Summer 2004/Pasadena
Five-week Intensive: July 26 - August 27
LG562
Bach
LG562: THEOLOGICAL GERMAN 2. Peter Bach.
DESCRIPTION:
- This course is designed to prepare theological students to
successfully pass the foreign language doctoral examination in German. Tied
closely to the competencies actually tested on the examination, the course will
concentrate on written and sight translations from the Old and New Testaments
as well as the writings of German-speaking theologians, e.g., Barth, Bultmann,
Moltmann, Pannenberg.
RELEVANCE FOR MINISTRY:
- Scholarly access to vast theological literature written in German
and largely untranslated.
COURSE FORMAT:
- The class will meet twice weekly for two-hour sessions for five
weeks. A two-hour homework assignment will be given after every class
meeting.
REQUIRED READING:
- Rogalla, H. and W. Grammar Handbook for Reading German
Texts. New York: Langenscheidt, 1985.
- Ziefle, Helmut, ed. Modern Theological German: A Reader and
Dictionary. Grand Rapids: Baker, 1997.
RECOMMENDED READING:
- It is also recommended that one of the following be acquired:
- Traupman, John C. The Bantam New College German and
English Dictionary. New York: Bantam, 1981.
- Messinger, Heinz. Langenscheidt's New College German Dictionary.
Munich: Langenscheidt, 1973.
- Terrell, Peter et al. Collins German-English, English-German
Dictionary. Glasgow: Collins, 1991.
- Oxford-Duden German Dictionary. 1990.
ASSIGNMENTS:
- Regular assigned reading from reading list and weekly handouts. A
two-hour homework assignment will be given after every class meeting.
PREREQUISITES:
- LG558 or equivalent. No audits except for those with transcript
evidence of previous study of German.
RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM:
- Elective.
FINAL EXAMINATION:
- Yes. Two written-translations and one sight passage (2-hour
length). This exam corresponds to the German qualifying examination for
Ph.D./Th.M. students in the Center for Advanced Theological Studies who are
required to take four units of this research language.