Summer 2001/Pasadena
Two-week Intensive
ST501
Brown
ST501: SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY I: THEOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY. Colin Brown.
DESCRIPTION:
- This course is designed to provide a resource for Christian
thought, life, and ministry by examining Christian beliefs about revelation,
reason, and faith; the nature and authority of Scripture; the existence of God
and the way we think about divine attributes; the Holy Trinity; creation and
providence; human beings as the image of God; the fall and sin.
RELEVANCE FOR THE CHRISTIAN LIFE AND MINISTRY:
- The purpose of the course to assist students to think for
themselves theologically by developing a method which seeks to identify the
issues, examine what others have said about them, reexamine the teaching of
Scripture, and give their own answers.
COURSE FORMAT:
- A two-week intensive, meeting daily for four-hour sessions of
lectures and discussion.
REQUIRED READING:
- Course Syllabus.
RECOMMENDED READING:
- There is no set textbook. Students are encouraged to read widely
from a variety of primary and secondary texts. Selected works will be placed on
the reserve shelf of McAlister Library. Further details of literature on
particular topics are given in the required Course Syllabus, available from the
Fuller Bookstore. The following general works contain material relevant to the
course:
- Brown, C. Christianity and Western Thought, I, From the Ancient
World to the Age of Enlightenment. InterVarsity Press, 1990.
- ________. The New International Dictionary of New Testament
Theology. 4 Vols. Re. ed. Zondervan, 1986.
- ________. "Trinity and Incarnation: In Search of Contemporary Orthodoxy."
Ex Auditu 7 (1991): 83-100.
- Clines, D. J. A. "Humanity as the Image of God in Man." In On the Way to
the Postmodern. Sheffield Academic Press, 1998, 2:447-97.
- Ferguson, S. B. and Wright, D. F., eds. New Dictionary of Theology.
InterVarsity Press, 1988.
- Jewett, Paul K. with Marguerite Shuster. Who We Are: Our Dignity as
Human. A Neo-Evangelical Theology. Eerdmans, 1996.
- Moreland, J. P. and Scott B. Rae. Body and Soul: Human Nature and the
Crisis in Ethics. InterVarsity Press, 2000.
- Schaff, P. The Creeds of Christendom. 3 Vols. 1877, reprint edition.
Baker Book House, 1983 and later reprints.
- Swinburne, Richard. The Evolution of the Soul. Rev. ed. Clarendon
Press, 1977.
- _________. Providence and the Problem of Evil. Clarendon Press,
1998.
- Van Till, Howard J., et. al., Portraits of Creation: Biblical and
Scientific Perspectives on the World's Formation. Eerdmans, 1990.
- Wink, Walter. The Powers. 3 vols. Fortress Press, 1984-1992.
ASSIGNMENTS:
- Submission of class notes with critical responses due two weeks
after the end of class and a written paper on a chosen topic due four weeks
after end of class. Students completing their Systematic Theology courses may
choose to write a Credo in lieu of these assignments.
PREREQUISITES: None.
RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM: Meets M.Div. core requirement in Systematic
Theology "a" (STA).
FINAL EXAMINATION: None.