Tuesday, August 07, 2012

Comparative Christian Theology

I just finished writing my new course for The University of Dayton's Usher School of Life-Long Learning. Scheduled for the winter term, the course will include some material that should be familiar to those who have attended my workshops here at the church and some new applications.

The Theological Diversity of the Early Church: And Modern Christian Diversity as its Reflection is an attempt at understanding the many streams of Christin theology that flow, naturally or not, from the literary development of the New Testament.

Shiloh has seen the New Testament Theology Chart, where we compare the literature of the Apostolic Age, the Gospel Era, the Institutional Age, and the ethical instruction of the Historical Jesus in order to examine what kinds of churches result from the systematic theology of each.

In some ways, the class will be an attempt at inviting diversity. Particularly, the class will address the diversity of modern Christian believers, and associating at least some of those beliefs with New Testament Biblical preference and concentration.

Shiloh members and community friends can register by contacting The University of Dayton's Life-Long Learning Center.

See You There! 

2 comments:

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

oooo ...., "The Theological Diversity of the Early Church: And Modern Christian Diversity as its Reflection" ... scares me, :) What's the simple title?