Spring 2003/Pasadena
CH801/579
Bradley
CH801/579: THE CHURCH IN MODERN SOCIETY. James Bradley.
DESCRIPTION:
- This is an advanced seminar primarily for doctoral students open on
the 500-level on a limited basis to qualified master's-level students. In early
modern Europe, Christian thought and institutions dominated vast areas of human
endeavor, including science, philosophy, social and economic theory, law and
politics. The revolutions of the modern world have almost completely
overturned this relationship and thrown the Church into a series of prolonged
crises. This seminar will survey the critical points of intersection between
the Church and society since the Enlightenment, particularly in Britain and
North America. We will read selections from several of the most influential
thinkers of the Enlightenment, Romanticism, and Positivism, and we will study
the most important contemporary theories of secularization, including those of
Weber, Berger, Wilson, and Pannenberg.
RELEVANCE FOR MINISTRY:
- This course is intended for students who plan a vocation in
teaching, research, and writing. The course will furnish students with an
understanding of the most formidable intellectual challenges facing the church
today, and hopefully, it will help lay a foundation that will enable the
Christian intellectual to offer a credible answer to these challenges.
COURSE FORMAT:
- The seminar will meet two hours a week for discussion.
REQUIRED READING:
- Cashdollar, Charles D. The Transformation of Theology,
1830-1890. Princeton, 1989.
- Gilbert, Alan D. The Making of Post-Christian Britain. Longman,
1980.
- May, Henry F. The Enlightenment in America. Oxford, 1976.
- Noll, Mark A. Between Faith and Criticism. Harper, 1986.
- Pannenberg, Wolfhart. Christianity in a Secularized World.
Crossroad, 1989.
ASSIGNMENTS:
- Rigorous participation in the seminar discussions and a major
research paper. Students will be able to choose from a wide variety of specific
topics for their papers, but the seminar is also designed to enhance the
student's overall competence in the broad field of modern Church
history.
PREREQUISITES:
- The seminar is intended primarily for Ph.D. and Th.M. students
working in the area of modern church history and theology. The course is open
to a limited number of M.A. and M.Div. students who are planning advanced work
in the fields of history or theology by permission of the professor. Such
students should have completed one or more survey courses in Modern Church
History, American Church History, or Modern Theology.
RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM:
- Elective for M.A. and M.Div. students; it is part of the required
curriculum for history students in the Center for Advanced Theological Study.
FINAL EXAMINATION:
- None.