syllabi-topic: Social Ethics - 17 results

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Christian Social Ethics

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Course Level-Format: undergraduate
Instructor: Jeffrey D. Meyers
Institution: Elmhurst College

Course Term: Spring
Course Year: 2020

Annotation:

A 2020 course by Jeffrey D. Meyers at Elmhurst College (now Elmhurst University) is “a critical introduction to normative Christian social ethics (its methodology, theology, and moral principles) on selected contemporary moral issues such as war, racism, hunger, poverty, and environmental degradation.”

Theology of Addiction

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Course Level-Format: undergraduate
Instructor: Corey Harris
Institution: Alvernia University

Course Term: Fall
Course Year: 2015

Annotation:

A 2015 course by Corey Harris at Alvernia University is a “study and analysis of concepts in fundamental moral theology, particular forms of addiction, and the social ethics implications of those addictions.”

Economic Justice & the Christian Conscience

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Course Level-Format: graduate  |   online and f2f
Instructor: Malinda Elizabeth Berry
Institution: Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary

Course Term: Summer
Course Year: 2015

Annotation:

A 2015 course by Malinda Elizabeth Berry at Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary explores “various perspectives on the meaning of justice, economic ‘development’ in the global village, economic systems and theories, economics and ecology, business ethics, economics in the church, and economic faithfulness for individual Christians.”

Christian Witness

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Course Level-Format: undergraduate
Instructor: Michael Andres
Institution: Northwestern College

Course Term: Fall
Course Year: 2009

Annotation:

A 2009 course by Michael Andres at Northwestern College is “an examination of Christian witness as verbal proclamation (evangelism), reasoned defense (apologetics), and as social action (justice).”

Patterns and Practice of Christian Justice

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Instructor: Scott Williamson
Institution: Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary

Course Term: Fall
Course Year: 2011

Annotation:

A 2011 course by Scott Williamson at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary investigates “philosophical and theological theories of justice, namely, to examine the resources of Christianity for brokering social justice in a broken society.”

Being A Servant: Internal Reflection Leading to Actions of Community and Peace

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Instructor: Thomas J. Neuville
Institution: Millersville University

Course Term:
Course Year: 2005

Annotation:

A 2005 course by Thomas Neuville at Millersville University brings together “self-reflection, keen awareness of the world around them and positive social action.”

Money & Mission of the Church

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Instructor: Adam J. Copeland
Institution: Luther Seminary

Course Term: Fall
Course Year: 2015

Annotation:

A Fall 2015 course by Adam J. Copeland at Luther Seminary surveys biblical texts “related to giving and stewardship of resources” and treats “practical application to contemporary congregational life and preaching.”

Theologies of Justice & Peace

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Course Level-Format: undergraduate
Instructor: Gerald Schlabach
Institution: University of Saint Thomas

Course Term: Spring
Course Year: 2015

Annotation:

A 2015 course by Gerald Schlabach at the University of St. Thomas provides an “examination of the views of various religions and ideologies on issues of justice and peace, with special attention to the Catholic and of the Christian teachings on such issues as war and peace, violence, economic justice, the environment, criminal justice, and social justice.”

Food, Faith & Justice in Autobiographies

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Instructor: Caryn Riswold
Institution: Illinois College

Course Term: Fall
Course Year: 2013

Annotation:

A 2013 course by Caryn Riswold at llinois College explores “the history and beliefs of several religious traditions” through “food rituals and dietary customs.”

Catholic Social Thought

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Course Level-Format: undergraduate
Instructor: Joe Incandela
Institution: Saint Mary's College

Course Term: Spring
Course Year: 2002

Annotation:

A 2002 course by Joe Incandela at Saint Mary’s College “examines Catholic positions on some of the most controversial social, ethical, and religious issues of our day: abortion, birth control, the relation between official Catholic teachings and individual conscience, reproductive technologies, cloning, stem-cell research, physician-assisted suicide, euthanasia, the allocation of scarce health resources, the ordination of women priests, capital punishment, nuclear weapons, terrorism, waging war vs. embracing peace, poverty and the United States economy, and the effect of being a member of the Church on being a citizen of the state.”