2016-2017 Undergraduate Academic Catalogue [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Theology
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Return to: Loyola College of Arts and Sciences
Office: Humanities Center, Room 042c
Telephone: 410‑617‑2219
Website: www.loyola.edu/academic/theology
Chair: Steven E. Fowl, Professor
Professors: Frederick C. Bauerschmidt; James J. Buckley; Angela Russell Christman; John J. Conley, S.J.; Stephen E. Fowl; Brian F. Linnane, S.J.; Claire Mathews-McGinnis; Joseph S. Rossi, S.J.
Associate Professors: R. Trent Pomplun; Arthur M. Sutherland
Assistant Professors: Daniel P. Castillo; Rebekah Ann Eklund; John R. Kiess; Maiju Lehmijoki-Gardner (visiting); Matthew A. Moser (visiting); Timothy W. O'Brien, S.J. (visiting)
Instructor: Daniel Wade McClain
The practice of theology in a Catholic context requires study of the origins and uses of Jewish and Christian Scriptures, the history of Christianity (Eastern and Western, Catholic and Protestant), contemporary theologies, and theological ethics. It also requires studying the multiple relationships between theology and contemporary philosophies, religions, and cultures. Thus, all students take an introduction to theology aimed at learning to interpret the Bible, understand history of Christianity, and become people who can respond intelligently, in thought and life, to the way these texts and traditions challenge (and are challenged by) our contemporary cultures.
The second theology course focuses these aims on one of four general areas: Jewish and Christian Scriptures, the History of Christianity, Christian Theology, Theology and Culture (including world religions). Core ethics courses are either case-oriented or theme-oriented explorations of theological ethics. The electives aim to introduce students to the way scholarly research is conducted in the various divisions of theology. These diverse aims are ultimately in the service of reading about, writing about, thinking about, and otherwise engaging the triune God. Loyola's theology courses are addressed to all students-Catholic and Christian, Jewish or members of other religions, doubters and nonbelievers.
Learning Aims
Students who successfully complete the theology major will be able to:
- describe the major events of the biblical narrative and name significant figures and events in the Bible, locating them temporally and spatially in relation to one another;
- distinguish different approaches to biblical interpretation and assess their relevance for particular theological aims;
- describe major doctrinal disputes and figures in the history of Christianity, locating them temporally and spatially in relation to one another;
- analyze and assess the significance of selected historical theological debates for Christians today;
- relate different Christian doctrines to one another in a systematic way and articulate the interconnections between them;
- relate Christian theological views to currents in the wider culture, including the views of other religious traditions;
- analyze and evaluate the congruities and discongruities between Christian theological views and other phenomena of human culture;
- practice the technique of "close reading" of a theological or other text;
- write papers using clear and persuasive language to analyze and appraise theological and other positions.
ProgramsAcceleratedMajorInterdisciplinary MajorsMinorCoursesTheology- TH 100 - Christianity in the Czech Republic
- TH 201 - Introduction to Theology
- TH 202 - Theology and Catholic Autobiography
- TH 203 - Catholic Church: Life and Thought
- TH 204 - The History and Theology of the Papacy
- TH 205 - Christian Rome: Understanding Jesus Christ in Rome
- TH 206 - Liturgical Art and Architecture
- TH 207 - Saints and Sinners in the Eternal City
- TH 211 - Women in the Christian Tradition
- TH 214 - Friends and Foes: Jews and Christians through the Ages
- TH 216 - Ignatius and the Jesuits: History and Spirituality
- TH 218 - Sacred Journeys: The History and Theology of Christian Pilgrimage
- TH 220 - The Catholic Church in the United States
- TH 222 - The Kingdom of God
- TH 224 - The Gospels and the Earliest Churches
- TH 225 - Biographical Tales of the Bible
- TH 229 - Images of God in Scripture
- TH 231 - Story and Revelation: The Art of Biblical Narrative
- TH 241 - Christian Feast and Devotions
- TH 242 - A History and Theology of Saints
- TH 243 - Heaven and Hell
- TH 244 - Forgiveness and Reconciliation
- TH 245 - Eucharist (The Mass) in Ordinary Time
- TH 246 - Who is Jesus?
- TH 247 - The Presence of God: Christian Mysticism, East and West
- TH 249 - Christian Sacraments
- TH 261 - Introduction to Judaism
- TH 262 - African American Religious Thought
- TH 263 - The Catholic Church in the Czech Republic
- TH 264 - Theology and Children's Literature
- TH 265 - World Christianity
- TH 266 - Christian Theology and World Religions
- TH 267 - The Holocaust and Jewish Law
- TH 269 - Theology and Literature
- TH 270 - Creation and Evolution
- TH 272 - The Christian Imagination
- TH 273 - Urban Health and Faith
- TH 274 - Religion, Poverty, and American Health Care
- TH 301 - Ethics: Theology and Ethics of Hospitality
- TH 303 - Ethics: Ancient, Modern, and Christian Approaches to Ethics
- TH 304 - Ethics: Introduction to Christian Ethics
- TH 305 - Ethics: Contemporary Moral Issues
- TH 307 - Ethics: Marriage and Sexuality
- TH 308 - Ethics: Justice and the Church in the World
- TH 310 - Ethics: Peace Ethics
- TH 311 - Ethics: Spirituality and Social Ethics-Biblical and Theological Perspectives
- TH 312 - Christian Environmental Ethics
- TH 315 - Ethics: Catholic Social Thought in the United States
- TH 316 - Ethics: Catholic Spiritual Life in the United States
- TH 319 - Ethics: The Church and the Human Body
- TH 321 - Studies in the Protestant Reformation
- TH 322 - Christianity and Its Critics
- TH 325 - From Christopher Columbus to Global Catholicism
- TH 326 - Ignatius Loyola and the Spiritual Exercises
- TH 327 - The Virgin Mary in Scripture and Tradition
- TH 329 - Medieval Women Authors
- TH 331 - Finding God in All Things: Spirituality and Prayer in the Christian Tradition
- TH 335 - An Introduction to the Theology of Saint Augustine
- TH 336 - Catholic Intellectual Life in the United States: Two Hundred Years of American Catholic Opinion
- TH 338 - The Theology of Thomas Aquinas
- TH 345 - Psalms
- TH 346 - Disputing the Bible
- TH 347 - Jesus and the Gospels
- TH 349 - Learn to Do Right: Biblical Perspectives on Social Justice
- TH 350 - Prophets and Peacemakers
- TH 354 - Male and Female in the Kingdom of God: Contemporary Gender Perspectives on the Bible
- TH 355 - Saint Paul and His Writings
- TH 356 - Genesis: Exploring the Bible's First Book
- TH 360 - The Biblical Imagination: From Eden to the Apocalypse
- TH 361 - Philosophical and Theological Metaphysics
- TH 362 - Hope, Death, and the End of the World
- TH 363 - Sacraments and the Christian Life
- TH 364 - God and Radical Evils
- TH 365 - Theology and Art
- TH 366 - Catholic Theology in Modernity
- TH 367 - Vatican II and the Postconciliar World
- TH 368 - The Church
- TH 369 - Faith and Reason
- TH 370 - Liberation Theology: Roots, Branches, and Critiques
- TH 381 - Faith and Film: The Apostle's Creed in the American Cinema
- TH 384 - Christianity and Islam
- TH 385 - The Theological and the Religious in International Cinema
- TH 386 - Fundamental Questions of Morality
- TH 387 - International Catholic Literature in the Twentieth Century
- TH 390 - What is Patience?
- TH 392 - Globalization, Inculturation, and Justice
- TH 395 - Justice, Peace, and the Integrity of Creation: A Christian Theological Inquiry
- TH 396 - Christianity and Global Justice
- TH 397 - Ethics after God
- TH 398 - Euthanasia and the Problem of Suffering
- TH 399 - Contemporary Catholic Intellectual Life
- TH 400 - Senior Seminar
Return to: Loyola College of Arts and Sciences
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