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3.00
4.00
3.53
Fall 2025
This course traces the history of Jerusalem with a focus on its significance in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. How has Jerusalem been experienced and interpreted as sacred within these religious communities? How have they expressed their attachments to this contested space from antiquity to modern times? Discussion will be rooted in primary texts from Jewish, Christian, and Muslim sources, with attention to their historical context.
2.11
2.56
3.35
Fall 2025
A survey course which familiarizes students with African-derived religions of the Caribbean and Latin America
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3.73
Spring 2025
This course examines the influence of theological ideas on social movements in twentieth- and twenty-first-century America and investigates how religious commitments shape everyday living, including racial perception and economic, political, and sexual organization. The course will examine the American Civil Rights Movement, late 1960s counter-cultural movements, and recent faith-based community-development movements and organizing initiatives.
5.00
1.00
3.49
Spring 2026
The goal of this course will be to examine different conceptions of Buddhist meditation and how these different conceptions affect the nature of practice and the understanding of the ideal life within a variety of Buddhist traditions. Thus, the study of Buddhist meditation traditions reveals not just intricate forms of practice, but reveals the nature of the good life and how one lives it.
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Spring 2025
Buddhist Mysticism and Modernity
3.00
4.00
3.30
Spring 2025
A text-focused class that will read the entire City of God, supplementing that work with several other of Augustine's smaller texts (particularly letters and sermons) to attempt to understand that work's argument, paying attention to the various audiences to which it was addressed, and to Augustine's larger thought as captured in that one great and difficult book
4.07
3.00
3.42
Spring 2026
This course focuses on Jesus of Nazareth as an historical figure, that is, as he is accessible to the historian by means of historical methods. Our most important sources of information on Jesus are the canonical Gospels, and so much of the course will involve reading and attempting to understand these texts. We will attempt to reconstruct at least the broad outlines of Jesus activity and teachings, keeping in mind the limits of our sources.
4.11
2.33
3.44
Fall 2025
Intensive study of the theological ideas and arguments of the Apostle Paul in relation to their historical and epistolary contexts.
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3.71
Spring 2025
Critical appraisal of classical and contemporary approaches to the sociological study of religion and society.
4.58
3.00
3.80
Spring 2026
Responses to the Holocaust
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