be carefully examined. In particular, how does the reception of voluntas affect the medieval reception of Aristotle's theory of human agency and freedom? This will enable us to understand more fully the medieval theory of liberum arbitrium and to determine whether it adds anything significant to our understanding of human freedom and to practical reason-based theories of action. Intended audience: MA and PhD students PHRA4310-01 POETRY & CREATIVE INTUITION Renz (DSPT) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM DSPT:2 Students in this seminar course will examine the relationship between creative intuition (sometimes called connatural knowledge) and the fine arts, particularly poetry. Focusing on the writings of Jacques Maritain, students will develop a scholastic understanding of how this kind of knowledge is used in the creative act, particularly in poetry. Using contemporary authors, students will then examine how poetry PHCE5410-01 LEVINAS Seidman (CJS) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM GTU:HDCO 35 FALL 2015 This course will explore the major writings of Emmanuel Levinas, with a special focus on the philosophical context of this work and the writings on Jewish texts and themes. Course readings include Levinas's masterworks Totality and Infinity and Otherwise than Being, as well as Radicalizing Levinas, a collection of political writings on Levinas's ethics. Required of PLTS MDiv and MTS students. Recommended preparation: basic seminary level courses in Old Testament, New Testament, Church History, and Reformation Theology. Auditors welcome. ST2014-01 FOUNDATIONS OF THEOLOGY Burke (JST) 3 units M 9:40 AM-12:30 PM n/a This course examines the nature and function of theology through a systematic inquiry into the dynamics of faith and revelation, the role of scripture and tradition, the use of religious language and symbols, the genesis of doctrine, the operation of theological method, and the relationship of theology to praxis. This course introduces basic theological concepts and terms, exposes students to a range of major theologians and theological styles, and situates the study of theology in the life and ministry of the Church. For these reasons, this course can serve as an introduction to the study of theology. It is designed for MDiv students and others in first degree programs (MA, MTS, etc.). This course will use a lecture/discussion format. Evaluations will be through short papers, class presentations and two exams. [30 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY ST1085-01 SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY II Love (SFTS) 3 units TF 10:20 AM-11:50 AM SFTS This course is the second semester of a two-semester introduction to Christian theology. The purpose is to help the student gain a basic knowledge of the principal topics of the theology of the universal church, especially as these topics are understood in the Reformed tradition and in conversation with feminist and other contemporary theologies. Beginning with the doctrine of humanity, we look at our original goodness and our fall into relational forms of sin as pride, despair and denial. Next, we look at the person and work of Jesus Christ, from a variety of perspectives. We look deeply at the meaning of our being "saved by grace through faith alone," and the roles of the divine Spirit and human spirit in bringing about our healing. We conclude with the nature of the Christian spiritual life, including sanctification and vocation, the church and its mission in the world and sacraments. STLS2105-01 LITURGICAL THEOLOGY Janowiak (JST) 3 units T 11:10 AM-2:00 PM JSTB:216 This course is designed as a theological introduction to the actions, symbols, texts, and contexts which make up the breadth and depth of Christian liturgy. Particular attention is given to reflection on the Church's worship as the arena of encounter with the Paschal Mystery of Christ and as a communal participation in the Trinitarian life. It is intended for MDiv and other Masters level students, with Roman Catholic liturgy as its particular focus. Classes will be divided into lectures and class discussions on assigned readings and related pastoral questions. Class participation and three writing assignments that demonstrate the ability to understand and adapt the pastoral and theological issues will be the basis for evaluation. ST1091-01 THEOLOGY: NATURE & METHOD Kromholtz (DSPT) 3 units T 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:3 This course (formerly titled "ST-1710 Theology: Method & Structure") is an introduction to the nature, method, sources, and structure of theology, focusing on (but not limited to) the Roman Catholic tradition and St. Thomas Aquinas in particular. Issues to be considered include: the nature and method of theology, the relationship between philosophy and theology, the theology of revelation, and the role of scripture, tradition, magisterium, faith, and reason in theology. The course also introduces students to writing research papers in theology. Format: Lecture and discussion. Requirements: 4000- to 5000-word research paper completed in stages, including peer critique; final presentation; in-class presentations. Intended Audience: MDiv, MA Theology, and other graduate students in theology. ST2160-01 INTRODUCTION TO THEOLOGY Radzins (PSR) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:102 The course emphasizes liberatory, and contemporary thought, through brief but in-depth encounters with historically pivotal or influential essays, texts, thinkers, and ideas. Students will learn to use and interpret basic theological concepts and models, using traditional vocabularies (doctrine of God, creation, theological anthropology, Christology, suffering and evil, soteriology, pneumatology, eschatology) by engaging a variety of theological texts critically and creatively. Students will be invited to participate as theologians while gaining a sense of how theology is a temporal, contextual, ST2003-01 SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY Jacobson (PLTS) 3 units MTh 11:10 AM-12:30 PM PLTS:GH1 A systematic examination of the classic Christian doctrines in light of the contemporary context and the church's ministry. 36 FALL 2015 ongoing and imaginative endeavor, in which present articulations are flooded with, produced by, argue with, extend, contradict, and depart from inherited claims about the relations between God, Jesus/Christ, the Holy Spirit, humanity, life, and the universe(s). Course format: Lecture and discussion. Evaluation: Class participation, Moodle posting, 2 brief papers and term paper. today's "public square," which is increasingly multi-cultural and multi-religious? What does theologically informed spiritual formation look like for social transformation? This course invites active engagement with both texts and communities, reflection and practice. By analyzing the development of and variety exhibited by approaches to Christology, we will ponder what Christ has to do with culture. In addition to classroom time, students will be expected to embark in small groups on a number of "learning journeys" to Bay Area social change organizations and to engage with their colleagues in collaborative projects toward constructing a Christian theology of social change and transformation. The class will meet on six Saturdays over the course of the semester in addition to learning journeys (class sessions meet from 9am to 3:00pm on these dates: 9/5, 9/19, 10/3, 10/17, 11/7, and 12/5). This course is also offered entirely online, but online students must first contact the instructor to assess whether the course requirements can be met in a student's particular location. This course is the inclass version of STRS 8284 Christ and Culture. Students wishing to take the online version of this class should register for STRS 8284. ST2232-01 HISTRCL DVLPMNT OF CHRISTOLOGY Krasevac (DSPT) 3 units MTh 8:10 AM-9:30 AM DSPT:3 The primary purpose of this lecture course (designed for the MA/MDiv/MTS levels) is to survey the main lines of Christological development from the earliest Patristic writers through Aquinas. The areas of particular concentration will be the Patristic development from Nicaea to Constantinople III and Aquinas' Christology and soteriology. Its secondary purpose is to survey the main lines of Marian doctrine, both as it has evolved historically, as it is being revisioned by contemporary authors. Modern and contemporary developments in Christology, including the various ^Quests^ of the historical Jesus, will be covered in ST 3115, Contemporary Christology, in the spring semester of 2016. The requirements for the course are attendance, and 20 pages of written work distributed over three essays. NOTE: This course is a prerequisite for ST 3115. [Auditors with Faculty permission] STRS2553-01 SACRAMENTS IN LATINO CONTEXT Fernandez (JST) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM JSTB:216 This lecture-seminar course provides an inculturated approach to the theology, preparation and celebration of the sacraments for a U.S. Church which is becoming predominantly Latino. It is especially designed to introduce the MDiv student both to the theology of the sacraments and to the pastoral resources available for celebrating sacraments in a Hispanic context. Its ethnographic approach, however, provides a model for sacramental inculturation to other contexts. The instructor is the co-author of one of its major textbooks, La Vida Sacra, one devoted to contemporary Hispanic sacramental theology. It is also designed to help prepare the student for the sacramental portion of the M.Div comps. Knowledge of Spanish is helpful but not required. Assignments include an article review, film reflection paper, and a final oral exam. [Auditors with Faculty permission] STHR2380-01 CHRIST,KRISHNA,BUDDHA Cattoi (JST) 3 units Th 6:10 PM-9:00 PM PSR:6 The first sessions of the course will explore the developments of Christology in the early centuries of the church, evaluating how Patristic Christological speculation understood the theme of Christ's embodiment. We shall then examine the extent to which the classical understanding of incarnation is questioned by the different construals of embodiment we find in devotional Hinduism and Mahayana Buddhism. Students will also be invited to reflect on the presence of female incarnations in Hinduism/Buddhism and on the possible impact of the phenomenon on inter-religious dialogue. We will then discuss how insights from Hindu/Buddhist speculative reflection could help us develop new contextual Christologies for the Asian continent. Students training for the priesthood are encouraged to reflect on the implications of the readings for contemporary missiology. The course is geared primarily towards MA, MDiv and STL students. [PIN code required] STSP2600-01 THEO/SPIRIT OF PRIESTHOOD Fernandez (JST) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM JSTB:216 This course is designed for candidates preparing for ordination to the Roman Catholic Priesthood. It will examine a sacramental and ecclesial understanding of presbyteral orders, and will include some reflection upon the biblical foundations for priesthood as they occur in the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures. Historical, Conciliar and papal documents will also form part of the content of the course. Contemporary Sacramental theology will be the underlying lens through which the Sacrament of Orders will be understood. Teaching methods includes lectures, STRS2384-01 CHRIST AND CULTURE Johnson (PSR) 3 units S 9:00 AM-3:00 PM MUDD:204 How do we think and engage theologically with the "world"? What can Christian theology offer to the complexities of 37 FALL 2015 discussions, papers, and guest speakers. This course can meet the requirement of the elective praxis course in the JSTB MDiv curriculum. [PIN code required; 25 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] of faith. This course examines the present moment in both the Church and culture within a North American context. By examining the cumulative impacts of globalization and secularization and by referencing prophetic voices addressing these evolving realities, the students will become conversant with various models of theology and spirituality which aptly demonstrate and reinforce the conviction that the Gospels are up to the challenges and tasks presented in this milieu. Among many of these prophetic voices has risen a discernible strain advocating the power of the shared journey of faith and a spirituality of accompaniment. A special focus will be given to various models of this shared journey as a fecund response to this challenging new moment. The course is designed as a facilitation by lecture, personal reading, and group discussion integrating three reflection papers designed for three distinct movements in the examination of this historical and cultural moment. Requirements: Reading of required materials, three theological reflections based on the material and its application to pastoral experience, and one classroom presentation. [Auditors with faculty permission] STRS3001-01 LIBERATION THEOLOGIES Radzins (PSR) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:204 Liberation theology arose as a way to address problems of human oppression. Subsequently, it has been considered "political" theology. This course explores the development of Latin American liberation theology by considering the relationship between politics and religion: what is the role of theology in public life? The course has two parts. The first explores the development of the movement from various appropriations of Marx to the writings of the foundational figures, Gutierrez, Dussel and Ellacuria. The second part considers the current state of liberation theology and its relationship to post-colonial thought, by reading the works of Althaus Reid, Petrella, and Maldonado Torres. STPS4110-01 SUFFERING,HOPE & A GOOD DEATH Love (SFTS) 3 units Th 8:30 AM-11:50 AM SFTS In the face of the human experiences of deep suffering and of death, what is the nature of the hope that Christians proclaim? In this course, we begin with stories of suffering, and our culture's conscious and subconscious refusal to look at deep suffering. We then look at the response to suffering and death found in the wisdom of the East, in Theravada Buddhism. From there, we look at the three central symbols of hope for Christians: The cross, and its revealing of a God who does not abandon us in our suffering; the resurrection of the dead to new and full abundant life; and God's providential journeying with us, in a redemptive way, through life. Finally, we look at the meaning of "a good death," at a way of approaching death that serves life. [Auditors with faculty permission] ST3067-01 THEOLOGY OF SACRAMENTS Kromholtz (DSPT) 3 units F 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:2 This course will introduce students to systematic theological reflection on the sacraments in general and on each of the seven sacraments. While other traditions will be touched upon, the focus will be on the Roman Catholic tradition, especially as found in the teachings of St. Thomas Aquinas. In this tradition, it is believed that (1) the sacraments, being instituted by Christ and deriving their power from him, introduce us to his divine life, and that (2) these sacraments are celebrated by the Church, so that this life may be professed and shared. This course focuses primarily on the first of these two fundamental aspects of the sacraments, although the second (liturgical) aspect will be present in many ways. Format: Lecture and discussion. Requirements: Weekly questions & comments in response to assigned readings, 2 essays of 300-1000 words, brief presentations, annotated bibliography, and a final exam. Intended audience: MDiv, MA, and MTS students. ST4152-01 VATICAN II: THEOLOGICAL IMPORT Griener (JST) 3 units T 11:10 AM-2:00 PM MUDD:103 A study of the Second Vatican Council (1962- 1965) in its historical, social, and cultural context, with critique and evaluation. Seminar: Weekly readings and papers. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] STSP3081-01 POST-MODERN EVANGELIZATION Roche (DSPT) 3 units MTh 11:10 AM-12:30 PM DSPT:ISS The "new evangelization" first proposed by Paul VI and strongly endorsed by John Paul II reaches far beyond older definitions of mission outreach. In this present moment, wrestling with the "dictatorship of relativism" and other realities addressed clearly and lovingly by Benedict XVI, religious educators have a duty to understand the times and to respond accordingly employing every resource at their disposal. Such a response demands of the educator and minister the high levels of integration and an ever-deepening STRS4216-01 INDIA-THEOLOGICAL IMMERSION Cattoi (JST) 3 units W 7:00 PM-9:00 PM JSTB:217 This theological immersion will give students the opportunity to explore the world of Hinduism as it is lived and practiced in the Indian states of Maharastra and Kerala, as well as the former Portuguese colony of Goa, where they will be able to 38 FALL 2015 get acquainted with the rich spiritual and theological heritage of Indian Christianity. Students will stay primarily in religuious institutions such as the Jesuit theologcate in Pune, and will also be able to take part in a short monastic retreat. Students will meet in the fall for a series of preparatory meetings and then travel to India in January. Students can register for the program either as a Fall class or as an Intersession class, but participation in both parts of the program is required. The course is only open to JST students. [12 max enrollment; PIN code required] Professor of Theology Rebecca Parker, has now resulted in a book, published in early 2010, co-authored with John Buehrens. Using readings from the history of American liberal theology and contemporary progressive sources, those enrolled--ministers, religious educators, lay leaders, and seminarians--will have a chance to deepen their theological competency and creativity, to reflect on the emerging postmodern context, and to engage in online discussion with others exploring a progressive approach to the classic issues of systematic theology, including the nature of God and humanity, the purpose of religious community, issues of salvation, worship, Christology and Spirit). ATTN: This is a Hybrid course - 8 online sessions and 6 residential sessions that low residency students can join via distance technology. [15 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] ST4362-01 INTRODUCTION TO LONERGAN Benders (JST) 3 units W 8:10 AM-11:00 AM PSR:6 This course offers students a lens to integrate core doctrines of Christian anthropology (creation, sin, grace and redemption) through the notion of conversion in the work of Jesuit theologian Bernard Lonergan. Students will also acquire a basic understanding of Lonergan's theological context and methodology as well as foundational ideas in his work, such as insight, judgment, general empirical method, and self-appropriation. Readings will include selections from Lonergan's seminal writings (Insight and Method in Theology) and secondary readings explaining these writings and their impact. Other assignments will foster direct appropriation of Lonergan's ideas through experiential learning and incorporate online presentations by leading scholars. Graded assignments will include class presentations, article reviews and a research paper or project. This course is suitable for advanced students who have taken at least two systematic theology courses. [25 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] ST4421-01 THEOLOGICAL SYNTHESIS/SFFRNG Burke (JST) 3 units M 9:40 AM-12:30 PM JSTB:216 THEOLOGICAL SYNTHESIS FROM A SUFFERING WORLD aims at theological synthesis and does so from a centering focus on the massive realities of historical suffering in our world. Working from core insights of liberation, political and feminist theologies, this synthesis course seeks to foster an internalized appropriation of some of the key systematic doctrines of Christian faith - Trinity, Christology, Salvation, Creation/Eschatology, and Church - in a way that investigates theological method and relates Christianity's classical dogmas to one another, to spirituality, and to ministry. This course is designed for advanced MDiv/ MTS and first or second year STL students. However, it is open to students in the MA, PhD, and STD programs. [PIN code required; 24 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] STHR4400-01 PHIL OF BEING AND NOTHINGNESS Berling/Lipscomb (GTU) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:205 This course will be a limited philosophical examination of Being and Nothingness in Western and Eastern Traditions, with special emphasis on the role of Nothingness (including notions of Nonbeing, Emptiness, Neglect, Not-yet-ness) and its implications for habits of thought and action. The course will follow a seminar format. Grading will be based on 2 inclass presentations (with papers), and a final paper. Intended audience: advanced MA/MDiv, and PhD. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment] STSP4725-01 CHURCH ON THE MOVE Boenzi (DSPT) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM DSPT The course examines contemporary ecclesial movements and their pastoral/spiritual contribution to the life of the Church. While John Paul II hailed religious movements as "a new Spring," many have created tension within the wider community. The course seeks to understand Christian movements from within, working with the testimony of leaders and members. Movements considered include: Catholic Action, Catholic Worker, Focolare, Communion and Liberation, Neo-Catechumens, Basic Ecclesial Communities, Cursillo, Sant'Egidio, Charismatic Renewal, Volunteer movements. Format: Class meets only during the first half of the semester; added class time to be decided. Lecture to seminar; evaluation: research paper and class presentations ST4402-01 OUR THEOLOGICAL HOUSE:UU THLGY Prud'Homme (SKSM) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM SKSM Many progressives do not realize that they even have a theology, much less that there is a systematic theological worldview that is characteristic of the liberal/progressive tradition. This course, developed by Starr King President and ST5020-01 METHODS AND DOCTRINES I Dodds (DSPT) 3 units 39 FALL 2015 W 9:40 AM-12:30 PM DSPT:2 This is a required course for doctoral students in the area of Systematic and Philosophical Theology, as well as for students who opt to choose this Area as their allied field- other advanced students are also allowed to take the course with the permission of the instructor. The course will give students a thorough grounding in theological methodology and hermeneutics, by way of a close reading of texts from a variety of historical and cultural contexts. Students will gain an understanding of the way in which doctrinal loci are imagined, encoded, and deployed across time and place, exploring some of the theological foci, strategies, and methods that have served as hinges for doctrinal development. By the end of the semester, students should have an understanding of the manner whereby, in the course of the history of Christian theology, some theological concepts have been sidelined, challenged, and reconceived, while others, once contested, have been retrieved and reconceptualized. [PIN code required; 18 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] 3 units F 11:10 AM-12:30 PM GTU:HDCO This student led seminar allows doctoral students an opportunity to present scholarly research in theology and science to their peers and participating faculty. This includes papers being prepared for GTU examinations, for presentation at the AAR, and so on. It also includes the opportunity to discuss timely materials related to theology and science from journals, media and other sources. [Auditors with faculty permission] STRS8284-01 CHRIST AND CULTURE Johnson (PSR) 3 units PSR:ONLINE How do we think and engage theologically with the "world"? What can Christian theology offer to the complexities of today's "public square," which is increasingly multi-cultural and multi-religious? What does theologically informed spiritual formation look like for social transformation? This course invites active engagement with both texts and communities, reflection and practice. By analyzing the development of and variety exhibited by approaches to Christology, we will ponder what Christ has to do with culture. In addition to classroom time, students will be expected to embark a number of "learning journeys" to social change organizations and to engage with their colleagues in collaborative projects toward constructing a Christian theology of social change and transformation. NOTE: This course is the ONLINE version of STRS 2384 Christ and Culture. Only students taking the course as an online course should register using this course number; all others should register for STRS 2384. This course meets asynchronously using Moodle (http://gtu.edu/library/students/moodlehelp). High-speed internet connection required. Occasional synchronous class meetings maybe scheduled; see syllabus for details. [Interview required; PIN code required] ST5121-01 THEOLOGY OF TILLICH Love (SFTS)/ Peters (PLTS)/Russell (CTNS) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM GTU:HDCO In this advanced M.A./M.Div. & Doctoral seminar we will study in depth the theology of Paul Tillich, arguably one of the two or three most distinguished Protestant theologians of the 20th century. His work is "required reading" for entering GTU doctoral students and this seminar specifically serves the needs and interests of students in the GTU Area of Systematic and Philosohical Theology. Advanced M.A. and M. Div. students will find it of interest as well. Texts will include the three volumes of his Systematic Theology, selections from his sermons and other writings, and materials relating Tillich's work to the natural sciences. Evaluation will be through active class participation and a research paper. [A thorough background in systematic and philosophical theology is strongly recommended. No background in science is required, though it is recommended; PIN code required; Auditors with faculty permission] RELIGION & PSYCHOLOGY ST5355-01 GOD:SEMINAR IN ADVANCED TOPIC Griener (JST) 3 units Th 6:10 PM-9:00 PM JSTB:217 This advanced seminar explores contemporary issues in the Christian understanding of God in a variety of global perspectives: regional-cultural, inter-religious, and scientific. Major issues and significant contributors to the fields will be studied and analyzed, including models of doing transcultural communication and comparative theology. Class presentations, annotated bibliographies, final 25+ paper research project. