COR 102: Christian Thought & Life
(3 hrs--Spring Semester First Year or Fall Semester
Sophomore year beginning Spring 2001)

Status: developed and revised by COR 102 instructors in Religion Department; approved by Gen. Ed. Council 4/5/00; approved by AAC 4/26/00.

Catalogue Course Description:
This course introduces the student to critical thinking regarding the essentials of Christian faith including the nature of orthodox Christian belief and the practices that Christians have historically engaged in as part of their commitment to the Church of Jesus Christ. The course considers how one uses the authorities of Scripture, reason, tradition and experience as they form the bases for a Christian worldview. A trip to a variety of worship communities in Chicago is a requirement for the course.

Prerequisites: COR 101

Instructors:
Instructors for the course will come from the Philosophy & Religion Department. However, due to the interdisciplinary nature of the course, guest lecturers from English, art, sociology and the natural sciences will also be utilized throughout the semester as needed.

Frequency of Offering:
Every semester. REL 101 and REL 301 have been deleted to make room in faculty schedules for this new course. We expect to offer 4-5 sections of the course with a limit of 32 students per section. The course will have a heavy writing component and so faculty will need assistance from the English Department in preparation for this aspect of the course.

 

Course Objectives:

Enabling Activities:

Evaluation:

The student will learn to: To meet the objectives the student will: The level of mastery of the objectives will be measured by:
1. identify the 4 sources of Christian authority and the elements of orthodox Christian belief 1. write a statement of belief incorporating the 4 sources of authority and the of key elements of the Christian faith
1. Faculty evaluation the paper
2. identify the 4 movements of worship, the role of sacred space, and the historical development of Christian worship
2. read a text on worship 2. Examination on the text
3. identify and/or begin to develop the spiritual disciplines and their role in the Christian life
3. keep a journal on one’s spiritual development and read materials addressing spiritual development 3. Faculty evaluation of the journal
4. distinguish between good and bad arguments 4. Read a primer on logic and critical thinking 4. Examination on logic and faculty evaluation of written arguments
5. evaluate apologetic writing 5. Read an apologetic for theism and write a critique of it
5. Faculty evaluation of the student critique
6. identify the various traditions within the Christian Church
6. Read a survey on the history of the Church 6. Examination on the text
7. identify and interpret various genres of literature in the Scriptures 7. Read selections of Scripture, a good secondary source, and keep a notebook on interpretation
7. Examination on the materials and evaluation of the notebook
8. distinguish between the mono-theistic religions and their views on worship and the role of the Scriptures
8. Take a trip to Chicago to visit Muslim, Jewish and Christian houses of worship 8. Evaluation of journal or paper

 

Course Content Outline: (based on M-W-F) schedule

 

Possible Texts: