Intro History of Christianity

Cathédrale_Notre-Dame_de_Paris_3-June-2010.jpg

Introduction to the History of Christianity - Spring Term 2022

(IST 2500; 4 Credits; Residential HI-Intro-Level Course)

Thursdays: 8:30 AM-Noon. Classroom Location: BEC-218

Start Date: Thursday March 31st, 2022

End Date: Thurs. June 2nd, 2022

Instructor: Albert Hernández, Ph.D. Email Address: ahernandez@iliff.edu

Office: Iliff Hall, Room 115 Office Hours: -- By Appointment--

Course Description/Synopsis:

This course introduces students to the broad outlines of the history of Christianity with an emphasis on major historical developments, and on the emergence of both local and trans-local expressions of religious traditions. Students will examine and discuss a series of historical case studies, derived from primary and secondary sources, covering different periods and themes, beliefs and practices, controversies and compromises, and key religious figures. Students will apply their learning from the case studies to a broad understanding of how different social, cross-cultural, institutional and intellectual patterns have shaped the diversity and complexity of the Christian historical and religious tradition.

DEGREE LEARNING GOALS in HISTORY (For all I.S.T. Master’s Degree Programs)

Historical Development and Expressions of Religious Traditions (HI): Demonstrate awareness of religious traditions as historically-situated movements that interacted and changed in relationship to their surrounding cultures and subcultures over time, resulting in various expressions located within and influenced by social structures and institutions, ideologies, historical events, ethnicity and gender, and cultural worldviews.

Course Overview:

This course introduces students to the broad outlines of the history of Christianity with an emphasis on major historical developments, and on the emergence of both local and trans-local expressions of religious traditions. Students will examine and discuss a series of historical case studies, derived from primary and secondary sources, covering different periods and themes, beliefs and practices, controversies and compromises, and key religious figures. Students will apply their learning from the case studies to a broad understanding of how different social, cross-cultural, institutional and intellectual patterns have shaped the diversity and complexity of the Christian historical and religious tradition.

Course Objectives and Learning Goals:

(1) Students will demonstrate basic fluency with key vocabulary and theological concepts used by historians to define and organize the different periods, themes, and concepts of the history of Christianity, such as ecclesiology, soteriology, pneumatology, Christology, theological anthropology, orthodoxy and heresy, reformism, and church revitalization.   

(2) Students will gain a basic understanding of the major historical periods, the varieties of local/regional expressions of Christian belief and practice, and of the complex, contested nature of forging trans-local definitions of Christian unity and identity out of the diversity of local communities and persons that make up the history of Christianity.

(3) Students will develop critical thinking skills through the assessment and application of historical knowledge from among the case studies, themes and periods, and religious traditions covered in the course. 

(4) Students will develop systematic research skills with both primary and secondary sources while studying and discussing the social, institutional, cultural, and intellectual history of the case studies covered in the course.

Required Course Textbooks & Readings:

Justo González, The Story of Christianity, Volume I:  The Early Church to the Dawn of the Reformation. Revised and Updated Edition. New York: Harper-One, 2010. [ISBN: 978-0-06-185-588-7]. (Also available from Amazon Kindle, and from Harper-Collins e-books thru Harper Collins Publishers, and available to Rent from select textbook providers, including Amazon.com).

Justo González, The Story of Christianity, Volume II:  The Reformation to the Present Day. Revised and Updated Edition. New York: Harper-One, 2010.  [ISBN: 978-0-06-185-558-94].  (Also available from Amazon Kindle, and available from Harper-Collins e-books thru Harper Collins Publishers, and available to Rent from select textbook providers, including Amazon.com).

Additional Required Readings ---- from primary and/or from secondary sources will be listed with Links in the "Course Summary" outline of the Syllabus under the respective week of the course in which the reading is due to be completed with full author, title, and page number information as well as any relevant external links for each secondary source or for each primary source excerpt.  All additional required readings are also be available to students under the "Files" tab of our Canvas course site.

Suggested Additional Reading: (Optional texts; Not required to purchase)

Everett Ferguson, Backgrounds of Early Christianity. Third Edition. William B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2003.

Kevin Madigan, Medieval Christianity: A New History . Yale University Press, 2015.

Brian Catlos, Kingdoms of Faith: A New History of Islamic Spain. Basic Books/Hachette Book Group, 2018.

Glen S. Sunshine, A Brief Introduction to the Reformation. Westminster John Knox Press, 2017.

George E. Tinker, Missionary Conquest: The Gospel & Native American Cultural Genocide. Fortress, 1993.

Evaluation, Required Assignments, and Grading Procedures 

CLASS DISCUSSION/PARTICIPATION & ATTENDANCE: 20%  

Each student is expected to have read the assignments and be prepared to discuss the material for each class session. Regular attendance in class will be factored into this portion of your grade. Excessive absences or tardiness will lower a student's final grade by at least ten percent or by one letter grade.

MID-TERM ASSIGNMENT: 30%

Each student will write a four to five page essay (approx. 1000 to 2000 words) on a theme/topic about women's roles/issues, or about LGBTQIA+ roles/issues, in the history of Christianity selected by the instructor from among the historical periods covered in the course.  Details and submission guidelines about this Mid-Term Assignment will be forthcoming on Canvas by Week Four and will be discussed in class. The Mid-Term essay will be due during Week Six of the term. 

