Summer 2008/Pasadena
Two-week Intensive: July 21-August 1
CH505
Muller

CH505: POST-REFORMATION AND MODERN THEOLOGY. Richard A. Muller.


DESCRIPTION: A survey of the major developments in theology since the Protestant Reformation, with emphases on English Puritanism, Protestant Orthodoxy, Pietism, Wesleyanism, and the dialogue with Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment thought from Schleiermacher through Barth, Vatican II, and the rise of contextual theologies.

LEARNING OUTCOMES: There are four objectives to this course. First, that students become familiar with the central theological doctrines and developments in post-Reformation Protestantism as well as those that resulted from cultural shifts provoked by the Enlightenment and its modern legacy. Second, that students gain an understanding of the theological controversies of the period from diverse points of view, including the perspectives of the original participants and those of historians today. Third, that students practice the close reading of selected primary sources in order to analyze and faithfully articulate the theological arguments of a historical text. Fourth, that students reflect on the perennial nature of the doctrinal controversies that shaped Christian identity in this period as these doctrines and practices have engendered contemporary Christian diversity and ecumenical conversation.

RELEVANCE FOR MINISTRY: By introducing a significant body of theological and historical data, the course seeks to lead students to a broader perspective on their own ecclesiastical traditions, beliefs, and practices, as well as to a sympathetic appreciation for the unity and diversity of the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic church of which they are a part. Intensive work in primary sources will help students to acquire an improved facility in the analysis of theological arguments and an increased ability to articulate the meaning of the Christian faith in its historical development--skills that will also benefit the student's reading, understanding, and exposition of Scripture itself.

COURSE FORMAT: Class will meet daily for four hours of lecture, five days per week in a two-week intensive, with occasional discussion sessions devoted to student interaction with concepts and assigned documents.

REQUIRED READING:
Hagglund, Bengt. History of Theology. Rev. ed. Concordia, 2007 [140 pp. read].
Grenz, Stanley J., and Roger E. Olson. 20th Century Theology: God & the World in a Transitional Age. InterVarsity Press, 992. [305 pp. read].
Muller, Richard A. Dictionary of Latin and Greek Theological Terms. Baker, 1985. [assigned terms]
Course reader, available from bookstore.

RECOMMENDED READING:
Cross, F. L. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. 3rd ed. Oxford University Press, 1997.
Douglas, J. D. The New International Dictionary of the Christian Church. Paternoster, 1978.
Gonzalez, Justo L. A History of Christian Thought. Vols. 2-3. Abingdon, 1987.
Placher, William C. A History of Christian Theology. Westminster, 1983.

ASSIGNMENTS:

  1. Assigned readings, to be completed as preparation for lectures.

  2. Three short papers on primary source readings; each 20% of course grade (due September 5).

  3. Comprehensive final essay/examination; 40% of course grade.

PREREQUISITES: None.

RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM: Meets MDiv core requirement in Church History "c" (CHC).

FINAL EXAMINATION: Yes.

This ECD is a reliable guide to the course design but is subject to modification. (4/08)