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] PS1009-01 INTRODUCTION TO PASTORAL CARE Thornton (PLTS) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM PLTS:C1 The purpose of this course is to grow in self-understanding as helping personsk to understand the context for situations of care, to learn an approach to pastoral care that can serve as a framework for working with people in a variety of crisis situations, to foster empathetic ways of listening and respondingl and to develop skills of self-criticism about our pastoral care work. These aims will be developed through assigned readings, class lecture and discussions, and role playing practice in small groups. [30 max enrollment] ST6015-01 THEOLGY & SCIENCE RESEARCH Russell (CTNS)/Peters (PLTS) PS1016-01 PAST COUNSLNG:PROCESS/SKILLS 40 FALL 2015 Ormond (DSPT) 3 units T 8:10 AM-11:00 AM DSPT:2 This course introduces basic concepts, attitudes, and skills of pastoral counseling. Consideration is given to the fundamental process and skills of pastoral counseling to more effectively deal with common pastoral concerns and problems. It further covers professional ethics for pastoral ministers including issues such as boundaries, power differentials, confidentiality, and sexual misconduct. Systematic training and practice in basic responding and initiating skills are provided. Multicultural implications are included. Intended audience: MDiv, MA, MTS. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] http://www.sati.org/chaplaincy-training/. Student will be interviewed, and if accepted, will pay a separate tuition of $1650 to the Sati Center. Tuition cost is based on Academic Year 2013/14, and is subject to change. [PIN code required; Interview required; Auditors excluded] PSSP4600-01 SPIRITUALITY & PRAXIS Prinz (JST) 3 units Th 6:10 PM-9:00 PM MUDD:103 This seminar brings political awareness into dialogue with theology, ecology and feminist hermeneutics. The seminar will work closely with different initiatives in the Bay Area that connect these aspects. The goal of the seminar will be to develop advanced theological reflections that are significant for current pastoral care issues and are important for a spiritual praxis. The format will be modified seminar sessions designed for students who have interest in pastoral care and spirituality. A foundational course is suggested but not obligatory. Intended audience: M.Div, MA/MTS and with requirements more specific to their interest and/or thesis: STL, STD and PhD students. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] PSRS2802-01 INTER CULTURAL PASTORAL CARE Griffin (PSR) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:204 This course offers a detailed examination of various racial/ethnic cultures within the Christian Church. Its aim is to equip students with knowledge about various cultures and how religious leaders can become more sensitive to the needs and interests of individuals within these groups. The course will address racism, xenophobia and classism as destructive forces in faith communities and explore ways to dismantle these structures in order to provide racial/ethnic healing and reconciliation. Through narrative, case studies and academic texts, this course will further examine the plight of the poor and pastoral care for economically marginalized individuals. In an exploration of cultural narratives, students will be invited to share their cultural narratives by engaging other cultural narratives. This approach allows for greater pastoral care, sensitivity, and awareness. [Introductory pastoral care course] PSRS8250-01 SEXUALITY AND PASTORAL CARE Griffin (PSR) 1.5-3 units PSR:ONLINE This is a synchronous course designed for the study of sexuality and religion and pastoral care approaches. Drawing from the work of theologians, James Nelson, Carter Heyward, and Kelly Brown Douglas and pastoral theologians Joretta Marshall and Larry Kent Graham, this course will explore issues of human sexuality and pastoral care. Students will study religious texts in constructing pastoral care responses to such issues as pre and post marital sex, marriage and divorce, betrothal, and women's and lesbian and gay ecclesial issues. Students will develop pastoral skills to facilitate difficult conversations about human sexuality. In this respect, students will be expected to understand traditional as well as progressive approaches to human sexuality. Special attention will be devoted to examining case studies and church policies/practices regarding lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues and assisting individuals and families through crises and celebrations regarding sexuality. In addition to M.Div. students, M.A. and CSR students are also encouraged to take this course. This ONLINE course meets at posted course meeting times using Adobe Connect, and you must be available in your corresponding time zone to participate in class. A telephone, webcam, high speed internet connection, and the latest version of Flash are required. PSHR3013-01 BUDDHIST CHAPLAINCY Fronsdal (IBS) 3-6 units n/a The practice of Buddhist chaplaincy demands the development of compassion and non-judgemental mind, and at the same time offers intense opportunities to develop these qualities. Chaplains serve in variety of settings in which people are under stress of one kind or another, including hospitals and hospices, prisons and jails, and military. This two-semester sequence of training is offered by the Sati Center (Redwood City, CA) in affiliation with IBS. Over the course of ten months, through discussion, readings, meditation, and internship, the student will not only learn about chaplaincy, but begin to develop the necessary skills and understandings for compassionate service to others who are in need, whether they are Buddhists or not. Course limited to IBS students. Both semesters must be completed for credit to be awarded. NOTE: To be accepted in the course, a separate application must be submitted directly to the Sati Center with a $50 application fee. PS8430-01 FORGIVENESS Fry (SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE 41 FALL 2015 "He (she) who is devoid of the power to forgive is devoid of the power to love." Martin Luther King, Jr. In this on-line class we will meet people from all over the world, from a variety of religious and cultural traditions, who have practiced forgiveness as a means of healing, reconciliation and/or liberation. Through readings, films, and exercises we will develop our own "forgiveness muscles" and deepen our spiritual practices. We will also explore ways of using forgiveness to strengthen our pastoral, prophetic and public ministries. This class will be experiential, drawing on personal narratives, neuroscience, psychology, practical theology and different faith traditions (including Judaism, Christianity, Islam and Buddhism). The first half of the semester will focus primarily on the development of interpersonal and pastoral skills in forgiveness. We will then explore the concept of "moral repair" or how we individually and collectively might apologize, repent, and/or make amends after wrongdoing. We will use case studies to explore how forgiveness and moral repair have been used with couples and families, in workplaces and religious institutions, and after war, genocide, apartheid and environmental disasters. We will also study how - or if - we can forgive ourselves and/or God. [PIN code required; 21 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] Dissertation/project stage of the SFTS DMin program. Pass/Fail only. [PIN code required] DM6017-01 PASTOR AS PERSON Choy (SFTS) 3 units n/a This foundational seminar (Doctor of Ministry program) considers each student's experience as a ministry practitionerwith her/his unique personal traits, relationships, talents, and limitations-- as he or she confronts the expectations, tensions, and other complex realities that accompany the practice of ministry and leadership. Serving as an opportunity to share personal and professional issues with ministry peers, the course focuses on the themes of calling, spiritual leadership, self awareness, family and congregational systems, and spiritual disciplines. [PIN code required] DM6018-01 THEOLOGY OF MINISTRY Choy (SFTS) 3 units n/a This foundational seminar explores the challenges of and opportunities for ministry in the 21st century, and encourages students to develop the critical skill of theological reflection. Students critique their ministerial role through their own theological experience of content, context and motifs in Christian ministry. This course honors diversity and the reality of our shared community with its plethora of experiences, beliefs, and values. [PIN code required] THEOLOGY & EDUCATION ED2088-01 ENGAGING YOUTH/FAMILY MINISTRY Jacobson (PLTS) 1.5 units Th 2:10 PM-3:30 PM PLTS:GH2 A consideration of the contents, contexts, and practices of effective youth and family ministries in a congegational setting. Emphasis will be given to the study and practice of faith formation and effective teaching and learning practices for children and youth. Students will develop a service learning curriculum to further the faith formation of children and youth. DR6001-01 PREPARATION FOR COMPREHENSIVES Doctrl Faculty (GT) 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a For PhD and ThD students only. DR6002-01 PREPARATION FOR DISSERTATION n/a (GT) 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a For PhD and ThD students only. SPECIAL COURSES MA1000-01 GTU MA RESEARCH METHODS Chretain (GTU) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:102 This course introduces MA students to research and writing methods for graduate work in theology and religious studies. The course content consists of three fundamental topics. The first is an introduction to religious studies as an academic discipline, focusing on major theorists and methodological and theoretical approaches. The second topic centers on how to productively conduct thorough and creative research in order to address a topic or question(s) effectively and extensively. The last section focuses on writing well- DM6010-01 D.MIN. SUPERVISION Choy (SFTS) 3-9 units n/a For SFTS D Min students, preparation of the dissertation/project. Pass/Fail only. [PIN code required] DM6013-01 D.MIN. SUPERVISION II Choy (SFTS) 3-9 units n/a 42 FALL 2015 researched papers that contain a solid thesis, supporting evidence, original voice, and correct citations. By the end of this course each student will complete several writing assignments, a draft thesis proposal (scope and nature of thesis, thesis statement, methodology, significance, chapter outline, and bibliography), along with a 10-12 page paper in the student's area of interest. The course is intended primarily for MA students in any stage of the program , but is also open to other masters level students focusing on academic research. This course is taught by PhD student Diandra Chretain with a Newhall Award, under the supervision of Arthur Holder. [25 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] 3 units n/a Only for students in the MA (Philosophy), non- thesis track who are in their final year of studies. MDV3025-01 DOMINICAN EXCHANGE PROGRAM Faculty (DSPT) 0 units n/a For DSPT students only. In order for exchange programs to be recorded on the permanent academic record, students must register for this course. There is a $50.00 charge per semester. Registration is necessary for students who wish to receive academic credit for their work in the exchange program or who wish to have student loan deferments certified for the time in which they participate in the exchange program. MA5000-01 IN THESIS Faculty 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a All Masters level students in the GTU community should use this designation if they are working on their thesis. MTS3000-01 MTS PROSEMINAR Faculty (JST) 0 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:103 MTS Proseminar, for JST students in the last semester of their MTS program, occasions a "look back" in the fall with a view that synthesizes one's theological studies and a "look forward" in the spring with a vision that imagines the next step integrated with one's past theological work. The contextual nature of all theology as well as approaches for doing theological reflection inform the synthesis. How various theological disciplines inform one another as well as how theological studies can shape and impact one's work in life crafts the integration. [Interview required; PIN code required; 10 max enrollment] MA5020-01 EXCHANGE PROGRAM,JAPAN Payne (IBS) 0-12 units n/a For study at the IBS affiliate, Ryukoku University, in Kyoto, Japan, or at Dharma Drum Buddhist College in New Taipei, Taiwan; open to IBS and GTU students only. In order for exchange programs to be recorded on the permanent academic record, students must be registered for this course. Registration is necessary for students who wish to receive academic credit for their work in the exchange program or who wish to be eligible for financial aid or deferment while they participate in the exchange program. [PIN code required; written permission of IBS administration required; Auditors excluded] NOV1100-01 NOVITIATE YEAR Faculty (DSPT) 0 units n/a For DSPT students only. Students enrolled in the Western Dominicans Novitiate Program (a program of DSPT) must register for this course for both semesters of their Novitiate Program. MA5300-01 MASC PROJECT Lettini (SKSM) 1-3 units n/a For SKSM Master of Arts in Social Change (MASC) students only. MASC students can split this course over two semesters or sign up for it during their last semester. This final project can take a variety of forms and should be representative of student learning and creative work in the MASC degree. Projects include research thesis, public presentations, designing and implementing educational curricula, organizing local/national conferences and special events, multimedia art-work, writing a book and more. The thesis topic, proposal and final draft need to be discussed and developed with the faculty. The project can have a public presentation. A total of 3 MASC Project credits are required for graduation in the MASC degree. Please discuss with instructor. [15 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] MDV3015-01 PLTS IN COMPS/THESIS/PROJECT Faculty (PL) 0-6 units n/a n/a- n/a For MCM/MTS/MDiv degree students preparing for comprehensive examinations, writing a thesis, or completing a project. 0.0-6.0 units. MDV3025-01 DOMINICAN EXCHANGE PROGRAM Faculty (DS) 0 units - n/a For DSPT students only. In order for exchange programs to be recorded on the permanent academic record, students MA5505-01 MA COLLOQUIUM Faculty (DSPT) 43 FALL 2015 must register for this course. There is a $50.00 charge per semester. Registration is necessary for students who wish to receive academic credit for their work in the exchange program or who wish to have student loan deferments certified for the time in which they participate in the exchange program. Upgrading a lower level course to an advanced or doctoral course. SRC9999-01 SPECIAL READING COURSE Faculty () 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a A special reading course designed by the student and faculty member. This course must have a special reading course form on file in your Registrar's office in order to receive credit for it. Obtain the form from your Registrar. MDV3050-01 DOMINICAN RESIDENCY PROGRAM Faculty (DS) 0 units - n/a For DSPT students only. Registration in this course is required for all DSPT students who are engaged in full-time ministry away from the school. DSPT students must also register for this course as a prerequisite for FE 2150. There is a $50.00 charge per semester. UCB9000-01 TAKING UCB COURSE(S) Johnson,J. (UCB) 0-12 units n/a n/a- n/a To use in Web Registration to indicate units to be taken under cross registration at UCB, Holy Names University, and Mills College. To be dropped when the cross registration form(s) is turned in to the Consortial Registrar for a specific course. MTS5020-01 MTS SYNTHESIS ESSAY Faculty (PS) 0-1.5 units n/a n/a- n/a For PSR students working on the Master of Theological Studies Synthesis Essay. Pass/Fail only. CSR3001-01 CSR FINAL PROJECT n/a (PS) 3 units n/a n/a- n/a For PSR students in the Certificate in Sexuality and Religion. Students should sign up for this course when they are working on their final CSR project. Pass/Fail only. This course is offered by PSR. [PIN code required; Interview required; Auditors excluded] NOV1100-01 NOVITIATE YEAR Faculty (DS) 0 units - n/a For DSPT students only. Students enrolled in the Western Dominicans Novitiate Program (a program of DSPT) must register for this course for both semesters of their Novitiate Program. GTUC6000-01 REGISTERED AT UCB Faculty () 0 units n/a n/a- n/a Course for those Joint Degree students registered at the University of California, Berkeley and not taking any GTU courses for a specific semester. STD6600-01 STD COMPREHENSIVES Faculty (JS) 1-12 units - n/a For JSTB STD students only. STD6601-01 STD DISSERTATION PREPARATION n/a (JS) 1-12 units - n/a For JSTB STD Students only. - SRC8888-01 SRC UPGRADE Burke,K. () 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a Upgrading a lower level course to an advanced or doctoral course. SRC8888-01 SRC UPGRADE n/a (JS) 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a 44 INTERSESSION 2016 1/4/16 – 1/29/16 INTERSESSION 2016 REGISTRATION DATES EARLY REGISTRATION: November 9-20, 2015 GENERAL REGISTRATION: January 4-January 29, 2016 (STUDENTS MAY REGISTER UP TO THE FIRST DAY OF CLASS) LATE REGISTRATION: (N/A) PLEASE NOTE: • Register for Intersession through WebAdvisor. • If you are using a PDF copy of the course schedule, check the online Searchable Course Schedule for any final course changes prior to registering (e.g., change of time, day, place, or description), as well as new courses, and cancelled courses. • Those using Early Registration should verify their schedules using WebAdvisor in the week before classes begin to ensure that course information hasn’t changed since registering. • Check with your school for policies concerning Intersession registration. • You may register up to the first day of the course in January, but because courses with limited enrollment may fill up during the Intersession registration period, it is to your advantage to register by November 20, 2015. • Courses for which insufficient interest is shown during the Early Registration period may be cancelled. TO AVOID PROBLEMS: • Read the instructions & schedule information carefully. • Note the start and end dates of your course as dates and course duration vary. • Check the online Schedule for changes (to time/dates/location/description). • If the course has a restriction, contact the Instructor for a PIN code. • If taking a Special Reading Course (SRC) be sure to turn in the SRC form to your registrar as well as completing the web-based part of the registration process. In the following listing of courses, course descriptions may continue from the bottom of one column to the top of the next column or from the bottom of one page to the top of the next page. 45 INTERSESSION 2016 criticism, modernist interpretations and sufi praxis will inform our deliberations. As an intensive course, students will be expected to come to class having done the required readings and with the first draft of the course requirements. The students will have a few weeks after the course to revise their assignments for submission. It is imperative that students do the preparatory work or they will not be able to participate as fully in class and they will also have difficulty completing the course requirements after the course. Course meets daily 1/11/16-1/15/16, from 9am-5pm, at Starr King School for Ministry.[PIN code required; 12 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] ART & RELIGION RANT1153-01 JESUS AND THE MOVIES Friedrich (GTU/CARE) 3 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-1:00 PM MUDD:103 How do we picture Jesus? What makes a representation "believable"? Can a movie fulfill the expectations we bring to a Jesus story? What happens when a sacred text is translated into popular image? Does cinema bring something new to our understanding of Jesus? Combining biblical criticism, Christology, art history, and cinema studies, this course examines numerous clips from 19 Jesus movies made between 1912 and 2014, showing how perennial issues of interpretation and representation are both repeated and transformed by the medium of film. Class meets M-F the first week and T-F the second week, 1/11/16-1/22/16, from 9:00am-1:00pm, in PSR 6. ETHICS & SOCIAL THEORY CEPS4000-01 AGING ISSUES & MINISTRY Greenstein (SKSM) 1.5 units TWThF 9:00 AM-1:00 PM SKSM This course is offered in two halves, each of which can be taken on its own. This half of the course will use popular cultural media - primarily film but also popular printed materials to draw attention to important current aging-related issues. ^Getting old^ is associated with many ^loss^ stereotypes: diminished power, physical attractiveness, independence, productivity - we will use popular cultural media to examine these stereotypes in the context of our cultural paradigms that encourage us to understand agingrelated issues only as a person's individual problems and ignore systems of privilege and difference. The culturally imposed messages that we absorb implicitly and explicitly from popular media lessen our ability to be effective in our ministries. Bringing them into our awareness helps us counter age-related oppressive belief systems. There will be some reading required beforehand. We will spend our time together reflecting on rhetoric in popular magazines, newspapers, films. [PIN code required; 8 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] Class meets daily, 1/19/2016-1/22/2016, from 9:00am-1:00pm at SKSM Fireside. RALS4300-01 LEADERSHIP, LITURGY, LEARNING Favreault (SKSM) 3 units MTWThFSSU 5:00 PM-9:00 PM SKSM A week-long immersion to explore the design, experience and leadership of multigenerational worship and ritual. Readings and activities will emphasize the role of liturgist as leader of faith formation in religious community. Texts, field trips, video and story will be drawn from the work of artists, performers, clergy and thinkers who guide our study and creation of transformational ritual and liturgical forms. There will be dancing, there will be poems, there will be food, there will be song, there will be art-making and picture taking. Course details will be sent in advance and will include reading, worship preparation and one writing assignment. Final project will be due in February. Please note that there will be evening sessions and local field trips built into the class schedule. Course meets M-Sun, 1/11/16-1/17/16, from 5pm-9pm, at SKSM Fireside Room. [PIN code required; 14 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] CE4703-01 HEALTH ETHICS Dowdell (SKSM) 3 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-5:00 PM SKSM Health and medicine lie at the intersection of thea/ologies, morals, and our bodies. This course provides a foundation in bioethics and the complexities of health, illness and health care. Students develop the ability to apply ethical theory and biopolitical knowledge to public health and clinical issues. Topics include: end-of-life decision-making, the care of vulnerable populations, genetic/reproductive technologies, and organ donation. The course includes a laboratory component; in which students lead analysis of key concepts and ethical problems in order to produce valuable arguments for bioethical debate as well as pastoral leadership. This CULTURAL AND HISTORICAL STUDIES OF RELIGIONS HRBS4820-01 QURAN: FEMINIST READINGS Anwar (SKSM) 3 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-5:00 PM SKSM In this course we will examine the worldview, language, narratives and teachings of the Quran to begin to understand the implications of the Quranic texts on the lives of women, on gender construction and gender relations. In the process we shall examine feminist writings on the Quran or on issues pertaining to Muslim women that relate to Quran. The course will involve an extensive and intensive critical engagement with the texts. The insights of historical-critical method, form 46 INTERSESSION 2016 course has four components: (1) pre-reading and assessment; (2) a collaborative story-catching project; (3) week-long January intensive; and (4) a final research paper, or case analysis on three bioethics topics due early February. [PIN code required; 25 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] Class meets daily, 1/25/2016-1/29/2016, from 9:00am-5:00pm at SKSM. FUNCTIONAL THEOLOGY FTRS2333-01 IMMERSION ISRAEL/PALESTINE Lin (PSR) 3 units OFFSITE Course coordinated in partnership with UCC Global Ministries and will be taught by Dr. Lii-Jan Lin and Rev. Dr. Peter Makari, Global Ministries Area Executive for the Middle East and Europe. This course will examine the historical and biblical context and perspective for the complex relationship between these areas of the Middle East. It will also engage with Global Ministries Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel, to accompany Palestinians and Israelis in their non-violent efforts to advocate for justice and peace and engage in interfaith dialogue. Participants will spend time in Israel, Palestine, Jordan and other locations. Course will include 2-3 pre-immersion class sessions, dates and times in November and December 2015 TBD. [Interview required; PIN code required; Auditors with faculty permission] RELIGION & SOCIETY RSFT4015-01 STRATEGIES FOR SOCIAL CHANGE Rueters-Ward (SKSM) 1.5 units TWThF 1:30 PM-5:30 PM SKSM This course is open to all interested in social change - whether as a community organizer, congregational leader, activist, scholar, non-profit leader, educator, or in other role/s. We will contrast a diversity of tactics used to assess organizational and community needs, mobilize religious and secular leaders, and build effective partnerships for justice. Central to this exploration is the idea that struggles for justice are interconnected, calling us to build new and diverse partnerships, and expanding analysis of how to make change. Together, participants will bring to life theologies for "collective liberation" - building a world that embodies the inherent worth and dignity of all beings. This interactive course requires reading in advance, and utilizes case studies of social change efforts which employ an intersectional approach: linking class, race, religion, gender, sexuality, dis/ability, ecological, and other issues and identities. Course meets daily, 1/19/16-1/22/16, from 1:30-5:30pm at SKSM Fireside Room. [16 max enrollment] FTRS2333-01 IMMERSION ISRAEL/PALESTINE Makari (PSR) 3 units OFFSITE Course coordinated in partnership with UCC Global Ministries and will be taught by Dr. Lii-Jan Lin and Rev. Dr. Peter Makari, Global Ministries Area Executive for the Middle East and Europe. This course will examine the historical and biblical context and perspective for the complex relationship between these areas of the Middle East. It will also engage with Global Ministries Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel, to accompany Palestinians and Israelis in their non-violent efforts to advocate for justice and peace and engage in interfaith dialogue. Participants will spend time in Israel, Palestine, Jordan and other locations. Course will include 2-3 pre-immersion class sessions, dates and times in November and December 2015 TBD. [Interview required; PIN code required; Auditors with faculty permission] RSHS4084-01 WORKING THROUGH WORK ISSUES Malarkey (SKSM) 3 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-5:00 PM SKSM We begin addressing the myth of the American Dream, and then step out of that framework to consider the U.S. work experience through the lenses of race, ethnicity, gender identity, abilities, income and class. As issues affecting the U.S. workplace also influence our congregations and ministerial constituencies, so we will delve into corporatist systems issues including layoffs, bullying, wage theft and discrimination. Growing income inequality is likewise a concern to our ministries and we will consider the history of income inequality in the United States and compare and contrast that history with the current reality. In this class we will also take a close look at the 2008 mortgage crisis with special attention to those most affected by it. There will be prerequisite readings which will be included in the final syllabus. This class is taught by a Hilda Mason Fellowship Recipient. [20 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] Class meets daily, 1/4/16-1/8/16, from 9:00am-5:00pm at SKSM. FTRS2450-01 REFUGE IN THE CITY Flunder (SFTS) 3 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-1:00 PM PSR:6 This two-week intensive course will immerse students in hands-on learning in ministries with the most marginalized people in the inner city: ministries with people who are homeless, in recovery from substance abuse, and living with HIV/AIDS. We will also visit hospital and juvenile hall chaplaincy programs and feeding programs. Students will learn about the City of Refuge theology and model for ministry development and will reflect on praxis each day. Class generally meets three days at PSR, but may meet off-site at various Bay Area cities at various times for the remainder of the course. Students should expect to attend class for 47 INTERSESSION 2016 mornings, afternoons, and sometimes evenings in approximately four hour blocks, including the Saturday in between the two weeks of class. Students should also expect to arrange transportation means to travel to off- campus sites. Most sites are accessible by BART or car-pools. Class meets weekdays, 1/4/16-1/15/16, from 9:00am-1:00pm location TBD. paper; formatting footnotes and bibliography; and preparing an audience-oriented summary of a paper. Participants will also learn how to identify and use the online resources of the GTU library. Finally, the course will introduce PSR's Plagiarism Policy and will offer students strategies for avoiding plagiarism. This ONLINE course meets asynchronously using Moodle, 7/6/15-7/31/15 (Summer 2015) or 1/4/16- 1/29/16 (Intersession 2016). It has no required meeting times. High-speed internet connection required. Occasional synchronous class meetings may be scheduled; see syllabus for details. [12 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] See http://moodle.gtu.edu/mod/resource/view.php?id=227 17 for full technology requirements. HISTORY HSFT4462-01 UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST HISTORY Faculty (SKSM) 3 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-5:00 PM SKSM This course begins with an examination of the (alleged) antecedents to Unitarianism and Universalism in preReformation Europe. We begin with development of Unitarianism in Poland, Transylvania, and England, then on to that of North American Unitarianism through its classical age, the Transcendentalist development, and the various crises of identity and purpose that develop into and through the late 19th and 20th centuries. Then we turn our attention to Universalist ascendency, decline, and then consolidation with Unitarianism. Careful attention will be paid throughout to the Unitarian/Universalist social location in relationship to class, race, and gender identities, and how these sometimes enabled and sometimes impaired social justice advances. Course meets daily, 1/4/16-1/8/16, from 9am- 5pm, at SKSM Fireside Room. [PIN code required; 30 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] SPECIAL COURSES DM6000-01 D.MIN. SEMINAR Walker (PSR) 3 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-1:00 PM MUDD:104 This seminar is designed to assist PSR Doctor of Ministry students focus their projects for the first year in the program before their ^Request to Proceed with Project^ form is submitted. Attention will be given to contextual and interdisciplinary methods of inquiry and multi-cultural environments of ministry today. Intended for PSR DMin students only. Course meets weekdays, 1/11/16-1/22/16, from 9:00am-1:00pm in MUDD 104. DM6021-01 DMIN ANNUAL CONTNUING SEMINAR Lawrence (PSR) 0-1.5 units MTWThF 9:00 AM-1:00 PM MUDD:102 This seminar is required for PSR DMin students each year after the DM 5000 & 5001 series or DM 6012 are completed. This seminar is designed to maintain peer conversation and development of student projects regularly for every year the student is active in the program. Students will have an opportunity to present on the progress of their project during this seminar to each other among different cohorts. Before the seminar meets each Intersession, each student is required to submit a written Progress Report to the faculty person leading the seminar. DMin students should register for 1.5 credits the first two years this course is taken and 0.0 units for all subsequent years. Class meets daily, 1/11/16-1/15/16, from 9:00am-1:00pm, at MUDD 102. INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES IDS8100-01 ART OF ACADEMIC WRITING Fetherolf (GTU/PSR) 1.5 units ONLINE THE ART AND TECHNIQUE OF EFFECTIVE ACADEMIC WRITING This writing course is designed to orient students to the primary types of academic writing they will be asked to do during their years at PSR and the Graduate Theological Union (GTU), including reflection papers, research papers, critical essays and exegetical papers. The course is intended to help students learn or ^dust off^ the writing skills they will need to succeed academically while in seminary. Through online lectures and discussions, extensive exercises, and brief homework assignments, participants will learn the art and technique of composing critical writing in a U.S. academic setting. Among other topics, this course will cover: developing a topic; identifying reliable resources; reading and note-taking; constructing a thesis; writing and revising the outline, body, introduction and conclusion of a 48 SPRING 2016 SEMESTER 2/1/16-5/20/16 SPRING 2016 REGISTRATION DATES EARLY REGISTRATION: November 9-20, 2015 GENERAL REGISTRATION: January 18-January 31, 2016 LATE REGISTRATION: February 1-12, 2016 PLEASE NOTE: • Registration through WebAdvisor is available only during the dates listed above • Access to web registration is not available between the dates for Early and General Registration • After the deadline for Late Registration, all registrations or changes in enrollment must be made using paper forms submitted to the registrar of your school UCB CROSS REGISTRATION SPRING 2016 INFORMATION UCB CROSS REGISTRATION FORMS ARE DUE FEBRUARY 5, 2016 Friday, February 5, at noon, is the deadline for filing the Cross Registration form in the GTU Consortial Registrar’s Office. There will be no exceptions to this deadline. INSTRUCTION AT UCB BEGINS ON JANUARY 19, 2016 In the following listing of courses, course descriptions may continue from the bottom of one column to the top of the next column or from the bottom of one page to the top of the next page. 49 SPRING 2016 materials and text, interactive qualities of the book form, and bookmaking as a process of spiritual development. ART & RELIGION RAHS1061-01 CHRISTIANITY IN 50 OBJECTS Barush (GTU/JST) 3 units F 12:40 PM-3:30 PM JSTB:217 This survey course will examine the history of the Christian Church from the Apostolic Age to today through a close reading of 50 objects, inspired by the BBC and British Museum's recent collaboration A History of the World in 100 Objects. Prompted by the increasing scholarly interest in the art and material culture(s) of religion across a number of academic disciplines (including religious studies, history, literature, and anthropology) a select corpus of monuments, spaces, sculptures, pictures, liturgical art, and other objects will serve as a framework for discussion. Students will be evaluated through final research papers on an original topic of their choice (70% of final grade), class participation (10% of final grade), and an oral presentation (20% of final grade). Intended audience: any interested graduate student. RAHS1604-01 CHRISTIAN ICONOGRAPHY Morris (DSPT) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM DSPT:1 An historical survey of the signs, symbols, modes, manners, myths, legends, and art forms of Christian culture, primarily from Biblical figures to time-honored saints. Emphasis on visuals with complementary readings. Lecture format; periodic quizzes, final paper or art project. Intended audience: MDiv, MA/MTS, DMin; PhD and ThD can enroll at higher level with special research paper added to requirements. RA1700-01 CHORALE Haynes (PSR) 1.5 units M 6:40 PM-9:30 PM, T 10:10 AM-12:00 PM PSR:CHPL Students explore the role of music in worship and in the life of faith through rehearsing music from a variety of cultures and stylistic periods and singing in worship services. The course emphasizes vocal development, theological reflection, building community through music, and music as a spiritual practice. Meets Mondays 6:40-9:32pm and Tuesdays 10:10am -12:00pm in the PSR Chapel. PSR community members encouraged to join. Open to the general public without registration. RA1156-01 VISUAL ARTS AND RELIGION Schroeder (CARE) 3 units T 8:10 AM-11:00 AM PSR:6 This lecture course will explore the ways in which people across time and space visualized their religious beliefs. We will begin with religious art of the Neolithic and Bronze Age, then consider the temples and cult statues of the ancient Greeks and Romans, and move on to study the rise of Christianity and Islam and their artistic traditions up to the present day. The course will cover a wide geographical span--from the Near East to North America and from the British Isles to Ethiopia. There will be three papers pertaining to a single object with religious subject matter as well as a midterm and a final exam. Intended audience: MDiv. [Auditors with faculty permission] RAHS2500-01 WOMEN, POETRY & THE SACRED Wheeler (GTU) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:102 Poetry is a challenging but apt medium for the communication of spiritual life. In this course, we will use poems to get a glimpse of what constituted women's lives for different contemporary American women, all of whom prioritized religious experience. We will examine how the poems portray women's lives. Do they do so convincingly? How have they done so? Have these poets overlooked vital areas of women's lives? We will examine how these women constructed positive views of female life: in friendship, family, places of worship, the workplace, and nature. We will also distill these poems' potential to show us how to observe the world around us, how to relate to the divine, and how to grow more confident in our lives as spiritual and gendered individuals. RAHS1300-01 THE BOOK AS SPIRITUAL VESSEL Sjoholm (PAOI) 3 units Th 11:10 AM-2:00 PM MUDD:104 This course explores the book as a receptacle for personal and cultural sacred knowledge. A global perspective is emphasized and serves to introduce a wide variety of devotional book forms and materials that have conveyed spiritual expression throughout history. Through a variety of transformative exercises, meditation, and writing prompts, students will translate their spiritual energy into the forms, materials, and content of devotional books. Coursework includes the contemplative practice of sumianagashi (Japanese marbling) and techniques such as accordion structures, books inspired by Ethiopian healing scrolls, and the codex. Basic book structure will be presented with an emphasis on mixed media and contemporary aspects of bookmaking. Weekly readings and projects will address issues of the metaphoric use of RAHS4179-01 ART, RITUAL, AND CULTURE Morris/Thompson (DSPT) 3 units T 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:1 This course will examine the ways in which visual arts, music, architecture, and ritual have affected Western understanding of culture and society. The course will be interdisciplinary and will combine lecture and seminar style discussion. Topics will include, among others, soundings from Second Temple 50 SPRING 2016 Judaism, Paleo-Christian cult, medieval royal architecture and ritual, Renaissance Italian city ceremonies, shrines and pilgrimage in the Spanish Empire, French Revolutionary Cult of Reason, Nazi and Fascist Propaganda, and the postChristian afterlife of this inheritance in American popular culture. Requirements will include active participation in discussions and a research paper. [25 max enrollment; Auditors with Faculty permission] This course introduces students to the intersection between the fields of dance and religious studies, by examining dance from a religio-cultural perspective. The course begins with an overview of how the body, and dance in particular, is talked about in the field of religious studies. From there, we will move through dance scholarship on Christian sacred dance, African-American "soul" and dance, Indian dance, and indigenous Native American dance forms in order to chart each cultural group's contributions to the U.S. dance canon while also identifying their contributions as religious dance practices and frameworks. In addition to the readings, we will frequently view dances in class and learn how to write and talk about both dance and religion, topics whose perceived ephemerality make them challenging yet productive sites for exploration. RAHS4311-01 MARIAN ART Barush (GTU/JST) 3 units Th 12:40 PM-3:30 PM JSTB:217 SPRING 2015 Queen of Heaven, Immaculate Conception, Mother, Advocate, Star of the Sea: from the early Christian centuries to today, representations of the Virgin Mary have evolved and changed, and are as diverse as her many titles. Using a cross-disciplinary approach, this course will examine the making, meaning, and reception of Marian images within the various social, religious, and cultural milieus from which they emerged. We will consider Theotokos icons, Italian Renaissance imagery of the Virgin and Child, nineteenthcentury portrayals of Mary as the Immaculate Conception, the miraculous Madonnas at Guadalupe and Czestochowa, and vernacular Marian shrines. The course will include film screenings, gallery trips, and a visit to a mission church. Students will be evaluated through final research papers on an original topic of their choice (70% of final grade), class participation (10% of final grade), and an oral presentation (20% of final grade). Final projects with creative art components encouraged. Intended audience: any advanced graduate student interested in the art and material culture of religion. SPRING 2016 Queen of Heaven, Immaculate Conception, Mother, Advocate, Star of the Sea: from the earliest Christian centuries to today, representations of the Virgin Mary have evolved and changed, and are as diverse as her many titles. Using a cross-disciplinary approach, this course will closely examine the making, meaning, and reception of Marian images within the various social, religious, and cultural milieus from which they emerged. For example, we will consider Greek icons depicting Mary as Theotokos, Italian Renaissance imagery of the Virgin and Child, nineteenth-century portrayals of Mary as the Immaculate Conception, the miraculous Madonnas at Guadalupe and Czestochowa, and vernacular Marian shrines. Seminar format with in-class discussion and weekly reading assignments. Students will be evaluated through final research papers on an original topic of their choice (70% of final grade), class participation (10% of final grade), and an oral presentation (20% of final grade). Intended audience: any advanced graduate student interested in the art and material culture of religion. BIBLICAL STUDIES & BIBLICAL LANGUAGES BS1021-01 NT GREEK II: AN INTRODUCTION Fetherolf (GTU/PSR) 3 units TF 8:10 AM-9:30 AM MUDD:103 This is the first half of a year long course introducing the basic grammar of biblical Greek. The course focuses on the basics of phonology (sounds), morphology (forms), and syntax (word order and function) for biblical Greek. The primary purpose of this course is to establish a foundational understanding of biblical Greek for students pursuing further study of the language. Issues of exegesis and interpretation will be discussed where appropriate, but the main focus of this course will be learning the grammar of biblical Greek. NOTE: This course is taught by PhD student Christina Fetherolf with a Newhall Award, under the supervision of Annette Weissenrieder. BS1037-01 ECCLESIASTICAL LATIN II Anderson (JST) 3 units TF 8:10 AM-9:30 AM JSTB:216 A continuation of Ecclesiastical Latin I. Same text, same requirements. My hope is to finish the Collins Text before the end of the term and have time for reading of real texts from Bible and Christian Latin authors such as Augustine and Aquinas. BSSP1066-01 BASICS: BIB STUDIES &SPIRTALTY Green (DSPT) 1.5 units n/a This module is the first of three 1.5 unit modules that may be taken individually or in sequence: BSSP 1066, BSSP 1067, and BSSP 1068. It covers the basic storyline as presented by the Bible. Please consult with the professor before registering. [PIN code required] RAHS4400-01 DANCE IN RELIGIOUS STUDIES Summers (GTU/CARE) 3 units Th 5:40 PM-8:30 PM MUDD:103 51 SPRING 2016 and sexuality studies, with a focus on Queer Theory. Finally, they will explore how their studies of biblical texts may contribute to the sometimes-divisive conversations regarding issues of gender and sexuality in contemporary communities. Offered as both a live and online course. NOTE: This course is the in-class version of BSRS 8220 Gender, Sexuality, and the Bible. Students wishing to take the online version of this class should register for BSRS 8220. BSSP1067-01 BASICS:BIB STUDIES/SPRTLTY B Green (DSPT) 1.5 units n/a This module covers the basic methods for reading biblical material at the academic and graduate level; it presumes familiarity with the biblical storyline. It is one of three 1.5 unit modules that may be taken individually or in sequence: BSSP 1066, BSSP 1067, AND BSSP 1068. Please consult the professor before registering. [PIN code required] BSNT2400-01 EARLY CHRISTIANITIES Lin (PSR) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:103 This intermediate seminar explores early Christian writings canonical and non-canonical - to investigate the varieties of beliefs and communities during the beginnings of many Christian movements. We'll read early Church Fathers, heresiologists, and the writings of/about supposed ^heretics.^ Students will present on different Christian groups, and we'll consider the formation of beliefs, community, and faith identities in order to better understand these elements at work today. For MDiv and MA students, PhD students have the option to enroll with increased reading and research. [15 max enrollment] BSSP1068-01 BASICS:BIB STUDIES/SPRTLTY C Green (DSPT) 1.5 units n/a This module covers some hermeneutical considerations and also some of the early rabbinic and patristic interpretation of biblical texts, with emphasis on why and how interpreters make choices. You must have taken not only BSSP 1066 and 1067 but also other Bible coursework at the 2000-3000 level. It is one of three 1.5 unit modules that may be taken individually or in sequence: BSSP 1066, BSSP 1067, and BSSP 1068. Please consult with the professor before registering. [PIN code required] BS4003-01 ADVANCED HEBREW READING II Schellenberg (SFTS) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:204 Reading of poetic and advanced texts. [At least four semesters of biblical Hebrew] BS1128-01 ELEMENTARY BIBLICAL HEBREW II Melgar (GTU) 3 units MTh 9:40 AM-11:00 AM MUDD:206 This is the second half of a year long course introducing the basic grammar of biblical Hebrew. The course focuses on the basics of phonology (sounds), morphology (forms), and syntax (word order and function) for biblical Hebrew. The primary purpose of this course is to establish a foundational understanding of biblical Hebrew for students pursuing further study of the language. Issues of exegesis and interpretation will be discussed where appropriate, but the main focus of this course will be learning the grammar of biblical Hebrew. [BS 1127 or equivalent; 20 max enrollment] NOTE: In Spring 2015, this course is taught by GTU PhD student Marla Porter with a Newhall Award, under the supervision of Annette Schellenberg. NOTE: In Spring 2016, this course is taught by GTU PhD student Cesar Melgar with a Newhall Award. BS4014-01 ADVANCED GREEK Park (SFTS) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:206 This course is designed for master's and doctoral students who want to study ancient Greek as a significant tool for their research. Following the current Greek language exam protocol, the class will read both Classical (Attic) Greek and the LXX. Attic Greek grammar will be introduced/reviewed first, and then syntax and vocabulary will be studied in depth as the assigned texts are discussed in class. [Intermediate Greek or its equivalent] BSRA4130-01 ISRAELITE/JUDEAN RELIGION Brody (PSR) 3 units F 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:102 This seminar course aims at a fuller understanding of Israelite and Judean religious ideas and practices through critical use of texts from the Hebrew Bible, contemporary epigraphic texts, iconography, and archaeology. The temporal focus will be on the Monarchic, or Iron II, period: 1000-586 BCE. Geographic focus will be on the southern Levant, with comparative look at the religions of the neighboring cultures of Phoenicia, Edom, Moab, and Ammon as a mode for contextualizing BSRS2200-01 GENDER, SEXUALITY, BIBLE Valentine (PSR) 3 units Th 6:10 PM-9:00 PM n/a This course will explore the intersections between biblical interpretation and issues of gender and sexuality. Students will engage texts from both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament. They will examine a variety of methods in biblical studies, with a focus on postmodern methods of interpretation. They will also engage in interdisciplinary study of contemporary theories and strategies in the fields of gender 52 SPRING 2016 contemporary Israelite and Judean religious beliefs and practices. Course requirements include presentations on selected secondary readings, class discussions, and a final research paper on a thematically related topic. methods are applied in the criticism of actual biblical texts. [12 max enrollment; PIN code required] OT4420-01 OLD TESTAMENT PROPHETS Hens-Piazza (JST) 3 units n/a (This is a hybrid cs on-line with three Saturday meetings) An investigation of the historical, compositional, and literary dimensions of the prophetic books of the Hebrew Bible. An exploration of how the message of the biblical prophets integrates the theological traditions of the past with the distinctive socio-cultural realities of their own context. Central to these investigations will be our study of these biblical texts in conjunction with relevant outside readings as well as contemporary ministerial issues and challenges with which they intersect [OT foundation course with completed exegesis study; PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] This hybrid course will meet 2/7/15, 3/14/15 and 5/2/15 from 9:00am-3:30pm. Spring 2016 dates TBA. BSRS8220-01 GENDER, SEXUALITY, BIBLE Valentine (PSR) 3 units Th 6:10 PM-9:00 PM PSR:ONLINE This course will explore the intersections between biblical interpretation and issues of gender and sexuality. Students will engage texts from both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament. They will examine a variety of methods in biblical studies, with a focus on postmodern methods of interpretation. They will also engage in interdisciplinary study of contemporary theories and strategies in the fields of gender and sexuality studies, with a focus on Queer Theory. Finally, they will explore how their studies of biblical texts may contribute to the sometimes-divisive conversations regarding issues of gender and sexuality in contemporary communities. Offered as both a live and online course. NOTE: This course is the ONLINE version of BSRS 2200 Gender, Sexuality, and the Bible. Only students taking the course as an online course should register using this course number; all others should register for BSRS 2200. This course meets asynchronously using Moodle (http://gtu.edu/library/students/moodlehelp). High-speed internet connection required. (Occasional synchronous class meetings maybe scheduled; see syllabus for details.) NEW TESTAMENT STUDIES OT3275-01 OLD TESTAMENT EXEGESIS Schellenberg (SFTS) 3 units MTh 8:30 AM-10:00 AM SFTS HEBREW EXEGESIS OF THE OT The main purpose of this course is to introduce methods of critical study of the Old Testament and the application of these methods to the interpretation of biblical texts with a view to preaching or teaching in the church. This course also offers the opportunity to continue the study of Hebrew by reading passages at an introductory level. Course format: seminar. Evaluation: Classroom participation; written assignments; ordination exam of PC (USA). NT1004-01 NT INTRODUCTION: Park (SFTS) 3 units Th 9:00 AM-11:50 AM SFTS SPRING 2015 GOSPELS The Gospels emerge in social and complex political context of the Roman Empire. This course examines the Gospels and contemporaneous texts within their first-century Greco-Roman contexts (especially Jewish contexts), pays attention to archaeological and inscriptional materials of the time, and demonstrates contemporary hermeneutical strategies, including feminist and postcolonial. Students will also consider the controversial contemporary contexts in which they and others interpret the New Testament. MDiv, MA SPRING 2016 This course is a general introduction to the canonical and apocryphal Gospels and Acts in early Christian literature. Major methodological issues in current Gospel scholarship will be introduced first. Then, each text of the Gospels and Acts will be interpreted in terms of its literary characteristics, historical background and theological ideas. Throughout the course, explicitly or implicitly, hermeneutical implications of the critical interpretation of the bible will be raised and discussed. OT4000-01 LITERARY CRITICISM & THE OT Hens-Piazza (JST) 3 units M 12:40 PM-3:30 PM MUDD:103 A survey of the history of literary criticism and an overview of modern literary theory itself, with special attention to its various systems and approaches. An examination of methods for biblical studies that have developed with reference to these literary approaches. A consideration of how these NT1500-01 NEW TESTAMENT MIRACLE STORIES Weissenrieder (SFTS) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM PSR:6 In this class we will focus on the question of reality in New Testament miracle stories. We will pursue this question in the light of ancient narratives, pilgrimages, medical texts, and visual images, the latter especially from the Catacombs. Since David Hume if not earlier, the interpretation of miracle OLD TESTAMENT STUDIES 53 SPRING 2016 stories has been dominated in the West by the binary distinction of fact vs. fiction. Even the latest research accepts this modern opposition as self-evident. The resulting ontology continues to underly the form-critical study of NT miracle stories, leading to interpretive nuances that presuppose the distinction of fact vs. fiction but have no basis in either the texts in question or their concepts of reality. The class will examine critically this extraneous mixing of modern concepts of reality with interpretations of miracles. To this end, the class will address how ancient concepts of reality, always complex, came to expression in stories of miraculous healings/ gifts/ changes of nature and their reception in ancient medicine, art, literature, theology and philosophy. Audience: MDiv, MA/MTS. [Introductory Greek] NT2530-01 METHODS:STUDY OF THE SYNOPTICS Racine (JST) 3 units MTh 12:40 PM-2:00 PM MUDD:102 Canon, Gospel literary genre. Synoptic fact. Contents and theological perspectives of the synoptic gospels. Introduction to exegetical methods such as historical criticism, narrative criticism and reader's response. Format: Lectures/discussion. Evaluation: Written assignments/research paper/in class and online discussions. [35 max enrollment] NTRS3512-01 RACE/ETHNICITY AND THE NT Lin (PSR) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:102 This intermediate course is divided in two parts. The first considers possible concepts of race and/or ethnicity in the ancient Mediterranean world while the second focuses on racial/ethnic theory today and ethnic minority hermeneutics of the NT in particular. Both ancient primary sources, the NT, and contemporary scholarship form the reading materials for the class. For MDiv and MA students, PhD students may enroll with expanded reading and research. [15 max enrollment] NT2000-01 NEW TESTAMENT EXEGESIS Weissenrieder (SFTS) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM PSR:6 SPRING 2015 This is an introduction to the basic hermeneutical theories from Romanticism to postmodernity and the standard exegetical methods currently practiced in New Testament interpretation. Theoretical discussion will be followed by interpretation of selected passages from various parts of the New Testament. Due attention will be given to the ordination exam of the PCUSA, while the course aims at wider applicability. Format: Lectures and discussions. Evaluation: Final exegesis paper. Intended Audience: MDiv, MA/MTS. [Elementary Greek] SPRING 2016 This is an introduction to the basic hermeneutical theories from standard historical critical methods to new approaches like postcolonial theory currently practiced in New Testament interpretation. Theoretical discussion will be followed by interpretation of selected passages from various parts of the New Testament. Due attention will be given to the ordination exam of the PCUSA, while the course aims at wider applicability. Format: Seminar. Evaluation: Final exegesis paper. Intended Audience: MDiv, MA/MTS. [Introductory Greek] NT4900-01 AS NVER SEEN B4:VISIONS IN NT Racine (JST) 3 units F 9:40 AM-12:30 PM JSTB:217 This seminar will examine material from the NT which describe visionary experiences found in the synoptic Gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, 2 Corinthians, and Revelation. It will use approaches from cultural anthropology, intertextuality, narrative criticism, and media studies to study these segments of the NT. Format: lectures/seminar. Evaluation: student presentations, short written assignments, term paper. [15 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] NT8200-01 MTHDS:STUDY OF THE SYNOPTICS Racine (JST) 3 units JSTB:ONLINE Canon, milieu, Gospel literary genre. Synoptic fact. Contents and theological perspectives of the synoptic gospels. Introduction to exegetical methods such as historical criticism, narrative criticism and reader's response. Format: Readings, audio podcasts, discussion forum, wiki. Evaluation: Written assignments/participation. This is the online version of NT2530 Methods: Study of the Synoptics designed for MDiv/MTS/MA. [12 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] NT2251-01 THE GOSPEL OF JOHN Green (DSPT) 3 units MTh 12:40 PM-2:00 PM DSPT:1 This course will be a basic introduction though at the intermediate level to the fourth Gospel, studying its literary character in detail, with some emphasis as well on its historical issues and reception within the tradition. The structure and symbolism will receive special attention, with students expected to use modern methods (as well as classic methods) to explore these features. Some previous critical study of the NT (either an introduction or another NT course) is required, since the basic tools of NT study must already be in hand. Short written assignments (three to five) and substantial reading of secondary sources and class participation will be used to evaluate student progress. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] 54 SPRING 2016 SPPS2526-01 WOMEN'S SPIRITUAL QUEST Ronzani (JST) 3 units T 11:10 AM-2:00 PM JSTB:216 This seminar will engage women in a process of reflection on their experience from the perspectives of spirituality, psychology, and the arts. We will consider women's religious experience; relationships; personal/social transformation; the body; nature. Class will include feminist readings, written reflections, discussion, and ritual. Format: Seminar. Evaluation: Informed class participation, reflection papers. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment; Auditors with Faculty permission] CHRISTIAN SPIRITUALITY SP2001-01 SURVEY HISTORY OF XIAN SPIRIT Pham (JST) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM JSTB:216 This course offers a survey studies of the history of Christian spiritualities. Selected figures and movements found in various historical periods in the development of Christianity will be studied through different approaches and perspectives, e.g. intercultural, feminist, etc. Since spirituality remains prior to and basis of theology, the course focuses and emphasizes on spirtual experiences, formation and practices. After having studied these figures and movements, students has the opportunity to reflect on their own spiritual experiences and practices moving towards applying and forming their own spirituality and that of the others in their ministry. The course is organized as a seminar. Thus, clasS participation is required. Student evaluation consists of 3 short reflection papers (1 - 3 pages) coming out from either assigned reading or group discussion and a final research project ( ~ 10 pages). [20 max enrollment; Auditors with Faculty permission] SP2527-01 SPIRITUAL LIFE AND LEADERSHIP Liebert (SFTS) 1 unit W 8:30 AM-10:10 AM SFTS SPRING 2015: CENTERING PRAYER Centering Prayer is a spiritual discipline designed to facilitate our ability to listen and respond to God's presence more fully in our lives. It develops an ancient prayer form of meditative prayer (as presented in The Cloud of Unknowing) in a contemporary idiom. Centering Prayer is an apophatic form of prayer that can help us to co-operate with God's gift of grace by moving beyond thoughts, words, images and feelings into the silence of our hearts. It is there, at the center of our being, that we learn to attend to the Spirit of God who dwells within. It is not meant to replace other kinds of prayer, and it in fact depends upon the regular practice of cataphatic forms of individual and corporate prayer that rely on thoughts, words, and images. During the time of Centering Prayer, our intention is simply to rest in God's presence and consent to God's action within. At other times, our attention and intention moves outward to discover and respond to God's presence in the world. Centering Prayer is a discipline to be learned and practiced regularly as an integral part of our spiritual life in the community of faith.During this semester, we will practice Centering Prayer in plenary and small groups, exploring the importance of silent listening to God for our daily lives and our ministry in the church. Reading and reflection papers complement the practice. [PIN code required; 24 max enrollment] FALL 2015: CONTEMPLATIVE LISTENING. The primary act of ministry is listening: to God, to oneself, to others. This class will introduce basic listening skills, but from a grounding in the contemplative tradition, rather than from psychology or communication theory. The semester will open with several weeks in which we investigate and practice contemplative prayer, understanding that contemplation invites us to a whole contemplative life-style. We will then learn a simple model for contemplative listening (one week) that we will practice for six subsequent weeks. Participants will take turns relating three meaningful experiences. We will also introduce other conversation skills (summaries, questions, and other probes), and conclude with pastoral applications and connections to other semesters of Spiritual Life and SPRS2175-01 TRANSITION & TRANSFORMATION Lescher (JST) 3 units W 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:205 "The only constant is change." This course will examine the experience of transition from the perspective of the Christian tradition, the human sciences, and contemporary spirituality. Students will be encouraged to reflect upon the transitions they have experienced/are experiencing in their own lives. The class will unfold in four parts: 1) A look at the lived experience of transition in the stories of two persons; 2) Analysis of the process of transition; 3) Transition as seen through the lens of theology and psychology; and 4) How might we sustain transformation in our lives? Both personal and cultural transformation will be considered. [15 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors with Faculty permission] SP2495-01 SPIRITUAL DIRECTION PRACTICUM Murphy/Ferdon (JST) 3 units F 9:40 AM-12:30 PM PSR:6 To refine a focus on religious experience in spiritual direction for those engaged in or preparing for this ministry. This course will enable participants to identify, articulate and develop religious experience. Each class will combine theory and practical application to ministry through presentations, verbatims, role plays, case studies, journal exercises and group discussion. Requirements: Two verbatims; assigned readings; two reflection papers; two worksheets. Combination of students with varying requirements [PIN code required; Interview required] 55 SPRING 2016 Leadership. Complements but does not replace the basic Pastoral Care and Counseling course. Limited to SFTS ministry students (MDiv, DMin and MATS students), particularly those electing the Spirituality Concentration. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] SPRING 2016: DISCERNMENT: SYSTEMS AND STRUCTURES. Social Discernment is a process of prayerful reflection and small group sharing that helps individuals (and, by extension, groups) to become more clear about how God is at work in systems and structures and might be calling them to respond. This process can lead to action on behalf of more just systems and to a clearer understanding of the relationship between one's spirituality and action on behalf of justice. Learning strategies include: reflection and weekly written response to a series of questions, small group sharing, reading, two brief reflection papers. Participants must commit themselves to the weekly class and to the whole discernment process in order to receive credit. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] SPCE4339-01 LUTHER & IGNATIUS:CONVRSTIONS Fullam (JST) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:205 Martin Luther and Ignatius Loyola wrote in the 16th century, one a prominent voice in the Protestant Reformation, the other in the Catholic Reformation. Despite theological differences, they have common emphases in spirituality and the moral life: an emphasis on Jesus Christ, an awareness of the divine presence in everyday life, and a deep commitment to service. The course will explore similarities and differences using primary and secondary source writings. This is a seminar: grades will be based on facilitating and participating in discussions, weekly short papers, and a final paper. [15 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] SPOT4444-01 BIBLICAL ISSUES/XTN SPRTLTY Green (DSPT) 3 units T 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:2 SPRING 2015: MEMORY SCRIPTURE SPIRITUALITY This seminar will examine that way Hermeneutics of Memory are operative in Old Testament texts, especially the Psalms, and in post-Auschwitz Political Theology (particularly in the concept of "Memoria Passionis" of Johann Baptist Metz). In the seminar students will demonstrate how the implications of such hermeneutical approaches will impact their research projects on particular biblical texts. This course serves as the capstone course for Christian Spirituality students; it is open to others with strong background in Bible study. Assessment by seminar participation, short working papers, presentation and research paper (18-25 pages) [12 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors with Faculty permission] SPRING 2016: The course will examine features of the book of the prophet Jeremiah, emphasizing in particular ways in which the prophet coped with frustration and failure and may be understood to have come to insights of compassion. Anticipate a seminar style course, where the responsibility to lead will be shared and the responsibility to participate actively assumed. There will be a course paper, 20-25 pages. This course is designed particularly for students in Christian Spirituality completing their biblical comprehensive requirement but is suitable for biblical studies students as well. [Recent critical work in OT, ideally in prophetic texts; PIN code required; 12 max enrollment; Auditors excluded]. SP2603-01 IGNATIAN VISION & CULTURES Pham (JST) 3 units Th 7:10 PM-9:40 PM JSTB:216 This course offers in-depth studies of Ignatian vision and cultures that have become foundational for Ignatian spirituality, Ignatian discernment, and Jesuit mission and inculturation. The core reading materials will come from Ignatius' own writings, including the Autobiography, the Spiritual Diary, the Spiritual Exercises, the Constitutions of the Society of Jesus, and his voluminous correspondence, as well as the writings of Ignatius' companions. The course is organized as a seminar, and class participation is expected and valued highly. Student evaluation consists of 2 short reflection papers (1-3 pages) and a final research project (~10 pages). [20 max enrollment] SPRS4024-01 SPRTLTY/NONVLNT SOCL TRNSFRMTN Faculty (SKSM) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM SKSM This course will explore the quests of Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr., Dorothy Day and Cesar Chavez for social transformation through nonviolence. Critical to the course will be an emphasis on the connection between spirituality and social action. What were the influences, e.g., Thoreau, Tolstoy, DuBois, that helped shape the zeitgeist of their times? How were strategies determined and employed? What is essential to an effective nonviolent campaign? What were the faith foundations of these extraordinary leaders? What were their relationships to their communities? How did they manage to keep their resolve in times of disappointments? These are some of the questions the course will explore. Limited Skype/virtual attendance allowed. [PIN code required; 14 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] ATTN: This course is HYBRID (Residential with Skype participation). SP4571-01 FRANC D SALES SOURCES&SPIRIT Boenzi (DSPT) 3 units TF 8:10 AM-9:30 AM DSPT:2 Francis de Sales, Bishop of Geneva from 1602 to 1622, is known as a French-speaking spiritual author and director, but few understand his roots in the Italian Renaissance and how his training in secular environments prepared him to for his life mission as one of the foremost Catholic Reformers in the 56 SPRING 2016 aftermath of the Council of Trent. This course provides the opportunity to examine his principal works as well as lesser known personal writings in an attempt to understand the basis for Salesian spirituality that he (perhaps unknowingly) originated -- a lay spirituality in the Catholic tradition that paved the way for Vatican II. Primary sources studied and discussed; final grade based on research paper and class presentation. the required year long introductory survey of the entire Buddhist tradition. Format: Seminar/lecture. Evaluation method: Participation/term paper. SPRING 2016: Introduces the Buddhist traditions transmitted to East Asia and the development of new traditions, We will take up a broad historical approach to developments in China, Korea and Japan Second half of the required year long introductory survey of the entire Buddhist tradition. Format: Seminar/lecture. Evaluation method: Participation/term paper. SPHS4915-01 ORTHODOX XTN SPIRITUALITY Klentos (PAOI) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:204 SPRING 2015 A general introduction to the broad themes of and major figures in Eastern Christian spiritual traditions. Working almost exclusively with primary texts (in English translation), students will encounter a wide range of traditions (Syrian, Greek, Armenian, and Slavic) from the second century to the present day. Format is seminar. Evaluation will be based on one in-class presentation and a final synthesis paper. SPRING 2016 A general introduction to the broad themes of and major figures in Eastern Christian spiritual traditions. Working almost exclusively with primary texts (in English translation), students will encounter a wide range of traditions (Syrian, Greek, Russian, French, and American) from the second century to the present day. Format is seminar. Evaluation will be based on one in-class presentation and a final synthesis paper. HR1596-01 INTRO THERAVADA BUDDHIST TRAD Quli (IBS) 3 units F 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF THERAVADA BUDDHIST TRADITIONS This course will survey the traditions of Buddhism commonly referred to as Theravada, with reference to their doctrine, development, and concrete localizations throughout South and Southeast Asia, as well as the contemporary West. We will also interrogate the shifting representations of these traditions that emerge in their interface with modernity. The course will incorporate both foundational primary texts and representative secondary scholarship in an attempt to broadly chart the living and historical dimensions of these traditions and the terms of their contemporary study. HRST2793-01 HINDU YOGA: THEOLOGY & ETHICS Faculty (GTU) 3 units T 6:10 PM-9:00 PM PSR:6 THE LIVING TRADITIONS OF HINDU YOGA THEOLOGY, ETHICS, & THE ARTS Yoga is practiced globally with extensive branches in the West. Interpretations & adaptations of Yoga today are almost exclusively associated with fitness & wellness in the popular imagination. Yet, Yoga includes but surpasses health. With millennia-old roots in Hindu spirituality, Yoga has traditionally represented major paths, each meant to lead the practitioner to enlightenment, and the fulfillment of the human potential defined differently by diverse Yoga traditions. This course will study the living traditions of Hindu Yoga, including the paths of knowledge, wisdom, love, and selfless service, and explore the yogic journey through its literature, philosophy, ethics, art, music, & research on yogic states of consciousness. The course is appropriate for MA and MDiv students and will require reflections papers, a literary review/analysis of a biography, and a research paper. CULTURAL AND HISTORICAL STUDIES OF RELIGIONS HRSP1508-01 INTRO TO BUDDHIST MEDITATION Seelawimala (IBS) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS The focus of the course will be given to Early Buddhist Meditation Practices based on Buddhaghosa's Visuddhi Magga (The Path of Purification) and the Pali Nikakya Texts. The goal of Buddhist Meditation will be discussed as a mental training for simple comfort of day-to-day life and ultimate achievement of perfect mental health, through Samatha and Vipassana methods of meditation. The course will include lecture, discussion and actual practice of meditation exercises. Class presentations, final research paper and a glossary of technical terms are required from students for evaluation. [Auditors with faculty permission] HRHS1518-01 BUDDHIST TRADTNS OF EAST ASIA Faculty (GTU) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM IBS BUDDHIST TRADITIONS OF EAST ASIA SPRING 2015: Introduces the Buddhist traditions transmitted to East Asia and the developments of new traditions. Second half of HR2995-01 TPCS THERAVADA BUDDHIST THGHT Fronsdal/Clark (IBS) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS THE RADIANCE OF EMPTINESS IN EARLY BUDDHISHM The realization of Emptiness is integral to the 57 SPRING 2016 worldview, practice, and soteriology taught in Early Indian Buddhism. This class will explore the different aspects of the teachings on Emptiness in the Pali discourses in relationship to some of the core concepts of the early Indian Buddhism, e.g., teachings on impermanence, not-self, dependent origination, meditation, and enlightenment. We will also look at the evolution of these teachings into the later Mahayana teachings on Emptiness. Evaluation: class participation, midterm paper, final paper. HR3300-01 TERMS, TEXTS & TRANSLATIONS Payne/Matsumoto (IBS) 3 units W 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS A study of the key terminology of Buddhist studies across the tradition, the ways in which texts are studied, and issues of translation. [Auditors with faculty permission] HRHS4362-01 JEWISH REVIVAL IN POLAND Shapiro (CJS) 3 units T 6:10 PM-9:00 PM n/a The modifier "Jewish" communicates enormous symbolic power in today's Poland, a country where less than one percent of the population identifies as Jewish. This course explores how and why public events defined as Jewish by their presenters factor into changing ways that Poles define themselves as a nation in the post-Communist era. It will provide both a chronological survey of Polish-Jewish history, as well as an introduction to thematic concepts, including philo- and anti-Semitism, collective memory and cultural entrepreneurship. Through primary and secondary historical sources, literature, biography and autobiography, and cultural analyses, students will gain an understanding of the "symbiosis and ambivalence" that historically characterized these relations. MA/ MTS; PhD / ThD students welcome. Students will be expected to write a one-page summary of each week's reading and come to class prepared to discuss their point of view. A 10 - 15 page paper due on the last day of class will examine in depth a topic raised during the course and based on consultation with the instructor. This course is taught by PhD student Eleanor Shapiro with a Newhall Award, under the supervision of Naomi Seidman. [Auditors with faculty permission] HRCE3014-01 ISSUES IN BUDDHIST MINISTRY: Yamaoka (IBS) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM IBS Explore the difficulties and direction in Buddhist Ministry within the Western context. Also, through a person-centered educational process, explore ways and means to develop one's personal ministry for the west. To study and evaluate an educational process will be the core element of the course. Lecture/seminar with research papers which include personal reflection documents within the words of the Buddhist teachers. Course is for MA students with an emphasis on ministry and chaplaincy. HR3017-01 READINGS IN MAHAYANA TEXTS Bridge/Kuwahara (IBS) 3 units M 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS:130 TRIPLE SUTRA An introduction to selected Mahayana Buddhist texts in English translation. In this semester we will read the Three Pure Land Sutras: the Larger Sukhavativyuha Sutra, the Smaller Sukhavativyuha Sutra, and the Contemplation Sutra on the Buddha of Infinite Life. The course will introduce the overall structure of each text and examine major doctrinal issues which form the foundation of the Pure Land teaching. Course format: lecture. Evaluation method: Participation/term paper. HR4569-01 WORKS OF SHINRAN IV Matsumoto (IBS) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM IBS WORKS OF SHINRAN IV: TANNISHO Introduction to the teachings of Shinran through a study of a key summary of his thought. Course will utilized English translations to support the study of the original text. HRPH 1614 Introduction to Shin Buddhist Thought, and at least one year of college level Japanese language study, or instructor's permission is prerequisite to enrollment. Course is required for ministerial aspirants. Fulfills Area Distribution Requirement for Area I. [PIN code required] HR3040-01 ZEN BUDDHISM Pokorny (IBS) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM IBS This is an introductory course aimed at developing a sound basic understanding of and experience in Zen Buddhist meditation practices. We will explore teachings on the Soto Zen practice of shikantaza ^just sitting^ as well as koan practice in both the Soto and Rinzai traditions. Participation in meditation practice as well as discussion of traditional and contemporary literature on Zen meditation practice are essential aspects of the class. We will read and discuss writings that focus on Zen meditation practice as it occurs in ritual, bowing, and ordinary, everyday activities such as cooking. We will also consider Zen meditation practices as they relate to fundamental Buddhist teachings and practices. There are no prerequisites for this course. [Auditors with faculty permission] HRHM4817-01 SUFI DHIKR Chadly (SKSM) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM SKSM "If you remember Me, I will remember You" ~Qur'an 2:152~ Throughout the world Sufism is identified as the mystical dimension of Islam emphasizing the student's journey towards higher states of consciousness and unity with The 58 SPRING 2016 Divine. Just as the surfer becomes one with the wave so does the human heart become one with The Eternal through the practice of Dhikr, remembrance of The Divine. In this experiential course students will explore the many facets of Dhikr, including chanting, prayer, meditation, Qur'anic recitation, movement, and music. Sufi communities, or "tariqas," are found throughout the world and vary from country to country. This course will touch upon many different traditions and focus primarily on the Naqshbandi tradition from Dagistan. [12 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] HR8344-01 TOPICS BUDDHIST TRDTNS WEST Mitchell (IBS) 3 units IBS:ONLINE This course surveys the history of Buddhist traditions in the West. Beginning with 19th century colonial contact and Asian immigration through 21st century global exchanges, we will explore the various ways that Buddhists, Buddhist communities, and Buddhist ideas have come to and developed in Western contexts. Previous Buddhist studies courses helpful but not required. Format: seminar with lecture and discussion. Evaluation: class participation, book review, final research paper. NOTE: This course is co-sponsored by SKSM. HR6006-01 ISSUES IN THE STUDY OF RELIGN Berling (GTU)/Jiwa (CIS) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM GTU:HDCO Seminar examining six contemporary books in the study of religions. Participants critique each book, and then discuss its implications for their own work. Student presentations and final paper that is an early draft of the CHSR methodology exam. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment] HR8401-01 GLOBAL RELIGIOUS TRADITIONS Lipowitz (SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE This course will examine the major global religions from a cross-cultural, multi-religious perspective. Taking into consideration that a course that explores many religions cannot be comprehensive, we will consider the religions from a thematic perspective by analyzing fundamental beliefs and practices in the various religious traditions. In addition, we will also examine assumptions underlying the discipline of religious studies. Students will engage through weekly readings and forum discussion, as well as other interactive learning activities, as part of the online learning community. Students of all faiths and backgrounds are invited and encouraged to enroll. Priority given to off-campus SKSM students. This course is taught by GTU PhD student Cassie Lipowitz with a Newhall Award, under the supervision of Ibrahim Farajaje. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] HR8250-01 ESOTERIC BUDDHISM Payne (IBS) 3 units IBS:ONLINE A survey of the history, teachings, doctrines, practices and textual traditions of esoteric, or tantric, Buddhism. Particular attention in this course will be given to the relations between Buddhist tantric traditions and other ritual traditions of India. [Auditors with faculty permission] HRPS8322-01 PSYCH ASPECTS BUDDHISM III Bermant (IBS) 3 units IBS:ONLINE This course, third in an IBS series, emphasizes the questions that arise when psychological theories and conclusions arising out of Buddhist doctrine and practice enter into sympathetic dialogue with theories, methods and knowledge norms undergirding modern experimental psychology. Topics covered include theories of mental and behavioral causation; the nature of sensation and perception; theories of cognition including cognitivism, emergence/parallel processing, and enaction; motivation; emotion; and questions of physical and mental health at the interface of religious and scientific worldviews. This is an on-line course. Students will participate in discussions with each other and the instructor, based on assigned readings, using the facilities on the Moodle on-line system. Each student will submit a term paper of approximately 4,000 words arising from a topic decided in cooperation with the instructor. Past experience with the course suggests that students from a variety of seminars at GTU enroll. [Some background in psychology, especially experimental psychology/cognitive science; PIN code required] NOTE: This course is co-sponsored by SKSM. HRHS8455-01 TOPICS IN BUDDHIST THOUGHT Grumbach (IBS) 3 units IBS:ONLINE BUDDHISM AND FOOD This class looks at the history of Buddhism in Asia through the lens of food. Although Buddhism is often thought of as espousing vegetarianism and eschewing alcohol, this view perhaps overly relies on textual sources and an orthodox approach to religion. By examining food practices-what monastics and laypeople actually do with food and drink-we will discover alternative representations of Buddhism that link the religion to agriculture, fertility, family, reproduction, defilement, and transgression. These aspects of life may be considered rather "non-Buddhist," but in the various cultures of Asia it is through the mundane that one enters into the transcendent. Lecture and discussion will be held online in real time using a voice/video application (such as Skype). Please contact the instructor as soon as possible for details. Format: online voice lecture and discussion; term paper. [Auditors with faculty permission] NOTE: This course is co-sponsored by SKSM. 59 SPRING 2016 MTh 9:40 AM-11:00 AM DSPT:18 This course (designed for the MA/MDiv/MTS levels) will consider the fundamental principles of moral theology (the teleological drive for happiness and perfection, the moral virtues, freedom and voluntariness, natural law, prudence, the determinants of the moral act, moral ^objectivity^ and intentionality) from the perspective of the Roman Catholic tradition, particularly in the lineage of Aquinas. We will also examine in some detail the contemporary debate over the nature and importance of the ^indirectly voluntary.^ Students should be prepared to engage in disciplined and critical reading and thinking in the Aristotelian/Thomist tradition, and be willing and able to synthesize a large amount of sometimes complex and difficult material; this is not an easy course. The format is lecture, with opportunity for questions and discussion; students will be required to write a book review and take an in-class final examination. Class attendance is required. [Auditors with faculty permission] HRPH8488-01 TOPICS IN ZEN BUDDHIST THGHT Leighton (IBS) 3 units IBS:ONLINE SUBTITLE: ZEN AND THE LOTUS SUTRA This online course will feature textual study of selected chapters from the Lotus Sutra, a central scripture in Chinese Buddhism, and even more pivotal in Japan, and also commentaries and references from Zen teachers. Through colorful parables and shifting visionary viewpoints, the Lotus Sutra elaborates and expresses such key East Asian Buddhist themes as the subtle workings of skillful means; the Diversity of spiritual needs and approaches and their unity in the One Vehicle; the mystical pervasion of awakening beings in both space and time; and the centrality of faith to Buddhist awakening. In addition to examining the meaning of the sutra's teachings and their relevance to modern spiritual concerns, we will also consider the sutra's widespread influence on East Asian philosophy, art, and literature, and the role of the Lotus Sutra in Japanese Zen. We will especially study Dogen's use of the Lotus Sutra, as well as its importance for figures such as Hakuin and Ryokan. [Some Introductory course in Buddhism; 15 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] CE3050-01 CATHOLIC SOCIAL TEACHING Farina (DSPT) 3 units Th 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:3 This is a seminar course focused on the Roman Catholic social teaching as expressed in the encyclical tradition from Leo XIII to Pope Francis and the Regional Bishops' Conferences of the Catholic Church. The study will examine the development of Catholic social thought as it emerges from the reading of the "signs of the times" in light of sacred scripture, natural law, and virtue.[PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] ETHICS & SOCIAL THEORY CE1051-01 INTRO TO CHRISTIAN ETHICS Miller (PSR) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM n/a MORAL DECISIONMAKING IN A POSTMODERN WORLD Leading churches, social advocacy groups, and nonprofit organizations through processes of moral discernment and decision-making has never been quite so challenging. Over the past half-century churches have been pushed from their once privileged place at the very center of social and public life to the very margins. In addition, ongoing church scandals and what some view as unwarranted intrusions into the political arena have further eroded the moral authority traditionally accorded to churches, clergy, and other religiously identified leaders and fostered a profound skepticism and even hostility towards organized religion. This entry level course takes seriously the challenges and opportunities for doing Christian Ethics in a Postmodern context. Rather than an ^issues^ or ^rules^ -based approach, the class will focus on the key concepts, tools, and skills that students will need to clarify their own beliefs and perspectives, understand the ^art^ of moral reflection and discernment, and provide ethical leadership and guidance to others. Intended audience: MDiv students. CE3230-01 CHRISTIAN SOCIAL ETHICS O'Neill (JST) 3 units MTh 11:10 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:102 This course will consider the tradition of Roman Catholic Social Teaching and modern social ethics. Issues to be treated will include Christian interpretations of violence and non-violence, war and peace, social reconciliation, global and domestic justice, human rights, bioethics, and ecological ethics. In assessing these issues, we will consider the interpretative perspectives of a consistent life ethic, liberation theology and Christian feminism. Lecture/discussion. Evaluation: Regular attendance and participation; midterm oral examination; final open-book examination (10-15 page research paper in lieu of examinations possible for MA students). Intended audience: MDiv, MA/MTS, STL. [PIN code required] CE3615-01 ETHICS & SPIRITLTY OF MNSTRY Fullam (JST) 3 units M 3:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:204 What makes a good minister? What makes a bad minister? Who do you hope to become in the course of your ministry? What sustains and enlivens pastoral ministry? What particular CE2045-01 FUNDAMENTAL MORAL THEOLOGY Krasevac (DSPT) 3 units 60 SPRING 2016 issues and concerns are of significance in the practice of ministry? In this course, we will bring into dialogue aspects of the ethics and spirituality of ministry in various contexts: parishes, schools, prisons,etc. The aim is to develop an account of some of the virtues relevant to pastoral ministry. This account should both reflect the best aspects of the ministers who have been formative for us, and serve as a guide in our own future practice of ministry. I assume that all students bring to this class some experience in volunteer or professional ministry. While it is not a requirement of this class that students be engaged in practical ministry during this term, I strongly encourage you to do so. The course is organized according to four salient virtues for ministry: selfcare, justice, fidelity and trustworthiness, and is most suitable for M.Div. and ministry-related MA students. This class is taught as a seminar. Grades will be based on weekly reflection papers and a final paper on a topic of the student's choice. [Graduate introductory course in ethics or moral theology; PIN code required; 15 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] in the broader societal context in which these individual situations and problems are situated. You will be offered a wide variety of readings and resources to use in your own work. This course can be taken as a follow-up to Aging Issues and Ministry, Jan. 2016. {PIN code required; 32 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] RELIGION & SOCIETY RSFT2480-01 API SEXUALITIES & CHRISTIANTY Delegencia (PSR) 3 units T 6:10 PM-9:00 PM JSTB:216 This course will explore the experiences and realities of Asian Pacific Islander (API) LGBT people across various Christian traditions (Evangelical, mainline Protestant, Roman Catholic). To understand the intersections between API, LGBT, and Christian identities, we will interact with a variety of media, including readings of historical and modern texts, film and video, guest speakers, simulation activities, theater, and a field experience in an affirming API Christian church. Students will gain transformative knowledge about the various intersections of API sexualities with Christianity and be equipped with tools for ministry and activism in API, LGBT, and Christian contexts. Major topics include: LGBT history and realities in the United States, Asia, and the Pacific; identity and coming out, as individuals and families; family, parents, and parenting; discrimination / marginalization / micro-aggressions; advocacy and organizing in API faith communities; HIV/AIDS and stigma in API faith communities; arts and culture; and, ministry and theology in API LGBT contexts. CEPS4005-01 PREACH IT! Faculty (SKSM) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM SKSM Theories abound about how to construct authentic sermons. In the non-exegetical homiletic path of UUism/Liberal religion, there is another possibility. This experiential preaching course will focus on finding your authentic style and voice. In constructing sermons, we will encounter: Presence. Power. Passion. Humility. Humor. The truth in one's chest and gut-the body somehow singing through thought. Further, we will explore tapping the neural ground of connection between speaker and listener and seek sources of relevance for words that speak truth, lift hope, inspire action and offer blessing. A preacher for 18 years, a public speaker for over 35, the instructor loves the pulpit whether in a house of worship, on the street, or in the halls of government. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] RSSP4568-01 DR. HOWARD THURMAN Blake (PSR) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM n/a DR. HOWARD THURMAN: THE SEARCH FOR COMMON GROUND IN THE 21ST CENTURY Considered a 20th Century prophet by historian, Lerone Bennett, Howard Thurman created a body of spiritual insights exploring the relation between mysticism and social action. He was among the first African Americans to meet with Mahatma Gandhi, 1936, and was a mentor to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. He was co-founding minister of the nation's first avowedly interracial, interfaith congregation, The Church for The Fellowship of All Peoples. This course will focus on comprehending the ideal of community as expressed through the thought and ministry of Dr. Howard Thurman. Essential to the journey together will be the discernment of evidence of oneness across racial, sexual, gender orientation, cultural, religious and national boundaries. CEPS8400-01 AGING ISSUES & MINISTRY Greenstein (SKSM) 1.5 units SKSM:ONLINE This course can be taken alone, but it is also the second half of a winter semester intensive course. It is suitable for students interested in chaplaincy, pastoral and congregational ministry, as well as for students interested in broader sociological perspectives. We will share our attention between focused pastoral and broader societal aspects of aging. Our culture encourages us to understand aging-related issues only as a person's individual problems and ignore systems of privilege and difference. These misapprehensions lessen our ability to be effective in our ministries. We will touch on ageism/stereotypes; changing roles; spiritual development; loss of independence; paid/unpaid caregivers; dementias; congregational programs; death/dying, both individually and RS4950-01 RESEARCHING LIVED RELIGION Baggett (JST) 3 units 61 SPRING 2016 T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:206 This course will introduce students to research methods for investigating religion sociologically. Students will learn how to pose well-conceptualized and theoretically informed research questions and then devise research designs based upon empirical study. Particular focus will be on training students to use in-depth interview, participant observation, content analysis and survey methodologies. Students will read exemplars of each of these methods and also be given opportunities to practice them vis-à-vis research topics generated by both the professor and themselves. This course is very highly recommended not only for Religion and Society students, but for any students who simply want to become knowledgeable about these methods or who intend to use one or more of them in addressing their thesis or dissertation topics. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] Videla Cordova Quero (PSR/SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE Across Asia and Latin America we are witnessing the emergence of queer faith-based communities in very dissimilar contexts and with very different histories. Exploring the way that these communities address issues of ecclesiology and rites would benefit students to explore the ways that our global village is moving in terms of the intersections among religion, gender, and sexuality. The course investigates what are the struggles and mechanisms that these communities have to cope in their context with ingrained homophobia, transphobia, lesbophobia and the like. At the same time, it will examine how those communities enact interreligious and multireligious dialogue and rituals and how faith and activism are coupled to counter oppressive discourses and colonial performativities in their own situations. The course also features guest ministers and activists from different context to whom we can turn to learn from their experiences and who will be "present" every class through recorded videos. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] RSCE5027-01 FOUNDATIONAL SOCIAL THEORY Baggett (JST) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM JSTB:216 The purpose of this course is essentially twofold. First, it will introduce students to the following four important theoretical strands within the discipline of sociology: conflict theory (in both its Marxian and Weberian variants), structural functionalism, symbolic interactionism and rational choice theory. Second, by focusing specifically on the critical study of religion, this course will also demonstrate the salience and applicability of these theoretical frameworks as we investigate the work of contemporary sociologists who actually employ them as a means for analyzing religion in the modern world. This course, while open to other advanced students as well, is specifically designed to assist doctoral students in the area of Ethics and Social Theory as they prepare for the comprehensive exam in ^Foundational Social Theory.^ Format: Each class session will incorporate both lecture and class discussion. Requirements: Classroom participation, and a choice of multiple short papers or a longer final paper. [PIN code required; 25 max enrollment; Auditors with Faculty permission] FIELD EDUCATION FE1006-01 CONCURRENT FIELD STUDY II Faculty (PSR) 3 units W 9:10 AM-12:00 PM MUDD:103/104/204/205/206 3 hour per week on-campus class and 15 hours per week onsite basic field education. Second part of 2-semester long course; must take both to get credit. Fulfills Basic Field Education requirement. Pass/Fail only. To enroll, student must have made arrangements for an approved field education placement with the Director of Field Education. (Note: Section 01 meets Wednesdays, 9:10am-12:00pm in MUDD 103, 104, 204, 205, and 206. Section 02 meets Mondays, 6:10-9:00PM, Mudd 104). [PIN code required for section 02; Auditors excluded] RSCE5525-01 SEMINAR IN HUMAN RIGHTS O'Neill (JST) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM JSTB:216 In addressing the problematic status of human rights in moral and political theory, we will consider the history, scope, and limits of human rights' theory as it applies to a range of socialethical issues. We shall be concerned especially with the use of rights' language in religious discourse; the extension of human rights to social-economic claims; and the principal philosophical and theological criticisms of modern rights' discourse. Intended audience: Ph.D/Th.D; STL/STD [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] FE1006-02 CONCURRENT FIELD STUDY II Faculty (PSR) 3 units M 6:10 PM-9:00 PM MUDD:104 3 hour per week on-campus class and 15 hours per week onsite basic field education. Second part of 2-semester long course; must take both to get credit. Fulfills Basic Field Education requirement. Pass/Fail only. To enroll, student must have made arrangements for an approved field education placement with the Director of Field Education. (Note: Section 01 meets Wednesdays, 9:10am-12:00pm in MUDD 103, 104, 204, 205, and 206. Section 02 meets Mondays, 6:10-9:00PM, Mudd 104). [PIN code required for section 02; Auditors excluded] RSHR8450-01 QUEERING ECCLESIOLOGY & RITES FE1041-01 FIELD EDUCATION LEVEL I 62 SPRING 2016 Faculty (DSPT) 1.5 units W 9:40 AM-11:00 AM DSPT:2 FIELD EDUCATION LEVEL I: PART 2 This course for M.Div. students allows them to continue to use the fundamental skills that were learned in FE1040 in a supervised ministerial setting. They may continue the ministry the began in FE1040, or begin a new ministry. They will complete a ministry contract for supervision at the ministry site. During the semester they are expected to apply what they learned in FE1040 regarding thresholds of conversion, evangelization, charisms and theological reflection to a weekly apostolate, with the goal of deepening their ministerial skills and ministerial identity. Classes will be a combination of lecture, theological reflection, discernment of charisms, and discussions on the process of evangelization introduced in the fall semester. Grading is based on class participation, written theololgical reflections, and a written statement of theology of ministry and ministerial identity. [PIN code required for Spring 2015 section; Auditors excluded] FE2152-01 MDIV INTEGRATION SEMINAR II Ross (JST) 3 units W 8:10 AM-9:30 AM JSTB:216 This course consists of a two-semester supervised field practicum and a concurrent two-semester supervision and theological reflection group. Second year JST MDiv. students only. Seminar format: reflection papers/presentations. [25 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] FE2153-01 CONTEXTUAL MINISTRY PRACTICUM Ross (JST) 0.5 units n/a This course offers the opportunity for students enrolled fulltime in a degree program to complement their studies with supervised ministry in a parish, school, or other setting. Students must perform a minimum of approximately four hours of ministry each week. Through reflection on this practical experience, students will deepen their understanding of how faith is inculturated and how culture shapes one's approach to ministry. JST students may enroll in this class only while being concurrently enrolled in the following degree programs: STD, STL, ThM, MTS, and MA. This course is offered on a P/F basis and will be supervised by the Director of Ministerial Formation. In addition to their ministry, students will engage in relevant academic work as assigned by the Director of Ministerial Formation. Class day/time TBA. [PIN code required; Auditors excluded] FE1152-01 MDIV INTEGRATION SEMINAR I Ross (JST) 1 unit W 12:40 PM-2:00 PM JSTB:216 This three-term course - fall and spring semesters and an intersession immersion experience - is required of all first year M.Div. students at JST. The M.Div. Integration Seminar provides an opportunity for students to integrate their academic studies and ministerial experience. During the course students will reflect upon their vocational and ministerial identity within the church; students will be introduced to pastoral theological methods for reflecting upon ministerial experience; and students will prepare for their ministry placement for the Second Year of the M.Div. program. (January 2016 Intersession dates to be confirmed.) [JST 1st year M.Div. students; PIN code required; 25 max enrollment] FERS3000-01 SOC CHG FIELD/IMMERS ELECTIVE Faculty (PSR) 1.5-3 units n/a CSSC program field work arranged in consultation and with approval of the Field Education faculty. To enroll, students must have had consultation with the Director of Field Education for an approved broad sector or area of interest focus and mentor active in that field. [PIN Code required; Auditors excluded] FE2150-01 PASTORAL MINISTRY INTERNSHIP Renz (DSPT) 1.5 units n/a This course involves a year-long experience of supervised pastoral ministry. The student is required to arrange for regular supervisory sessions with an on-site supervisor at an approved ministry site. These sessions must include discussions of human, intellectual, spiritual, and formation issues. The supervisor must submit written summary reports of these meetings, and the student must write learning goals, and two theological reflection papers which demonstrate an integration of theological learning with pastoral experience. Qualified MDiv students may substitute this course for FE 2140/2141 (Field Education Level II). Permission of both the director of Field Education and academic dean is required. DSPT MDiv students only. FERS3001-01 SOC CHG FIELD/IMMERS CAPSTONE Faculty (PSR) 3 units S 9:00 AM-3:00 PM, W 4:00 PM-8:00 PM MUDD:100/PSR:BADE SPRING 2015 This course incorporates the capstone experience for the Certificate of Spiritual and Social Change into Field Work and Laboratory. Participants collaborate with each other, the faculty instructor, and their mentors on learning objectives, criteria for assessing outcomes of their social change field work, critical theological reflection on their work, and integrate courses and immersive learning of the CSSC program. Participants will meet together in person for three day long class sessions. Participants will also provide progress reports on line through a dedicated website, and will submit a final portfolio/project (vocational plan, strategic 63 SPRING 2016 plan, organizing module or social change proposal) and prepare a presentation of the portfolio/project. A fourth class session of presentations will be open to the community for observations and proposals for next steps. This course emphasized the interrelationship between spirituality and social change work. From a critical reflective approach students are prepared to respond, envision, and sustain social change field work through diverse spiritual perspectives. Enrollment in this course is limited to those students who have submitted a Proposal for Social Change Field Work no later than December 1, 2014. [CSSC students only; PIN code required] SPRING 2015 Class Sessions: February 7, 2015, 9:00 - 3:00 Collaborative lab: Proposals, Mentors, Learning Objectives, Spiritual Practices, Theological Reflection on Social Change Work. March 7, 2015, 9:00am-3:00pm Hermeneutics of Spiritual and Social Change, Guest Collaborators for Multi-faith Spiritual and Social Change Practices; Theological Reflection on Case Studies. April 11, 2015, 9:00am-3:00pm Frameworks for integration of learning in CSSC program; Presentations. May 6, 2015 4:00pm-8:00pm Participants present their projects and portfolios to the class and community with observations and proposed next steps. SPRING 2016 Required capstone course for C.S.S.C. CSSC program field work arranged in consultation and with approval of the Field Education faculty. To enroll, students must have had consultation with the Director of Field Education for an approved broad sector or area of interest focus and mentor active in that field. Participants collaborate with each other, the faculty instructor, and their mentors to draft learning objectives and establish criteria for assessing the outcomes of their field work and immersion experiences. Participants meet together in person three Saturdays during the semester and provide regular progress reports online through a dedicated website. Participants will submit a final project in this course (such as a vocational plan, a social venture proposal, an educational and/or spiritual formation module for community organizing, among others) based on their field work/immersion experiences geared toward a specific area of social change. Draft iterations of the project are submitted online throughout the semester for feedback from colleagues, mentors, and the faculty instructor. The class meets in person a fourth and final time, at the end of the semester, to present their final projects and solicit observations and proposals for next steps. [SPFT 1082 or 8182; FTRS 2973; PIN code required; Interview required]. Tentative 2016 Dates - Classes [Mudd 100]: Saturdays, 2/6/16, 3/5/16, 4/9/16 from 9:00am-3:00pm. Presentation (Bade): Wednesday, 5/4/16 from 4:00pm-8:00pm. ministry. Theoretical material from theology, the behavioral sciences, and pastoral care. Integrates theological understanding and knowledge of behavioral science into pastoral functioning. Upon completion, a written evaluation from the program supervisor will be placed into the student's permanent files. Discuss first with your advisor and then faculty. Final evaluation from CPE supervisor needs to be sent to faculty by the last day of the semester to receive credit. Every year SKSM offers an orientation to CPE and to the application process; students are responsible for applying and securing a place in a CPE program. Please check the SKSM Student Handbook for more information. [20 max enrollment] FE4052-01 CONGREGATIONAL FIELDWORK SP Faculty (SKSM) 1-5 units n/a SPRING 2015 Fieldwork in Unitarian Universalist congregations may include teaching a religious education class for children or adults, working with a youth group, participating in a stewardship campaign and/or more. Please arrange with the professor. [5 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] SPRING 2016 Fieldwork in Unitarian Universalist congregations includes teaching a religious education class for children or adults, working with a youth group, participating in a stewardship campaign and more. Please arrange with the professor. [PIN code required; 5 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FE4062-01 COMMUNITY FIELDWORK SPRING Lettini (SKSM) 0.5-5 units n/a Field work describes an involvement in community work for up to 15 hours a week with the ongoing support of a mentor. Community Fieldwork includes work in gender, racial and economic justice, queer activism, disability advocacy, immigration issues, environmental responsibility, civil liberties protection, HIV response, youth at risk, peace building, participating in a fundraising campaign for a non for profit or grassroots organization, chaplaincy, teaching and more. Students should discuss the field work opportunity with their advisor before making arrangements with the professor. Student and community mentor should discuss and sign a learning agreement before the official beginning of the field work experience. Midterm and final student/mentor evaluations will also be required by midterm and the last day of SKSM classes. All forms available from the professor at the beginning of the semester and subsequently on the SKSM Website. Please see Student Handbook for more information. [PIN code required; 30 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FE4012-01 CLINICAL PASTORAL EDUCATION Lettini (SKSM) 1-10 units n/a This course is for Starr King students engaged in part-time or full-time Clinical Pastoral Education. Participate in ministry to persons, and in individual group reflection upon that FE4211-01 PARISH INTERNSHIP SPRING Faculty (SKSM) 5-10 units 64 SPRING 2016 n/a SPRING 2015 This is a 9 month full-time (one year) or an 18 month part-time (two year) experience in a teaching congregation under the supervision of a Minister in final Fellowship with the UUA, an intern committee, and a professor at the school. Those who register for this course must also register for Parish Intern Reflection Spring. [15 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] SPRING 2016 This is a 9 month full-time (one year) or an 18 month part-time (two year) experience in a teaching congregation under the supervision of a Minister in final Fellowship with the UUA, an intern committee, and a professor at the school. Those who register for this course must also register for Parish Intern Reflection Spring. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] Th 4:00 PM-5:30 PM SKSM All SKSM students involved in community internships will meet together for reflection on their work, as it is only through the processes of theological reflection and critical reflection on experience that field work becomes field education. This class includes readings, discussions and writings and is designed to broaden and to deepen students' analytic perspective on their field site contexts and on their roles as religious leaders and professionals. Students will be grow in their ability to think and learn in a praxis oriented way, that is, allowing situations of practice to deepen and challenge their academic knowledge about theo/alogies, and allowing their academic knowledge of theology to deepen and challenge their practice of leadership. In field-based experiences the depth of students' learning depends entirely upon how well they can implement praxis oriented learning. [12 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FE4213-01 PARISH INTERN REFLECTION SP Faculty (SKSM) 2 units n/a All Starr King students serving as ministerial interns in Unitarian Universalist congregations are expected to participate in regularly scheduled times of reflection on their ministerial work and the work of their intern colleagues. Participation in a two day gathering of interns and teaching ministers at the School is essential. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FUNCTIONAL THEOLOGY FTCE2572-01 PRISON MINISTRY Williams (JST) 3 units Th 8:10 AM-11:00 AM MUDD:103 SPRING 2016 Course offers a theoretical and experiential introduction to prison ministry to prepare ministry students for possible careers as prison chaplains. The course emphasizes the theological, psychological and pastoral needs of the incarcerated and examines the current state of corrections in the United States. The course explores the historical roots of correctional chaplaincy in the United States, punishment theory, prison culture, racism, restorative justice and alternatives to incarceration. Format includes both lecture and seminar discussion of reading materials as well as theological reflection based on both the reading and the students' (required for course) experience of spending 2 hours per week at San Quentin State Prison under supervision of the instructor. While the context is Catholic prison ministry, the course encourages collaborative, ecumenical and interfaith ministry. [20 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] FE4221-01 COMMUNITY INTERNSHIP SPRING Lettini (SKSM) 5-10 units n/a Community Internships involve engagement at a field site from 16 to 40 hours a week, under weekly supervision at the site and the support of the SKSM Community Intern Reflection class (an integrative seminar). Community Internships include a variety of settings, such as supervised placements in a non-profit service agency or grassroots organization, hospice work, chaplaincy, teaching and more. They can also entail creating new projects such as starting a new organization or planning a national conference with a board of mentors. Those who register for this course should also register for Community Intern Integrative Reflection Spring. Students should discuss the internship with their advisor before making arrangements with the professor. Student and supervisor/mentors should discuss and sign a learning agreement before the official beginning of the internship. Midterm and final student/supervisor evaluations will also be required by midterm and the last day of SKSM classes. All forms available from the professor at the beginning of the semester and SKSM Website. Please see Student Handbook for more information. [30 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] FTLS2600-01 THE RCIA:MODEL FOR CATECHESIS Ross (JST) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:102 This course will explore the pastoral implementation of the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA). The Rite's four dimensions of catechesis, word, community, worship, and service (RCIA, no.75), will provide a framework for understanding catechesis as a mystagogical process. In addition, the course will involve in-depth study of the historical background of the catechumenate; the liturgical practices of the RCIA; inculturation and the RCIA; and catechesis more generally, including the use of the RCIA as a FE4223-01 COMMUNITY INTERN REFLECTION SP Faculty (SKSM) 2 units 65 SPRING 2016 model for parish catechesis (for example, in baptismal and marriage preparation). Intended audience: M.Div., Th.M. and STL students. Format: lecture, seminar and class discussion. Requirements: short reflection paper, final research paper, class presentations. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; auditors excluded] classes offered in the fall and spring semesters respectively. The purpose of this seminar style course is to assist Changemaker Fellows to critically reflect on the link between spirituality and social change and to better integrate their academic and other learning experiences with their selfunderstanding of themselves their vocation and roles as spiritually-grounded, theologically-rooted changemakers and social justice leaders. Course activities include participation in monthly cohort meetings, attending the Rockwood Art of Leadership, taking part in a day-long spiritual retreat, and traveling as a group on a nine-day immersive learning journey. Spring 2015: Day and time TBA Fall 2015: Sep. 9, Oct. 7, Nov. 4, Dec. 2 Spring 2016: Feb. 3, Mar. 2, Apr. 20, May 18. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] FTRS2973-01 TRANSFORMATIVE LEADERSHIP Miller (PSR) 3 units W 5:40 PM-8:30 PM MUDD:102 PROPHET, HERETIC, AND SOCIAL ENTREPRENEUR Social entrepreneurship is a rapidly developing and changing field, which in many ways both builds upon and poses crucial challenges to older styles and strategies of religious and spiritual leadership. This course is designed to provide participants with a basic overview of theories and practices of social entrepreneurship as well the opportunity to critically reflect on the benefits and limitations of this particular model of leadership in working towards for the common good. A central question to be explored throughout the course will be: What can spiritual/religious/theological values can contribute to the practice of social entrepreneurship and the quest for a more just, inclusive, and equitable world. This course will be taught in a seminar format, which means that class participants will be expected to take increased responsibility for preparing for class discussions, co-designing the course experience, and leading class activities. Additionally, engagement with external experts will be a major component of this course. Class participants will be exposed to these external experts in the classroom through guest-lectures, viewing online videos, and completing assigned readings. Outside of the classroom, students will be expected to identify and conduct a one-on-one interview with a social entrepreneur of their choosing, who may continue to serve as a mentor after the course has ended. This course is required for all those enrolled in PSR's Certificate of Spirituality and Social Change. This course is the in-class version of FTRS 8297 Transformative Leadership. Students wishing to take the online version of this class should register for FTRS 8297 Transformative Leadership. SPRING 2015 This course will meet on alternating Thursday evenings from 5:10-8:00 PM. The scheduled meeting dates are February 5 and 19, March 5 and 19, April 2, 16, and 30, and May 6 and 20. Note well: Because of this alternating schedule only one absence (excused or unexcused will be permitted) during the course of the semester. [PIN code required; 22 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] FTLS3216-01 LITURGY PREP & LAY PRESIDING McGann (JST) 3 units W 9:40 AM-12:30 PM JSTB:216 This course in the practice and theology of liturgical prayer is intended for those taking leadership in worshiping communities: as members/facilitators of worship committees, pastoral associates, and/or those leading liturgical prayer on behalf of the community. Although the primary focus is Roman Catholic and the liturgical/rubrical issues related to this tradition, the course invites an ecumenical reflection on the dynamism of the life of the Trinity expressed in the identity of the minister, the rhythms/dynamics of liturgical enactment, and the diversity of members in a worshiping community. Students will be prepared for lay presidency of rites in various settings and pastoral situations that are appropriately led by lay leaders. (MDiv, MA/MTS) FT3724-01 UMC MISSION Oliveto (PSR) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:102 This course addresses both the theology and practice of evangelism with an emphasis on the United Methodist Church. Participants will formulate their own theology and practice of evangelism through an exploration of the Biblical roots and Wesleyan understandings of evangelism. Current trends in church growth and evangelism tools and resources will be studied. In a multi-cultural multi-faith world, how do we empower our congregations to share the Jesus story effectively and enthusiastically? FTLS4500-01 THEOLOGY OF PREACHING Janowiak (JST) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:205 This course explores the theology of preaching in the Christian tradition and investigates the ways that different theological perspectives intersect with the preaching event. It gives primary place and focus to preaching as a liturgical event and seeks to integrate Word and Sacrament as a unitive proclamation of God's saving acts in Jesus. In addition, the FTRS2974-01 CHANGEMAKER FELLOWS SEMINAR Lee (PSR) 3 units W 8:00 AM-5:00 PM MUDD:100 Enrollment in the Changemaker Fellows (CMF) Seminar is required for and limited to PSR students who have been accepted into the year-long Changemaker Fellowship program. The seminar consists of two sequential 3.0 credit 66 SPRING 2016 relationship between shared literary texts and the community's reception, the cultural and social contexts of communities (their "social location"), and the role of the preacher as "one who proclaims" in the name of Christ and the Church will help shape our discussion. The course welcomes ecumenical perspectives. Opportunities for shared preparation (lectionary based) and actual preaching integrate the practical ministry of the preacher with the theological investigation. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment] a mentor after the course has ended. This course is required for all those enrolled in PSR's Certificate of Spirituality and Social Change. NOTE: This course is the ONLINE version of FTRS 2973 Transformative Leadership. Only students taking the course as an online course should register using this course number; all others should register for FTRS 2973. This course meets asynchronously using Moodle (http://gtu.edu/library/students/moodle-help). High-speed internet connection required. (Occasional synchronous class meetings maybe scheduled; see syllabus for details.) FTSP5050-01 DEEPENING THE WELL Rankow (SKSM) 3 units W 2:10 PM-5:00 PM SKSM This course will invite students to explore the nature of their own spiritual formation and to cultivate an awareness of the Divine presence and action in every dimension of life. Through readings from multiple faith traditions, audio and film resources, discussion, reflection, and a variety of experiential activities we will consider the practices, struggles, and commitments that deepen and nourish our souls. We will look at the role of spirituality in ministry, and the impacts that the demands of ministry can have on our spirituality. We will examine the importance of developing an ongoing spiritual discipline to foster balance, integrity and vitality in our relationships with God, self, family, congregation, community, and world. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] HISTORY HS1120-01 HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY Walker (PSR) 3 units M 9:40 AM-12:30 PM PSR:6 This course is a basic introduction to the history of Christianity for students in a variety of programs of theological education. The course will treat Christianity as a world religion, and will offer students ways of focusing on denominational history or the history of particular traditions, interpretation of Christianity to non-Christian communities, or the exploration of a particular theme or problem in the history of Christianity. The course will include attention to institutional church developments, theology, and the relationships of Christianity and society. Students will gain skills in finding and interpreting historical evidence, reading and using historical books and articles critically, and the ability to craft a good historical essay or presentation that could be used in an educational setting outside the classroom. FTRS8297-01 TRANSFORMATIVE LEADERSHIP Miller (PSR) 3 units PSR:ONLINE PROPHET, HERETIC, AND SOCIAL ENTREPRENEUR Social entrepreneurship is a rapidly developing and changing field, which in many ways both builds upon and poses crucial challenges to older styles and strategies of religious and spiritual leadership. This course is designed to provide participants with a basic overview of theories and practices of social entrepreneurship as well the opportunity to critically reflect on the benefits and limitations of this particular model of leadership in working towards for the common good. A central question to be explored throughout the course will be: What can spiritual/religious/theological values can contribute to the practice of social entrepreneurship and the quest for a more just,inclusive, and equitable world. This course will be taught in a seminar format, which means that class participants will be expected to take increased responsibility for preparing for class discussions, co-designing the course experience, and leading class activities. Additionally, engagement with external experts will be a major component of this course. Class participants will be exposed to these external experts in the classroom through guest-lectures, viewing online videos, and completing assigned readings. Outside of the classroom, students will be expected to identify and conduct a one-on-one interview with a social entrepreneur of their choosing, who may continue to serve as HS2195-01 CHURCH:MODERN TO CONTEMPORARY Boenzi (DSPT) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM DSPT:3 CHURCH HISTORY, 1451-2013: A SURVEY OF THE LIFE AND STORY OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH FROM THE FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE TO THE FIRST DECADE OF THE 21ST CENTURY While the intent is to trace the general trends and conditions that shaped the Church Catholic during 500 years, the opportunity is given students to study more localized events and traditions, noting where movement has taken place to renew the Church and re-launch the Gospel mission. HS2195 is primarily a survey course. HSHR2520-01 RLGS FNDTNS US SOCIAL MOVMNTS Schlager (PSR) 3 units T 6:10 PM-9:00 PM MUDD:102 RELIGIOUS FOUNDATIONS OF US SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Intended for MDiv, MA, and PhD students, 67 SPRING 2016 this course will explore the religious foundations of several U.S. social justice movements of the 20th century including the Civil Rights Movement, Women's Movement, LGBTQ Movement, and Environmental Justice Movements. The historical, cultural, and economic aspects of these various movements will be considered with the aim of understanding how religion informed these calls for deep and lasting change within U.S. culture. Several class presentations and a final research paper will be required. HS5125-01 THE SEVEN COUNCILS Ludwig (DSPT) 3 units F 2:10 PM-5:00 PM DSPT:2 The Ecumenical Councils from Nicaea I (325) to Nicaea II. Theology and Practice of the Conciliar Principle. The dogmatic and Disciplinary canons. The interaction of ecclesial and imperial power. Significant personalities and issues. [Some ability in Latin or Greek; ability to do research in either French, German, or Italian; PIN code required] HSHR4800-01 HISTORY OF RELIGION SEMINAR Ocker (SFTS) 3 units Th 7:00 PM-10:00 PM SFTS SPRING 2015 PLURALISM, ORTHODOXY, COMPLEXITY, ENTANGLEMENT Pluralism and Orthodoxy is, of course, a central issue in Catholic and Protestant theology for the last two hundred years, including the sub-fields of biblical studies, church history and history of religion, ethics, and spirituality. The topic touches on broad epistemological questions, such as the following. Is knowledge a subjective quality or entangled with natural and artificial environments that change over time? Is it prone to a comprehensive theoretical framework (is truth simple), or does the real world require multiple, open-ended frameworks that account for change (is truth complex)? Since these questions are debated in physics, cognitive science, psychology, philosophy, and theology, they provide points of contact between these disciplines. The issue of pluralism and orthodoxy is also extraordinarily relevant to the work of effective, culturally adaptive ministry and leadership. Complexity theory also links the practice of ministry to the analysis and leadership of complex organizations. The seminar will allow students to explore and innovate their own perspectives, approaches, and solutions to the question of pluralism and orthodoxy. In weekly meetings over the course of the semester, through readings, discussions, and contributions from faculty colleagues, the seminar will approach the relationship of pluralism and orthodoxy from the standpoints of biblical studies; Christianity in late antiquity, early modern Europe, and the African diaspora; theology; pastoral care; and spirituality today. This semesterlong agenda will, I hope, benefit from contributions by faculty colleagues, e.g. visiting or leading particular sessions to discuss their own perspectives and work. In addition, a one-day workshop with three to six distinguished visiting experts on Sunday 8 March will focus attention on a narrow set of historical and theoretical issues: the history of post-dogmatic approaches to theology; the science of complexity, plural epistemologies and theory of and theories of ^entanglement,^ and the sociology of pluralism. Papers by distinguished visiting experts will be circulated to participants in the workshop two weeks in advance. A ^local^ colleague (from SFTS, the GTU, or UC) will begin discussion of the paper with a brief response, followed by a ^free for all.^ As in previous years, the seminar counts as a ^capstone^ course for the SFTS MDiv. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] HS6025-01 HISTORY METHODOLOGY SEMINAR Aranoff (CJS)/Ocker (SFTS) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:104 METHODS: JEWISH AND CHRISTIAN HISTORIES This course will survey the most significant historical methodologies affecting historical research in religions today, with special interest in the histories of Judaism and Christianity. Students. in a research project, will develop. present, and defend a methodology for one's own research and the theory supporting it in a term paper. