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HISTTHEO 265: Virtue and Theology in Early Christian Ethics
1.00 Credits
Duke University
In this course, we will examine the classical concept of virtue (Homer, Plato, and Aristotle) and the way that Christian theology (Christology, anthropology, eschatology, hamartiology) causes early Christian theologians to modify the classical concept of virtue. After a survey of key Christian views of theology and discipleship (Clement, Nyssen, Ambrose, Augustine) we will examine key ethical issues. Prerequisite: Church History 13. Instructor: Smith
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HISTTHEO 271: Christologies of the Early Church
1.00 Credits
Duke University
Investigation of important soteriologies and debates centering on the person of Christ from the second through the fifth centuries. Instructor: Staff
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HISTTHEO 271 - Christologies of the Early Church
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HISTTHEO 273: Continental and British Roots of Evangelicalism
1.00 Credits
Duke University
A study of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century movements in Europe and Britain characterized by a stress on personal religious experience. Instructor: Staff
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HISTTHEO 302: Theology of John Wesley
1.00 Credits
Duke University
Instructor: Staff
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HISTTHEO 305: Roger William's Life and Thought
1.00 Credits
Duke University
The historic importance of Roger Williams cannot be limited to that of a sectarian firebrand who challenged Puritan authorities, befriended Indian neighbors, founded the colony of Rhode Island, and established the First Baptist Church in America. Roger Williams may well deserve the title "America's Theologian" because he was the trailblazer for the liberty of conscience, the freedom of religion, and the separation of church and state which became established as distinctively American ideal in history, culture, and law. This course will examine the life and thought Roger Williams through a careful reading of his writings with attention to both their historical context and contemporary relevance. Instructor: Freeman
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HISTTHEO 308: Greek Patristic Texts
1.00 Credits
Duke University
In this course we will study the Greek syntax and style of key patristic texts, e.g. Martyrdom of Polycarp, Letters of Ignatius of Antioch, Acts of Paul and Thecia, Origen's Preface to On First Principles, Nyssen's Life of Macrina, and Nazianzen's Third Theological Oration. Class will include a review of Attic grammar not common in Koine Greek. Instructor: Staff
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HISTTHEO 313: The Apostolic Fathers
1.00 Credits
Duke University
A study of the religious thought in the writings of the Apostolic Fathers. Instructor: Staff
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HISTTHEO 317: Seminar in the Greek Apologists
1.00 Credits
Duke University
A study of the apologetic writings of the Greek Fathers in relation to the challenges of their contemporary world. Special attention will be given to leading protagonists of late Graeco-Roman culture, such as Celsus, Porphyry, and Julian. Instructor: Staff
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HISTTHEO 318: Topics in Patristic Theology
1.00 Credits
Duke University
A study of selected topics from the Greek Fathers. Instructor: Staff
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HISTTHEO 319: Greco-Roman Intellectual Traditions of Patristic Thought
1.00 Credits
Duke University
The course examines various intellectual traditions (philosophical schools, schools of rhetoric, literature) that provided the high cultural background for early Christian authors, from the writers of the New Testament to Patristic theologians such as Justin, Clement, Origen, Gregory of Nyssa, and Augustine. Instructor: Smith
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