Spring 2016/Houston
IS501
Taylor
IS501: PRACTICES OF WORSHIP (4 Units: 160 hours). W. David O. Taylor.
DESCRIPTION: Christian practices constitute the Christian life. The combined Christian practices of vocational formation, worship, community, and mission facilitate the integration of personal, spiritual, academic, and global formation into the vocational coherence of a Christian leader through reflection, relationships, and practices. IS501 is an integrative course that explores the identity and practices of Christian worship as a people called, gathered, and sent by God. Together, professor and students study and enact historic Christian disciplines necessitated by this distinctive identity (Sabbath-Keeping, Confession, Praise, Gathering & Sending, Reading & Proclaiming the Word, Prayer, Communion, Enacting the Prophetic).
LEARNING OUTCOMES: (1) Students will reflect on their current and past experiences of Christian practices of worship; (2) Students will participate in local contexts and demonstrate the capacity to engage in activities and exercises related to Christian spiritual disciplines and practices of worship; (3) Students will demonstrate the capacity to engage scripture, tradition, and contemporary resources to reflect theologically on historic practices of worship; (4) Students will articulate how worship practices impact their response to the Central Integration Question (CIQ) and will identify exercises, habits, and disciplines to embody these practices within their sociocultural context.
COURSE FORMAT: This class meets once per week for three-hour sessions for a total of 30 hours of classroom instruction for lecture and discussion (which includes 8 hours of participation in vocation and formation groups) plus 10 hours of directed learning activities for a total of 40 instructional hours.
REQUIRED READING/VIEWING: 1,000 pp. of required reading and/or the equivalent in viewing.
The Holy Bible. CEB, NRSV, and TNIV translations are acceptable. [60 pp. assigned].
Course Reader. Found on eReserves through our course Moodle site. [465 pp. assigned].
Block, Daniel I. For the Glory of God: Recovering a Biblical Theology of Worship. Baker Academic, 2014. ISBN: 978-0801026980, Pub. Price $28.01 [100 pp.]
Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Life Together. Harper One, 2009. ISBN: 978-0060608521, Pub. Price $14.99 [100 pp. assigned].
Caccamo, James F., Todd Johnson, and Lester Ruth. Living Worship: A Multimedia Resource for Students and Leaders. Brazos Press, 2006. ASIN: 1587432951, Published Price $27.99 [15 hours of viewing and reading assigned] (available to purchase online at the Archives bookstore).
Cherry, Constance M. The Worship Architect: A Blueprint for Designing Culturally Relevant and Biblically Faithful Services. Baker Academic, 2010. ISBN: 978-0801038747, Pub. Price $24.99 [150 pp.]
Peterson, Eugene. Answering God: The Psalms as Tools for Prayer. HarperOne, 1991. ISBN: 978-0060665128, Pub. Price $13.00 [125 pp.]
CORE PRACTICES (secondary readings to be found on eReserves):
Sabbath-Keeping
Olson, Dennis, “Sacred Time: The Sabbath and Christian Worship,” in Carol Bechtel, ed. Touching the Altar. Eerdmans, 2008, pp. 2-32. In eReserves.
Block, Daniel I. For the Glory of God, ch. 11.
Cherry, Constance M. The Worship Architect, 12
Confession
Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Life Together. Harper One, 2009, pp.110-122.
Peterson, Eugene. Answering God, 1-3.
Praise
Ford, David and Daniel Hardy. Living in Praise: Worshipping and Knowing God. Baker, 2005, pp. 1-59. In eReserves.
Block, Daniel I. For the Glory of God, ch. 2.
Gathering and Sending
Cherry, Constance M. The Worship Architect, 3-4, 8.
Peterson, Eugene. Answering God, chs. 4-5.
Reading and Proclaiming the Word
Block, Daniel I. For the Glory of God, ch. 7.
Cherry, Constance M. The Worship Architect, chs. 1-2, 5.
“Ten Tips for Reading Scripture in Public Worship.” Online article found at:
Prayer
Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Life Together. Harper One, 2009, pp.76-89.
Block, Daniel I. For the Glory of God, ch. 8.
Cherry, Constance M. The Worship Architect, ch. 9.
Peterson, Eugene. Answering God, ch. 6.
Communion
Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Life Together. Harper One, 2009, pp.17-75.
Block, Daniel I. For the Glory of God, pp. 155-167.
Cherry, Constance M. The Worship Architect, chs. 6-7.
Enacting the Prophetic
Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Life Together. Harper One, 2009, pp. 90-100.
Peterson, Eugene. Answering God, chs. 7-10.
ASSIGNMENTS AND ASSESSMENT:
1,000 pages reading and 15 hours of multimedia and videos, including at least 60 pages of biblical text [This assignment is related to learning outcome #3]. [67 hours].
Classroom: for each practice, students will engage, reflect, create (utilizing instruction, participation, presentation, discussion, engaging practice-based theology cycle for theological reflection, case studies) (30%). [This assignment is related to learning outcome #1, #2, #3]. [22 hours].
Vocation Formation Group (VFG)-In a Vocation Formation Group, students will engage spiritual disciplines, practices, and discussion. Students will study the Bible, and share and listen to stories related to the practices (5%). (Vocation Formation Group Leader (VFGL) will let professor know if students have been present and engaged) [This assignment is related to learning outcome #1, #2, and #4]. [8 hours].
Students will participate in directed practices and disciplines over the course of the quarter (10%). [This assignment is related to learning outcome #2]. [15 hours].
Four fieldwork activities and reflections (20%). [This assignment is related to learning outcome #2]. [8 hours + 8 hours = 16 hours].
Autobiography related to core course concept (5%). [This assignment is related to learning outcome #1]. [2 hours].
DLA’s (Distributed Learning Activities) (10%). [This assignment is related to learning outcome #1 and #4]. [10 hours].
Signature Assignment: 100-word CIQ response, Integration paper related to course practices, and Rule of Life (2,500 words total) (20%). [This assignment is related to learning outcome #1, #3, and #4]. [20 hours].
PREREQUISITES: None. Recommended in first year of study.
RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM: Meets a core integrative requirement in the 120 MDiv Program and the 80 MAT, 80 MATM, 80 MAICS Programs (Fall 2015).
FINAL EXAMINATION: None.