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A summary of each course to help with your selection.
Course ID
Course
RELS 369
RELS 369
Historical Theology
Course Credits: 3
A study of the history of Christian theology from the post-apostolic age to the present. Focus is on perennial issues in Christian theology and areas of convergence and divergence between the three Christian traditions: Orthodoxy, Catholicism, and Protestantism. Students will consider the role of the Bible, culture, and experience in order to understand the complexities involved in studying historical theology.
RELS 371
RELS 371
Sociology of Religion
Course Credits: 3
An introduction to the theories and concepts utilized by sociologists to interpret religious behaviour and the organization of religion.
RELS 372
RELS 372
Contemporary Catholic Theology of the Love of God
Course Credits: 3
This course traces the theme of the merciful love of God in Scripture and Catholic Tradition, especially in the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Catherine of Siena, St. Therese of Lisieux, St. Faustina Kowalska, and Pope John Paul II, as well as in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. The Mercy of God is presented as a central vantage point from which to view more clearly many important elements of Catholic doctrine and spirituality, ethics, and a common springboard for Catholic-Evangelical ecumenism—in other words, the contemporary Catholic world view. (This is not a course in Catholic apologetics or polemics.)
NB: Course taught at Catholic Pacific College, an approved TWU learning centre.
RELS 373
RELS 373
Theology I: The Trinity & the Church
Course Credits: 3
A doctrinal study of the Trinity and the Church, engaging the biblical material in forming a doctrine of God and the Church.
NB: It is strongly recommended that students take RELS 369 before taking this course.
RELS 374
RELS 374
Theology II: The Person & Work of Christ
Course Credits: 3
A doctrinal study of the person and work of Jesus Christ, engaging the biblical material in forming a doctrine of Christology and soteriology.
NB: It is strongly recommended that students take RELS 369 before taking this course.
RELS 380
RELS 380
Cross-Cultural/Missions Practicum
Course Credits: 2, 3
A supervised short-term missions/cross-cultural internship/practicum.
NB: Open only to Inter-Cultural Religious Studies majors or minors.
RELS 381
RELS 381
Contemporary Christianity
Course Credits: 3
Students are invited to investigate some of the most significant theologians and theologies of the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries with a view toward how they influence Christianity today. The approach is both inter-confessional and international in scope and seeks to allow students to grapple with important theological issues in local, national, and global contexts.
RELS 382
RELS 382
Catholic Church: Theology & Practice
Course Credits: 3
This course focuses on the theological, liturgical, and spiritual traditions that undergird the Catholic Church and which continue to form her self-understanding. Historically, this course explains and evaluates the development of the Catholic doctrine of the Church in terms of its roots in Scripture and Tradition, and with a particular emphasis on the Pauline understanding of the Church as the Body of Christ, and selected readings from the Church Fathers, as well as developments in Catholic understanding of the Church in different historical periods and social contexts. It also examines the Church in terms of her ongoing mission to the contemporary world implied by Catholic doctrine. Spiritually, this course exams the distinctive teaching of the Second Vatican Council's 'universal call to holiness' which ultimately serves to integrate doctrine and life in each member of the Church. Analysis of these themes are undertaken in dialogue with the perspectives of other Christian traditions, and in the light of the constructive critique they can offer.
NB: Course taught at Catholic Pacific College, an approved TWU learning centre.
RELS 383
RELS 383
Reason & Belief in God
Course Credits: 3
A survey of central issues arising from the question, “Is belief in God rational?” Topics include arguments concerning the existence of God, religious pluralism, natural science and religious belief, religious language, and critiques of natural theology from Kierkegaard and Reformed Epistemology.