FINAL ASSIGNMENT OPTIONS - (Choose ONLY one):

Option 1 - Final Exam 50%:   Each student who chooses this option will complete and submit a take-home final exam by the due date comprised of comprehensive essay questions on the material covered in the course. Students will be allowed to choose several questions from a list of essay topics and then develop and discuss each answer separately. Students will be expected to write a total of about 8 to 10 pages for this final assignment option. The final exam will be distributed to students on Canvas by the instructor, and is to be uploaded/posted to Canvas as a document submission by the announced deadline.  Please, NO PDF files/docs, and NO PAGES files/docs, because we do not have the software to add comments and feedback on these types of files. The due date for submitting/posting the final exam essays on Canvas will be announced in class and posted on Canvas.

Option 2 – Final Research Paper or Final Reflection Paper 50%:   If you have already taken an advanced-HI, or survey-level Breadth-HI course at I.S.T., then this final assignment option may be the best choice for you this term.  Each student who chooses this option will write a final Research Paper or a final Reflection Paper/Essay based upon their proposed topic.  Papers should not exceed a total of 8 to 10 pages in length.  All final Research Papers or Reflection Papers will be uploaded/posted to Canvas as a document submission by the announced deadline.  Please, NO PDF files/docs, and NO PAGES files/docs, because we do not have the software to add comments and feedback on these types of file submissions.  The due date for submitting/posting the final paper on Canvas will be announced in class and posted on Canvas.

Course Procedures & Expectations

Accessing and Regularly Checking our Canvas Course Site:

Writing Lab:

Grammar and organization are important for all written assignments.  Additional help is available from the Iliff Writing Lab . , which is available for students of any level who need help beginning an assignment, organizing thoughts, or reviewing a final draft.

Academic Integrity and Core Values:

All students are expected to abide by Iliff’s statement on Academic Integrity , as published in the Master's Student Handbook , or the Joint PhD Statement on Academic Honesty, as published in the Joint PhD Student Handbook , as appropriate.  All participants in this class are expected to be familiar with Iliff’s Core Values .

Incomplete Grade Petitions:

Incomplete Grade Petitions will be granted only in the case of documented and verifiable medical circumstances or other personal or family related emergencies. In the event a student requires this option, the final grade for the course will be assigned as a "Pass" (P) or "Fail" (F) grade.  See the Master's Student Handbook for the Policies and Procedures about Incomplete Grade Petitions.

Additional Policies & Services:

Accommodations: Iliff engages in a collaborative effort with students with disabilities to reasonably accommodate student needs. Students are encouraged to contact their assigned advisor to initiate the process of requesting accommodations. The Advising Center can be contacted at advising@iliff.edu or by phone at 303-765-1146.  The Disability Services Officer at Iliff is Jeremy Garber, jgarber@iliff.edu . For more information, go to the Disability Services section in the Masters Student Handbook (Links to an external site.) .

DateDayDetails
Mar 31, 2022ThuWEEK ONE: Thursday March 31st, 2022 - Intro to the History of Christianity & Major Historical Periods due by 02:00PM
Apr 07, 2022ThuWEEK TWO: Thursday April 7th, 2022 - CASE STUDY #1, PART I: Christianities in the Fourth Century C.E.due by 01:00PM
Apr 15, 2022FriWEEK THREE: Thursday April 14th, 2022. Class met on Zoom from 9 to 10:30am. Recording now available. due by 05:59AM
Apr 21, 2022ThuWEEK FOUR: Introducing Christianities of the Medieval Mediterranean Period and Region (ca. 600 –1500 CE)due by 02:00PM
May 01, 2022SunWEEK FIVE: Gathering Days @ Iliff - Class Does Not Meet On-Campus this Week due by 05:59AM
May 06, 2022FriWEEK SIX: Christianities of the Medieval Mediterranean Continued (ca. 950 –1500 CE). Also Case Study #2 - The Crusades & Medieval Political Systems due by 05:59AM
May 09, 2022MonWEEK SIX - MID-TERM ESSAY ASSIGNMENT: Due Sunday May 8, 2022 by 11:59 PM (MST). Value: 30% of Final Grade.due by 05:59AM
May 12, 2022ThuWEEK SEVEN: CASE STUDY #-3 - The Franciscan Order, The "Age of the Holy Spirit" & The Apostolic Poverty Controversy of the High Middle Ages.due by 02:30PM
May 19, 2022ThuWEEK EIGHT: Introducing Christianities of the Renaissance Era, the Rise of Italian Humanism, & The Black Death (1300-1600)due by 02:30PM
May 27, 2022FriWEEK NINE: Introducing Christianities of the Reformation & Early-Modern Periods (1500 to 1750). Also Case Study #4 - Luther & the Protestant Reformation due by 05:59AM
Jun 02, 2022ThuWEEK TEN: Christianities of the Modern World (ca. 1650 - Present) due by 02:30PM
Jun 07, 2022TueFINAL EXAM ESSAYS: Instructions & List of Essay Questions. DUE: Monday June 6, 2022 by 11:59 PM (MST)due by 05:59AM
Jun 11, 2022SatPoints/Grades for Class Participation & Attendance due by 05:00AM