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] HSST8201-01 UCC HISTORY AND THEOLOGY Walker (PSR) 3 units PSR:ONLINE This course introduces and explores the history and theology of the United Church of Christ. It is mainly for MDiv students. It satisfies the requirement for study of UCC history and theology for students seeking ordination in that denomination. Ordained clergy interested in or seeking standing in the UCC are welcome. It also is available to MDiv or MA students interested in denominational history or progressive theologies in the United States. The course uses reading, collaborative writing and resource creation, independent research and presentation of findings, audio and video presentations and online forum style discussion to map the complex picture of UCC history and engage the main theological concerns of the denomination and its diverse members. Forms of UCC spiritual practice will also be introduced. The course can be taken for 3 units of academic credit or for CEUs. An initial webinar will be scheduled the first week of the semester in consultation with students registered by the first day of the semester. NOTE: This ONLINE course meets at posted course meeting times using Adobe Connect, and you must be available in your corresponding time zone to participate in class. A telephone, webcam, high speed internet connection, and the latest version of Flash are required. [Auditors excluded] 68 SPRING 2016 Fennema (PSR) 1.5 units M 5:15 PM-6:30 PM, T 10:00 AM-12:00 PM PSR:CHPL SPRING 2015 This course consists of working as a team to design, plan, and carry out worship for weekly chapel and other occasional services. Students will gain experience with planning and carrying out worship in a variety of styles through a small group process. We will explore the nuts and bolts of designing meaningful, multisensory, and creative worship while reflecting on the historical, cultural, theological, embodied, and practical aspects that shape the experience of worship in contemporary communities of faith. Meets Mondays 5:10-6:30pm in the small dining room in PSR's D'Autremont Hall and Tuesdays 10:10am -12:00pm in the PSR Chapel, with discussion sections TBD. FALL 2015/SPRING 2016 Planning and Crafting Chapel Worship This practicum course consists of working as a team to design, plan, and carry out worship for weekly chapel and other occasional services at the Pacific School of Religion. Students will gain experience with planning and carrying out worship in a variety of styles through a small group process. We will explore the nuts and bolts of designing meaningful, multisensory, and creative worship while reflecting on the historical, cultural, theological, embodied, and practical aspects that shape the experience of worship in contemporary communities of faith. Evaluation is based on attendance, participation, evaluation of chapel services, curation of chapel service(s) and a final critical reflection paper. It is geared toward MDiv. students, but all are welcome. Course meeting times coincide with Chapel Planning Committee Meetings on Mondays from 5:15-6:30pm in the small dining room of D'Autremont Hall, and with Chapel services on Tuesdays from 10am-12pm in the PSR Chapel. 3-4 other discussion sessions will be arranged in consultation with the professor and other students. [Auditors with faculty permission] HOMILETICS HM1001-01 INTRODUCTION TO PREACHING Childers (SFTS) 3 units Th 2:00 PM-5:00 PM SFTS Introduction to the composition and delivery of sermons with attention given to hermeneutical and theological issues. Examination of selected homiletical models. Practice preaching. Instructor and class critique. Sermons recorded and reviewed. SFTS core course. [Spring 2015: 25 max enrollment] INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES IDS6016-01 SEMINAR ON COURSE DESIGN Berling (GTU) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM GTU:HDCO Seminar engages theories of teaching and learning to help students develop course syllabi for specific institutions of their choice. Student collaboration and presentations, and a final project of a detailed syllabus. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment] LITURGICAL STUDIES LS1201-01 CHRISTIAN WORSHIP Fennema (PSR) 3 units Th 5:40 PM-8:30 PM PSR:6/PSR:CHPL For many communities of faith, worship forms the heart of their life together. It is a place where participants learn the behaviors, rhythms, and patterns of faith that form them for lives of spiritual and social transformation. In this introduction to the practice of worship, we will examine the ways in which Christian liturgies both shape and are shaped by culture, history, theology, language, and practice. As we investigate the different movements and rhythms of worship and sacraments, students will learn to harness the power of embodied spiritual and ritual practices in different ministry contexts by critically and constructively engaging liturgical texts and contexts, by designing multisensory, intercultural, and meaningful worship services, and by practicing their leadership of different elements of worship, all while immersing themselves in their own unique religious/denominational, historical, and cultural styles of worship. This lecture/discussion course will be evaluated by attendance, participation, weekly critical and constructive reflections, midterm exam and final worship design synthesis project. LSFT2404-01 CELEBRATION OF THE SACRAMENTS Kromholtz (DSPT) 1.5-3 units DSPT This course will introduce those in formation for priesthood in the Roman Catholic Church to the celebration of the sacraments and other liturgical rites according to the Ordinary Form of the Latin Rite. The course offers an opportunity to integrate their lived understanding of the liturgy through the study and practice of leading it. Format: Practice liturgy sessions with discussion. Requirements: (1) Attendance, participation, assistance, and leadership at practice liturgy sessions; and (2) a final exam (oral). Course is normally taken Pass/Fail for 1.5 units; those wishing to earn 3.0 units must register for a letter grade and must complete a research paper of 5000-7000 words. Intended Audience: Those in formation for the Presbyterate in the Latin Rite of the RC Church. Day and time to be arranged during the first course meeting, Monday 2/1/16 at 12:30PM, in DSPT Galleria. [A course in liturgy and a course in sacramental theology] LSFT2141-01 CHAPEL WORSHIP DESIGN PLANNIN 69 SPRING 2016 Discussion session. Evaluation: Paper and Final Exam Audience: MDiv, MA/MTS, PhD/ThD [Auditors excluded] LSHS4675-01 EASTERN CHRISTIAN LITURGIES Klentos (PAOI) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM PAOI This course will introduce students to the fundamental elements of Eastern Christian worship. The survey will treat the distinct spirit of Eastern worship, the origins and development of the 7 extant eastern rites, and the physical setting and objects used by these traditions. The course will deal in detail with the most widely used eastern service, the Byzantine eucharistic liturgy. The course will combine lecture and seminar discussion. Evaluation will be based on two inclass presentations,two written assignments, and a final takehome exam. PHHS2001-01 CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY Ramelow (DSPT) 3 units M 9:40 AM-12:30 PM DSPT:1 A lecture on late 19th and 20th century philosophy: idealism, pragmatism, phenomenology, hermeneutics, existentialism, analytic philosophy, structuralism, postmodernism, deconstruction and leading criticisms of the same. The lectures are designed to give an overview. Lecture/discussion. There will be a short mid-term and final exam (non-comprehensive) and a term paper. Intended audience: MDiv, MA/MTS, PhD/ThD. PH2040-01 PHILOSOPHICAL ANTHROPOLOGY Dodds (DSPT) 3 units Th 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:2 An examination of Aristotelian and Thomistic understandings of soul, life, sensation, intellect, will, and the processes of cognition and choice. Philosophical issues in human conception and evolution. Unity of the human person, mindbrain and body-soul dualisms. Lecture/discussion, fifteentwenty page research paper, or three 4-5 page essay papers on assigned topics. Intended audience: MA/MTS/MDiv.[PH 1056 Philosophy of Nature or equivalent] PHILOSOPHY & PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION PHHS1051-01 HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY:MEDIEVAL Thompson (DSPT) 3 units TF 9:40 AM-11:00 AM DSPT:2 This course will focus principally on the development of Christian philosophical theology, emphasizing: Patristic Roots (to 1100), Scholastic Synthesis (1200 to 1325), and Nominalist Critique (1325-1450). Attention will also be given to the reception of Greek, Arab and Jewish learning by the medieval west. Anselm of Canterbury, Bonaventure, Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, and William of Occam will receive special attention. Students will be expected to interpret and discuss such texts orally (proved by participation in class discussions) and analyze and interpret them in writing (proved by written examinations). [25 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] PH2050-01 METAPHYSICS Vega Rodriguez (DSPT) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-11:00 AM DSPT:2 SPRING 2015 A comprehensive introduction to the main questions of Metaphysics: being, causality, substance, individuation, existence. In all these topics we will keep in mind the history of Metaphysics from Parmenides to Heidegger to examine the scope of Metaphysics as science, its object and the treatment of the question of being. Format: Online lecture. One discussion session per week. Evaluation: paper, quizzes and final exam. Audience: MDiv, MA/MTS, PhD/ThD [Auditors with Faculty permission] SPRING 2016 An examination of Aristotelian and Thomistic understandings of soul, life, sensation, intellect, will, and the processes of cognition and choice. Philosophical issues in human conception and evolution. Unity of the human person, mindbrain and body-soul dualisms. Lecture/discussion, fifteentwenty page research paper, or three 4-5 page essay papers on assigned topics. [MA/MTS, MDiv; Auditors excluded] PH1065-01 THEORY OF KNOWLEDGE Vega Rodriguez (DSPT) 3 units Th 11:10 AM-12:30 PM DSPT:2 SPRING 2015 The course studies the main topics on the theory of knowledge such as truth, evidence, error, intentionality, perception; as well as the problem of universals, induction and skepticism, the sources and structure of justification and knowledge. The readings for the course include writings from contemporary philosophers and significant texts from other authors in the History of Philosophy with special reference to Aquinas. Class Format: Online Lecture; Discussion session. Evaluation: Paper and Final Exam Audience: MDiv, MA/MTS, PhD/ThD [Auditors excluded] SPRING 2016 The course studies the main topics on the theory of knowledge such as truth, evidence, error, intentionality, perception, skepticism, sources of knowledge and justification. Class Format: Online Lecture; PHHS4020-01 PLATO Ludwig (DSPT) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM DSPT:18 Reading and discussion of selected dialogues in English translation. Emphasis is on developing a strategy for reading the dialogues based on contemporary assessment of their 70 SPRING 2016 literary form and their function within the Academy. Class presentation and final paper. Intended audience: MA students who want and in depth treatment of Plato. [PIN code required; Auditors excluded] PHST4810-01 DO WE HAVE FREE WILL? Ramelow (DSPT) 3 units Th 12:40 PM-3:30 PM MUDD:206 It seems hardly possible to lead a meaningful life without assuming the freedom to choose and pursue goals and purposes. Nevertheless, throughout history this assumption has been challenged, be it by Marxists, psychologists or, more recently, by neurophysiology. Almost all of these challenges to free will are rooted in forms of materialism. Other challenges, however, are religious in nature (predestination). Through the study of key texts, we will try to answer the question how free will is best understood, and what grounds we have for assuming its existence. Class preparations and 15-20 page research paper. [15 max enrollment; Auditors excluded] PH4445-01 PHENOMENOLOGY OF THE OTHER Gable (DSPT) 3 units F 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:18 By engaging the works of phenomenologists such as Husserl, Stein, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Sartre, Levinas, Derrida, and Marion, this course will examine the topic of intersubjectivity and the role of the other in the constitution of meaning, objectivity, self-identity, and moral obligation. Student evaluation will be based on preparation of assigned class readings, participation in class discussion, a class presentation, and a final research paper. For students in the M.A./M.T.S. and Ph.D./Th.D. programs. [PIN code required; Auditors excluded] SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY PHCE4500-01 ARISTOTLE'S COMMENTATORS Farina (DSPT) 3 units M 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:3 This seminar course will explore the developments in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Philosophy as key thinkers from these traditions offered commentary on Aristotle's writings, while also formulating their own philosophical ideas. We will examine in particular the ethical works of the major figures from these traditions. The course is intended to be an advanced study in ethical theory. Students will be required to lead class discussions, design a class presentation, and complete a research paper. The prerequisite for the course is to have taken at least one semester of Ancient Philosophy, Medieval Philosophy, General Ethics, History of Ethics, or Fundamental Moral Theology. [One course in either Ancient Philosophy, Medieval Philosophy, General Ethics, or Fundamental Moral Theology; PIN code required; 12 max enrollment] ST1084-01 SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY I Love (SFTS) 3 units MTh 10:20 AM-11:50 AM SFTS The first semester of a two-semester introduction to Christian theology. Beginning with the meaning of religious faith, we move into the method question of the relation between divine revelation and the authority of scripture, human reason and experience. From there, we investigate the meaning of God using ancient and contemporary Trinitarian theology; Reformed theologian John Calvin, feminist theologian Elizabeth Johnson, and Latin American theologian Gustavo Gutierrez. We conclude with differing understandings of creation, and God's relationship to human suffering. Three exams (with option of substituting papers for exams). This course is the prerequisite for ST 1085, Systematic Theology II. [Auditors with Faculty permission] ST2315-01 GOD IN CHRISTIAN TRADITION Tran (JST) 3 units W 7:10 PM-9:40 PM JSTB:216 This course is designed for introductory students, ordinarily those in the MDiv and MTS Program. It attempts a foundational theological inquiry into the Christian understanding of God as Three "Persons" in One "Substance." The Trinitarian understanding of God emerges from sustained reflection on Christian consciousness of experiencing the divine in the person of Jesus Christ and in the power of the Holy Spirit. This survey course traces the development of Christian reflection on the Trinity from the scriptural sources through the modern period. In addition to the classical views on the doctrine, contemporary theological from multiple and global perspectives will be considered. For those who want to upgrade this class to a 4000 level, please PH4634-01 THEORIES OF INTENTIONALITY Gable (DSPT) 3 units T 12:40 PM-3:30 PM MUDD:204 Intentionality, a central concern of Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind, is that property of all mental acts which directs them toward objects and ultimately allows us to intelligently relate to the world. Within intentionality lie the mysteries of knowledge, perception, and truth. This course constitutes a sustained examination of different theories of intentionality, beginning with Aristotle and proceeding through various medieval, modern, and contemporary theories of intentionality. Students will be evaluated on their preparation of assigned class readings, contribution to class discussion, a class presentation, and a final research paper. For students in the M.A./M.T.S. and Ph.D./Th.D programs. [PIN code required; Auditors excluded] 71 SPRING 2016 see the instructor for a separate requirement. [20 max enrollment] Roman Catholic perspective with cross reference to Protestant and Orthodox ecclesiologies. Foundation course for MDiv and MTS students. Those who want to take a 4000 level course on ecclesiology should consult with the instructor for an independent coursework [20 max enrollment] ST2349-01 CHRISTOLOGY AND THE POOR Burke (JST) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM JSTB:216 This course serves as an introduction to Christology. It does not attempt to survey a number of contemporary christologies, but seeks instead to interpret Jesus Christ from a concern for historical human suffering and the requirement that theology speak to that concern in a manner both faithful to the tradition and relevant to believers today. To accomplish this we will begin with the Biblical witness and examine the development of the classical christological doctrines from the privileged cultural locus of Latin America and the systematic perspective developed by Jon Sobrino. As an introduction to Christology this course is designed for M.Div. students and others in first degree programs (MA, MTS, etc.). It will employ a lecture/discussion format. Evaluations will be through weekly one-page papers, class presentations, and a final 5-7 page paper. Students in advanced degree programs (STL, STD, Ph.D., etc.) can petition to upgrade this course and submit a final research paper of 20 pages along with a prospectus for the research paper. [30 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] STRS2650-01 SOCIAL TRANSFORM & LIBERATION Radzins (PSR) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:104 SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION AND LIBERATION What is social transformation and how can it be effected? This course explores how different understandings of social transformation and especially concepts of "liberation" shape public life and discourse. The class considers a number of different movements, some theological, some not, including liberation philosophy and theology and post-colonial thought. Figures to be read include Cornel West, Gustavo Gurierrez, Enrique Dussel, Marcella Althaus Reid, Karl Marx, Simone Weil, Franz Fanon, Edward Said, and Gayatri Spivak. ST3069-01 SPECIAL TOPICS IN SACRAMENTS Kromholtz (DSPT) 3 units F 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:3 This course will help students to deepen their systematic theological reflection on the sacraments in general and on each of the seven sacraments, with a particular focus on the sacraments of Eucharist and Holy Orders. The Roman Catholic tradition as exemplified in the teachings of St. Thomas Aquinas, with reference to its historical context, will provide the basis for reflection. Students completing the course will be able to explain, discuss, and apply the insights gained here for preaching, catechesis, liturgy, and further theological studies. Format: Lecture and discussion. Requirements: Requirements: Weekly questions & comments in response to assigned readings, 2 essays of 300-1000 words, brief presentations, annotated bibliography, and a final exam. Intended Audience: MDiv or MA Theology students; other graduate students admitted with permission. Upgrade to 4000 or 5000 level with addition of research paper and presentation. ST2378-01 SPIRIT IN THE CHURCH Griener (JST) 3 units MTh 8:10 AM-9:30 AM JSTB:216 Lecture-seminar format, explores the Christian understanding of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit's action in the world and Church, ritual and liturgy, including the sacraments (especially those of initiation), the goal of God's saving work in history, eschatology. Major Church and ecumenical documents, plus contemporary biblical and theological resources. Informed class discussion, two research papers, first midway through the semester, the second at semester's end. A foundational course in the JST MDiv curriculum. ST2458-01 INTRODUCING ECCLESIOLOGY Tran (JST) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:204 This lecture course, formerly titled "A Community Called Church" (ST2454), is an introduction to ecclesiology. We will survey biblical, historical, cultural, and theological resources for the understanding of the Christian churches, with particular emphasis on ecumenical concerns and global perspectives. By considering the social and cultural contexts, we will survey the various ways in which the Christian community has understood itself historically, and the polar tensions that have perdured into the present. Among the issues to be discussed are the purpose or mission of the Church, its relationship to the world, and the interaction between global and local churches. The class is taught from a ST3115-01 CONTEMPORARY CHRISTOLOGY Krasevac (DSPT) 3 units Th 11:10 AM-2:00 PM DSPT:18 This lecture course (designed for the MA/MDiv/MTS levels) will trace the modern development of the various ^Quests of the Historical Jesus^ (First, Second, Third), with particular emphasis on Edward Schillebeeckx' hermeneutical and theological principles and James Dunn's historical Christology, as well as on several other important ^Third Quest^ figures (Crossan, Brown, Meier, Wright, Theissen, and Sanders). Requirements for the class are regular attendance, and 20 pages of writing (to be distributed over three essays assigned by the instructor). The prerequisite fo the class is to 72 SPRING 2016 have completed ST 2232 (Historical Development of Christology) or its equivalent (work assuring a fairly comprehensive knowledge of the Patristic/conciliar development of Christology from Ignatius of Antioch through Constantinople III, and of Aquinas' understanding of the hypostatic union in the framework of his metaphysics of ^esse^). [ST 2232 or equivalent; PIN code required; Auditors with Faculty permission] If ^God is love^ is God also ^eros^? Do contemporary notions of eroticism make a difference in how we could read biblical texts and historical Christian traditions? Does any of this matter for how Christian faith communities engage in positive social change? This course will explore the various cultural and historical meanings of the erotic in the development of Christian theological traditions and especially how these are reflected (or not) in Eucharistic liturgical celebrations. We will consider and test the hypothesis that ^eros^ marks a fundamental desire for ^communion,^ which is on display at the Eucharistic Table, and further, that the erotic character of the Table offers a vision for social transformation rooted in the Christian Gospel. Lecture and seminar-style discussion; introductory course in theology recommended; ^upgrades^ available for DMin and PhD students. NOTE: This course is the in-class version of STRS 8400 Eros, Eucharist, Social Change. Students wishing to take the online version of this class should register for STRS 8400. ST3150-01 PROCESS THEOLOGY Hutchins (PSR) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM PSR:6 An introduction to process thought. Participants will read much of Alfred North Whitehead's ^Process and Reality^ and subsequently gain basic knowledge of developments in process theologies by Cobb, Keller, Suchocki, Coleman and others, as well as possible ways to use process approaches in many aspects of religious and public life. Course format: Lecture and discussion, creative participation, plus student presentation. In the first half of the term, students will be expected to do close readings of assigned sections of Whitehead's ^Process and Reality,^ with class lectures and discussions about Whitehead's philosophical concepts, and methods of understanding dynamisms of creative process through participating in poetry, music, and the arts. In the second half of the term, students will engage process theologians' writings on God, the Trinity, Jesus, Christ, Self/Community, Theopoetics, and Eschatology in conversation with contemporary interdisciplinary conversations (sciences, the natural world and ecology, feminist/womanist, issues of race and class, economics, G/L/Q theory, literature and visual/musical arts) in which process insights can foster vitality and transform established modes of thought. Format: Lecture and discussion. Evaluation: Regular reflection papers, class participation and presentation, 10 page final paper. [Previous course in theology or conversation with Instructor; 24 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] STLS4500-01 THEOLOGY OF EUCHARIST Janowiak (JST) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM JSTB:217 Course Content and Scope: This course will examine the history and theology of the celebration of the memorial of Christ's death and Resurrection, and the relationship of the Eucharistic Mystery to practice and devotion. This will include its theological meaning(s), the roots of ecumenical divergence, and the growing convergence in past decades. Special attention will be given to the issues of Christ's "real presence" in the sacrament, Eucharistic sacrifice, the pneumatological dimensions of ecclesial worship of Eucharist, Eucharist and its ministers, and the ethical dimensions of sacramental memorial "through him, with him, and in him, in the unity of the Holy Spirit." Throughout the study, we will ask how the Eucharistic table can become the place where Christians express and celebrate their unity with Christ and one another, broken and poured out in love for the world. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment] ST3999-01 JST STL/THM SEMINAR Burke (JST) 1 unit W 9:40 AM-11:00 AM JSTB:217 This one credit seminar is for those JST S.T.L. students who also wish to receive the Th.M. when they graduate. The course will be a consideration of the different publics served by these degrees: the church (S.T.L.) and the wider public (Th.M.). Students will be encourage to develop their own understanding of these differences in focusing upon the area of their research. Grading will be based on class participation and a final paper. [PIN code required] STSP4500-01 IMAGINATION LIBERATION HRMNTC Burke/Prinz (JST) 3 units M 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:103 This course designed for Advanced M.Div, MA or STL, STD and PhD students will employ a modified seminar format to bring into dialogue political/ contextual theologies and/or spiritualities with with mystical traditions & biblical horizons. The seminar is going to employ different hermeneutical approaches to facilitate this dialogue and will give the student an opportunity to think through their own hermeneutical approach in their research. [PIN code required; 18 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] STRS4000-01 EROS, EUCHARIST,SOCIAL CHANGE Johnson (PSR) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM MUDD:104 STRA4645-01 THE BYZANTINE VIRGIN MARY Klentos (PAOI)/Schroeder (CARE) 73 SPRING 2016 3 units T 12:40 PM-3:30 PM MUDD:103 In this class we will study how Virgin Mary was represented in Byzantine theological text and visual representations. The students will be graded on their participation in class discussion, on an illustrated power point presentation, and a final paper. This seminar explores theological interpretations of the human person (theological anthropology) in the context of social, psychological, and evolutionary/neuro-scientific contributions to the field: the emergence of consciousness in cultural context; the role of autobiographical and social/community memory in forming identity; the structures and constraints that shape human freedom. Class participation, and presentations, annotated bibliographies, final 20 page research project. Advanced MDiv/MA/MTS/STL. [PIN code required; 15 max enrollment] STSP4704-01 PATRISTIC SPIRITUALITY Cattoi (JST) 3 units Th 6:10 PM-9:00 PM MUDD:206 The primary focus of this lecture/seminar course is the development of Christian Patristic spirituality, tracing the gradual development of the notion of theosis (deification) in the writings of the Eastern Fathers. We will begin with Origen's spiritual theology and the Origenist school of spirituality, giving particular attention to the teaching of Evagrios Pontikos. We will then study the role of the spiritual senses and the question of mystical knowledge in the writings of Gregory of Nyssa and the Pseudo-Denys. Finally, after a look at the issue of anhypostasis, we will discuss Maximos the Confessor's theology of deification and the role of images in the writings of John Damascene and Theodore the Studite. The course will conclude with a foray into the later Byzantine theology of Gregory Palamas. This class is primarily for STL or doctoral students, though advanced MA or MDiv students may also attend. Students are expected to give class presentations on the assigned material, submit a weekly reflection (1-2 pages), and write two papers (10-12 pages each) or a longer research paper (20-25 pages). [PIN code required] STHS4830-01 THEOLOGY OF ANGELS & DEMONS Kromholtz (DSPT) 3 units T 12:40 PM-3:30 PM DSPT:3 This course examines the theology of angels and demons in the Christian tradition, with a focus on the teaching of St. Thomas Aquinas. It will include the history of doctrine, as well as systematic reflection on how angelology can shed light on our current theological conceptions of God, Christ, Church, and humanity. Format: lecture, seminar, & discussion. Requirements: Research paper and seminar presentations. Intended Audience: MA Theology or advanced MDiv students; other students at least at the Master's level may be admitted with permission. Doctoral students: upgrade to 5000 level with additional seminar presentation. STPH4885-01 ISSUES IN DIVINE ACTION Dodds (DSPT)/Tabaczek (GTU) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM DSPT:2 A seminar course exploring contemporary issues in the theology of divine action. Pursuing questions such as how we might understand divine providence, miracles, and prayer in this age of science, the course will consider how modern Newtonian science influenced our understanding of causality, how theories of contemporary science (such as quantum physics, chaos theory, and emergence) have opened the discussion of divine action, and how certain classical philosophical insights into the nature of causality (Aristotle and Aquinas) may be brought to bear on contemporary issues in the theology/science dialogue. A background in science is not necessary. The course requires weekly reports with questions for discussion and either an in-class presentation of student's semester research together with a written summary or a 15-20 page research paper. MA / PhD / ThD. [PIN code required; 12 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] NOTE: This course is co-taught by GTU PhD student Mariusz Tabaczek. STRS4800-01 CONTEXTUAL THEOLOGY Cattoi (JST) 3 units T 6:10 PM-9:00 PM JSTB:217 The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the principles and the practice of contextual theology. The class will study the philosophical and methodological basis of contextual theological reflection, while also exploring particular instances of theological contextualization in different historical periods, ranging from the theology of the Cappadocian fathers in the 4th century to the post-colonial 'local' theologies of the past century. Particular attention will also be given to the contextual dimension of constructive theologies based on dialogue with other religious traditions. The arguments of opponents of contextual theology will also be considered. The class is geared to PhD and STD students, but advanced Masters' or STL students are also welcome to attend. [PIN code required] ST5021-01 METHODS AND DOCTRINES II Radzins (PSR) 3 units Th 2:10 PM-5:00 PM MUDD:104 This course is required for PhD students in the Systematic and Philosophical Theology area. It will cover a variety of ST4826-01 PERSON, THE SELF,THE SCIENCES Griener (JST) 3 units T 12:40 PM-3:30 PM JSTB:217 74 SPRING 2016 readings on theological and doctrinal loci by a variety of contemporary Christian theologians. The class will give students grounding in theological methodology plus an opportunity to see how methodological commitments and doctrinal commitments interact. The class concludes with an exam that functions as the General Comprehensive exam for the Systematic and Philosophical Theology area. is on display at the Eucharistic Table, and further, that the erotic character of the Table offers a vision for social transformation rooted in the Christian Gospel. Lecture and seminar-style discussion; introductory course in theology recommended; ^upgrades^ available for DMin and PhD students. NOTE: This course is the ONLINE version of STRS 4000 Eros, Eucharist, and Social Change. Only students taking the course as an online course should register using this course number; all others should register for STRS 4000. This course meets asynchronously using Moodle (http://gtu.edu/library/students/moodle-help). High-speed internet connection required. (Occasional synchronous class meetings maybe scheduled; see syllabus for details.) ST5240-01 THLGY OF WOLFHART PANNENBERG Peters (PLTS)/Russell (CTNS)/Love (SFTS) 3 units T 2:10 PM-5:00 PM GTU:HDCO In this advanced M.A./M.Div. & Doctoral seminar we will study in depth the theology of Wolfhart Pannenberg, arguably one of the two or three most distinguished Protestant theologians of the 20th century. His work is "required reading" for entering GTU doctoral students and this seminar specifically serves the needs and interests of students in the GTU Area of Systematic and Philosohical Theology. Advanced M.A. and M. Div. students will find it of interest as well. Texts will include the three volumes of his Systematic Theology, selections from his earlier ground-breaking Revelation as History, and other materials including those relating Pannenberg's work to the natural sciences. Evaluation will be through active class participation and a research paper. [A thorough background in systematic and philosophical theology is strongly recommended; No background in science is required, though it is recommended; PIN code required; Auditors with faculty permission] RELIGION & PSYCHOLOGY PS1016-01 PAST COUNSLNG:PROCESS/SKILLS Ormond (DSPT) 3 units T 9:40 AM-12:30 PM n/a This course introduces basic concepts, attitudes, and skills of pastoral counseling. Consideration is given to the fundamental process and skills of pastoral counseling to more effectively deal with common pastoral concerns and problems. It further covers professional ethics for pastoral ministers including issues such as boundaries, power differentials, confidentiality, and sexual misconduct. Systematic training and practice in basic responding and initiating skills are provided. Multicultural implications are included. Intended audience: MDiv, MA, MTS. [PIN code required; 20 max enrollment] ST6015-01 THEOLGY & SCIENCE RESEARCH Peters (PLTS)/Russell (CTNS) 3 units F 11:10 AM-12:30 PM GTU:HDCO This student led seminar allows doctoral students an opportunity to present scholarly research in theology and science to their peers and participating faculty. This includes papers being prepared for GTU examinations, for presentation at the AAR, and so on. It also includes the opportunity to discuss timely materials related to theology and science from journals, media and other sources. [Auditors with faculty permission] PS1060-01 PASTORAL CARE & CONGREGATIONS Griffin (PSR) 3 units TF 12:40 PM-2:00 PM MUDD:206 This survey course is designed to introduce students to the fundamentals of pastoral care, including its history, literature, theories and practices. Students will explore pastoral theology and pastoral care practice as essential components within Christian and other faith traditions and parish ministry. In this respect, students will further explore the nature of holistic care for individuals and families within faith and social communities. Through film, lectures, texts/readings and class discussions, this course will consider pastoral care and counseling principles and approaches and their relationship to common issues and concerns, e.g., worship and spiritual needs, marriage and family, sexuality, boundaries, illness, loss, grief, death and dying. In light of the fact that students find the role plays very helpful in their formation as pastoral care providers, this class will be taught twice each week; one class is devoted to lecture and the other class is a lab structure for modules (role plays). [20 max enrollment] STRS8400-01 EROS, EUCHARIST,SOCIAL CHANGE Johnson (PSR) 3 units PSR:ONLINE If ^God is love^ is God also ^eros^? Do contemporary notions of eroticism make a difference in how we could read biblical texts and historical Christian traditions? Does any of this matter for how Christian faith communities engage in positive social change? This course will explore the various cultural and historical meanings of the erotic in the development of Christian theological traditions and especially how these are reflected (or not) in Eucharistic liturgical celebrations. We will consider and test the hypothesis that ^eros^ marks a fundamental desire for ^communion,^ which PSRS2499-01 CULTS AND SECTX 75 SPRING 2016 Griffin (PSR) 3 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM n/a The purpose of this course is to explore the unorthodox sexual responses and/or abuses endemic in ancient near eastern rites and modern US Christian cult life. While religions generally have been classified as cults at one point or another--including Christianity--this course will further examine religious communes that gained prominence by remaining religious sub-cultures. Special attention will be given to the sexual practices of the 19th century Oneida community, early 20th century African American cults and sects and tragic contemporary cults such as the Peoples Temple, Branch Davidians and Heaven's Gate. Through readings, narrative and film about these cults, implications will be drawn for current views regarding sexuality and spirituality. context by critically reflecting on the sometimes uncomfortable relationship between the having of novel/great ideas and pragmatism. Specifically, participants are hoped to be able to: 1. differentiate different approaches to religious education, and understand the fundamentals of critical pedagogy as a framework for religious education; 2. understand the nature of Christian Religious Education and its theological, historical, and educational contexts from critical pedagogical perspective; 3. identify their own assumptions about and approaches to Faith Education, and how these are derived from and influence their own personal, social, political, cultural, racial, and religious contexts; 4. critically evaluate these approaches through readings, lectures, small group work, and other class activities; 5. articulate and develop in a written form their own theology of education; and 6. develop skills to create and facilitate communities of learning and teaching, and, through small group work, learn the basics of curriculum development. A participatory and empowering approach to Critical Christian Religious Pedagogy will be utilized throughout the course. Each participant is strongly encouraged to have a specific educational setting for praxis. PSHR3013-01 BUDDHIST CHAPLAINCY Fronsdal (IBS) 3-6 units n/a The practice of Buddhist chaplaincy demands the development of compassion and non-judgemental mind, and at the same time offers intense opportunities to develop these qualities. Chaplains serve in variety of settings in which people are under stress of one kind or another, including hospitals and hospices, prisons and jails, and military. This two-semester sequence of training is offered by the Sati Center (Redwood City, CA) in affiliation with IBS. Over the course of ten months, through discussion, readings, meditation, and internship, the student will not only learn about chaplaincy, but begin to develop the necessary skills and understandings for compassionate service to others who are in need, whether they are Buddhists or not. Course limited to IBS students. Both semesters must be completed for credit to be awarded. NOTE: To be accepted in the course, a separate application must be submitted directly to the Sati Center with a $50 application fee. http://www.sati.org/chaplaincy-training/. Student will be interviewed, and if accepted, will pay a separate tuition of $1650 to the Sati Center. Tuition cost is based on Academic Year 2013/14, and is subject to change. [PIN code required; Interview required; Auditors excluded] ED8465-01 INTRO LIBERAL RELIGIOUS ED Prud'Homme (SKSM) 3 units SKSM:ONLINE This online seminar course provides a broad introduction to the theory and practice of liberal religious education, with an emphasis on Unitarian Universalist congregations. Topics include history and philosophy of Unitarian Universalist religious education, teaching and learning, developmental theories, the congregation as an educating community, social justice visions for religious education, current approaches and innovations in religious education for all ages, collegial relationships and professional standards for religious educators, and curriculum resources. The course draws from another by the same name, developed by Betty Jo Middleton, Roberta M. Nelson, Eugene B. Navias, and Judith Mannheim, with support from a St. Lawrence Foundation grant. Open to seminarians, ministers, religious educators, and other lay leaders. [15 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] THEOLOGY & EDUCATION SPECIAL COURSES ED1135-01 CRITICAL RLGS PEDAGOGY:CHRSTN Lee (PSR) 3 units T 5:40 PM-8:30 PM MUDD:100/102/103/104/204/205/206 This course explores five themes: the who, what, why, where, and how of Christian religious education. Philosophy of education and ministry will be framed through readings, praxis and discussion. The goal is to review and renew each participant's approach to educational ministries in diverse DM6010-01 D.MIN. SUPERVISION Choy (SFTS) 3-9 units n/a For SFTS D Min students, preparation of the dissertation/project. Pass/Fail only. [PIN code required] DM6013-01 D.MIN. SUPERVISION II Choy (SFTS) 76 SPRING 2016 3-9 units n/a Dissertation/project stage of the SFTS DMin program. Pass/Fail only. [PIN code required] particular ministry issue in its cultural and social context, to place the issue in a larger theological context, and to utilize such understanding in ministerial leadership that is attentive to that issue in holistic ways. Interdisciplinary in nature, this course models dialogue between disciplines to further enrich and enhance ministry. [PIN code required] DM6014-01 D/P SEMINAR Choy (SFTS) 3 units M 2:00 PM-4:30 PM SFTS SPRING 2015 The Dissertation/Project is the "signature assignment" in one's Doctor of Ministry studies-the capstone requirement for one's Advanced Pastoral Studies coursework and practice of ministry-oriented research. This seminar is designed to help students understand, prepare for, and complete that requirement by beginning with careful conception and development of Dissertation/Project proposals which are attentive to the Learning Objectives for the D.Min. program: reflect upon the issues in society, mission and ministry today through independent and critical reflection, theological analysis, and social analysis; build relationships of collaboration among peers in ministry characterized by openness, cooperation, and cultural competence; and use interdisciplinary and research skills to develop innovative approaches to ministry as reflected in application of interdisciplinary thinking to project development and implementation. [24 max enrollment] SPRING 2016 Orientation to the final requirement for the Doctor of Ministry degree: Dissertation/Project requirements, options, and resources. Plenary, small group work, and individual advising in preparation of DIP Topic Proposal and 0/P Design Proposal. [PIN code required] DR6001-01 PREPARATION FOR COMPREHENSIVES Doctrl Faculty (GT) 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a For PhD and ThD Students Only. DR6002-01 PREPARATION FOR DISSERTATION n/a (GT) 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a For PhD and ThD Students Only. MA5000-01 IN THESIS Lettini () 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a All Masters level students in the GTU community should use this designation if they are working on their thesis. MA5020-01 EXCHANGE PROGRAM,JAPAN Payne (IBS) 0-12 units n/a For study at the IBS affiliate, Ryukoku University, in Kyoto, Japan, or at Dharma Drum Buddhist College in New Taipei, Taiwan; open to IBS and GTU students only. In order for exchange programs to be recorded on the permanent academic record, students must be registered for this course. Registration is necessary for students who wish to receive academic credit for their work in the exchange program or who wish to be eligible for financial aid or deferment while they participate in the exchange program. [PIN code required; written permission of IBS administration required; Auditors excluded] DM6019-01 CULTURAL MILIEU & CHURCH MISSN Choy (SFTS) 3 units M 9:00 AM-12:00 PM SFTS SPRING 2015 This foundational seminar in the Doctor of Ministry program explores recent social theory as it informs contemporary pastoral theologians' mission and ministry. In this course students will explore developments in religiosity in the global context and in the national context, and make an effort to understand these developments as social phenomena. We will also explore the moral and theological challenges generated by the current multicultural context, reflect upon our social locations in this context, and clarify the grounding for mission. In addition to the written texts, we will use the texts of our own experiences. SFTS Doctor of Ministry students. [24 max enrollment; Auditors with faculty permission] SPRING 2016 As the third of three foundational seminars in the Doctor of Ministry program, this course engages students in exploring a contextually attentive approach to ministry by examining the interface between culture and mission, the issues and challenges of doing ministry in a multicultural environment, and in particular their own "social position" and how that position shapes their understanding and practice of ministry. Students will learn ways to use the tools of the social sciences to understand a MA5300-01 MASC PROJECT Lettini (SKSM) 1-3 units n/a For SKSM Master of Arts in Social Change (MASC) students only. MASC students can split this course over two semesters or sign up for it during their last semester. This final project can take a variety of forms and should be representative of student learning and creative work in the MASC degree. Projects include research thesis, public presentations, designing and implementing educational curricula, organizing local/national conferences and special events, multimedia art-work, writing a book and more. The thesis topic, proposal and final draft need to be discussed and developed with the 77 SPRING 2016 faculty. The project can have a public presentation. A total of 3 MASC Project credits are required for graduation in the MASC degree. Please discuss with instructor. [15 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] Faculty (PSR) 1.5 units PSR:ONLINE This class is required for PSR MDiv students who will be expected to write a research paper or formulate a project that demonstrates their abilities to address theological themes historically, biblically, and ethically and with sensitivity to vocational and pastoral issues. They will demonstrate the ability to think contextually and reflect critically on experience and tradition. The class is taken in the student's last spring semester of the MDiv program. The class meets the first half of the semester. Intended audience: MDiv. Pass/Fail only. NOTE: This course is the ONLINE version of MDV 4500. Only students taking the course as an online course should register using this course number; all others should register for MDV 4500. This course meets asynchronously using Moodle (http://gtu.edu/library/students/moodle-help). High-speed internet connection required. (Occasional synchronous class meetings maybe scheduled; see syllabus for details.) MA5505-01 MA COLLOQUIUM Faculty (DSPT) 3 units n/a Only for students in the MA (Philosophy), non- thesis track who are in their final year of studies. MDV3025-01 DOMINICAN EXCHANGE PROGRAM Faculty (DSPT) 0 units n/a For DSPT students only. In order for exchange programs to be recorded on the permanent academic record, students must register for this course. There is a $50.00 charge per semester. Registration is necessary for students who wish to receive academic credit for their work in the exchange program or who wish to have student loan deferments certified for the time in which they participate in the exchange program. MTS3000-01 MTS PROSEMINAR Lescher (JST) 3 units M 2:10 PM-5:00 PM JSTB:217 MTS Proseminar, for JST students in the last semester of their MTS program, occasions a "look back" in the fall with a view that synthesizes one's theological studies and a "look forward" in the spring with a vision that imagines the next step integrated with one's past theological work. The contextual nature of all theology as well as approaches for doing theological reflection inform the synthesis. How various theological disciplines inform one another as well as how theological studies can shape and impact one's work in life crafts the integration. [Interview required; PIN code required; 10 max enrollment] MDV4401-01 INTEGRATION SEMINAR Faculty (JST) 3 units F 2:10 PM-5:00 PM JSTB:216 The principal focus will be on working through various ^cases^ as a means of appropriating theological study (ethics, systematics, biblical, liturgics, etc.) and developing ministerial skills in addressing these cases. Limited to 3rd year JSTB MDiv students. [20 max enrollment; PIN code required; Auditors excluded] NOTE: This class also include three additional meetings during the Fall semester, dates TBA, in Sept., Oct. and Nov. NOV1100-01 NOVITIATE YEAR Faculty (DSPT) 0 units n/a For DSPT students only. Students enrolled in the Western Dominicans Novitiate Program (a program of DSPT) must register for this course for both semesters of their Novitiate Program. MDV4500-01 SENIOR INTEGRATIVE PROJECT/SEM Faculty (PSR) 1.5 units Th 9:40 AM-12:30 PM PSR:6 This class is required for PSR MDiv students who will be expected to write a research paper or formulate a project that demonstrates their abilities to address theological themes historically, biblically, and ethically and with sensitivity to vocational and pastoral issues. They will demonstrate the ability to think contextually and reflect critically on experience and tradition. The class is taken in the student's last spring semester of the MDiv program. The class meets the first half of the semester. Intended Audience: MDiv. Pass/Fail only. NOTE: This course is the in-class version of MDV 8400 Senior Integrative Project/Seminar. Students wishing to take the online version of this class should register for MDV 8400. SRC8888-01 SRC UPGRADE n/a () 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a Upgrading a lower level course to an advanced or doctoral course. SRC9999-01 SPECIAL READING COURSE Faculty () 1-12 units n/a n/a- n/a MDV8400-01 SENIOR INTEGRATIVE PRJCT/SEM 78 SPRING 2016 A special reading course designed by the student and faculty member. This course must have a special reading course form on file in your Registrar's office in order to receive credit for it. Obtain the form from your Registrar. STD6601-01 STD DISSERTATION PREPARATION Faculty (JST) 1-12 units n/a For JSTB STD Students only. UCB9000-01 TAKING UCB COURSE(S) Johnson,J. (UCB) 0-12 units n/a n/a- n/a To use in Web Registration to indicate units to be taken under cross registration at UCB, Holy Names University, and Mills College. To be dropped when the cross registration form(s) is turned in to the Consortial Registrar for a specific course. WU4999-01 SKSM WRITE-UP Faculty (SK) 0.5-3 units - n/a CSR3001-01 CSR FINAL PROJECT n/a (PS) 3 units n/a n/a- n/a For PSR students in the Certificate in Sexuality and Religion. Students should sign up for this course when they are working on their final CSR project. Pass/Fail only. This course is offered by PSR. [PIN code required; Interview required; Auditors excluded] GTUC6000-01 REGISTERED AT UCB Faculty () 0 units n/a n/a- n/a Course for those Joint Degree students registered at the University of California, Berkeley and not taking any GTU courses for a specific semester. STL5500-01 STL THESIS Faculty (JST) 1-12 units n/a For JSTB STL students only. STL5501-01 STL EXTENDED RESEARCH PAPER Faculty (JST) 3 units n/a For JSTB STL students only. STL5600-01 STL COMPREHENSIVES Faculty (JST) 1-6 units n/a For JSTB STL students only. STD6600-01 STD COMPREHENSIVES Faculty (JST) 1-12 units n/a For JSTB STD students only. 79