Concentration in Theology

Director

Associate Professor Alexander

About the Concentration in Theology

The Concentration in Theology is designed to offer students interested in theology the opportunity of a focused and structured course of study in theology beyond the core curriculum. Building upon “Understanding the Bible” and “Western Theological Tradition,” the Concentration in Theology promotes a basic competency in each of the major areas of theological study: systematic and historical theology, Scripture, and moral theology. Secondly, the concentration demonstrates the essentially interdisciplinary nature of theology, that is to say, the relation of theology to the other areas of the liberal arts.

Concentration Requirements

I. Courses (15 Credit Hours):

THE 3320Principles of Catholic Biblical Interpretation

3

THE 3331Sys The I: God/Hum Exst

3

Or

THE 3332Sys The II:Christ/Church

3

THE 3341Moral Theology

3

One upper-level elective course in theology (Scripture, systematics, or historical theology)

One upper-level elective course in another discipline (philosophy, history, English, for example) that is related to the discipline of theology

Examples include, but are not limited to:

Philosophy of God

From Ancient to Medieval Philosophy (or any of the other historical surveys)

Shakespeare

The Reformation

American Catholic History I and II

II. The Capstone Presentation

The concentration as a whole is intended to possess an essential unity or structure beyond the mere accumulation of required credit hours in a particular area. To this end, the proposed concentration requires a capstone presentation. In the spring of their senior year concentrators present publicly a final paper which focuses upon a theological question or subject as it relates to the student’s major or which grows out of the required elective in a discipline outside of theology. The capstone presentation is assessed on a pass/fail/pass-with-distinction basis.