500

THE 510 Word of God: Scripture and Tradition

This course studies God’s Word as it has been expressed and handed on in Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition with a special focus on the central teachings of the Catholic faith (such as creation, fall and redemption, Trinity and Incarnation, the Church and the Holy Spirit).  Emphasis is placed on reading primary sources, including principal Biblical texts, writings of Church Doctors and Fathers, major theologians, Magisterial documents and writings from the Franciscan tradition.  

3

THE 511 Principles of Biblical Study I

Is an introduction to the literature of the Old Testament: the Tetrateuch, the Deuteronomic corpus, the prophetic literature, the priestly writings, the wisdom literature, and the Deuterocanonical books. Students will be directed to read selections from the above categories. The theological-historical meaning of the Old Testament will be stressed.

3

Prerequisites

THE 101 and THE 110

Cross Listed Courses

THE 211

THE 512 Principles of Biblical Study II

Is an introduction to the literature of the New Testament: the Synoptic Gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, the Johannine literature, the Pauline literature, the Letter to the Hebrews, and the "catholic epistles." The theological-historical meaning of the New Testament will be stressed.

3

Prerequisites

THE 101 and THE 110

Cross Listed Courses

THE 212

THE 513 Theology of Christ

Investigates the person and mission of Jesus Christ as articulated in the New Testament documents, in the early creedal formulae, and in the declarations of the Church Councils of the fourth, fifth and sixth centuries AD. Finally, students will be exposed to positions of great Catholic thinkers and contemporary scholars on various Christological questions.

3

Prerequisites

THE 101 and THE 110

Cross Listed Courses

THE 213

THE 514 Theology of the Church

Examines the nature, history, and problems of the Christian community as understood in the Catholic tradition. Students undertake the task of investigating the biblical foundation of the Church, various branches of the Church, Christian authority, principles underlying church worship practices, church-state relationship, ecumenism, and other ecclesiological topics.

3

Prerequisites

THE 101 and THE 110

Cross Listed Courses

THE 214

THE 515 Christian Moral Principles

Elucidates the principles of morality that regulate Christian living. These principles are studied as they are found rooted in the New Testament documents and articulated throughout the history of the Christian community's lived existence, with a thorough look at the contemporary understanding of Christian moral theology as it is articulated by the magisterium of the Catholic Church and by theologians in union with the magisterium. Students will examine these principles as they apply to some perennial moral issues.

3

Cross Listed Courses

THE 115

THE 516 The Sacraments

Presents a general theological consideration of the structure of the sacramental life of the Church and an historic-dogmatic analysis of the major theologies of the individual sacraments. Particular emphasis will be given to baptism and Eucharist. The course will include the Christian response to the sacramental life in filial, salvific social, communal, and ecclesial dimensions.

3

Prerequisites

THE 101 and THE 110

Cross Listed Courses

THE 314

THE 518 Theology of the Church and Sacraments

This course offers a historico-dogmatic analysis of the Church and the seven sacraments, from their biblical foundations to contemporary magisterial teaching. It will consider such topics as authority, liturgy, communion ecclesiology, relations between Church and state, and ecumenism. There will be particular emphasis on Baptism and Eucharist.

3

THE 519 Ecclesial Nature and Mission of Theology

This course introduces the student to the graduate study of sacred theology by examining the nature and mission of theology as an ecclesial vocation, in light of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith’s 1990 document, “Instruction on the Ecclesial Vocation of the Theologian” (Donum Veritatis).  The nature of theology is examined as a “science” in the classical sense, that is, an intellectual habit in which certitude is available through rational reflection, in the light of faith, on divine revelation.  The student will be formed in the fundamental dispositions and tools requisite to the responsible and academic pursuit of graduate theological studies.

3