CollegeTransfer.Net

Course Criteria

Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Offerings Examines missions and evangelistic work in youth ministry. The course focuses on outreach to youth and outreach with youth. Attributes: Upper-Division Restrictions: Freshman students are excluded.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Offerings Prerequisite: THEO 2620. Investigates faith-based community economic development programs, such as those founded by John Perkins. Students will work on a small business project. Some sessions of this class will be held off campus in central Seattle. Attributes: Upper-Division Restrictions: Freshman students are excluded.
  • 5.00 Credits

    Offerings Prerequisite: UFDN 2000 or 3001 and one 3000 level Scripture course. The Greco-Roman period proved vital to the formation of Judaism and the rise of Christianity. Students will study this extraordinary era to identify its pivotal historical events; to explore the innovative ways authors of important literary texts, such as the Dead Sea Scrolls, interpreted Israel's Scriptures; and to evaluate the significance of early Jewish writings, such as those found in the Old Testament Apocrypha, for understanding the New Testament and the emergence of Christianity. Attributes: Upper-Division
  • 5.00 Credits

    Offerings Prerequisite: UFDN 2000 or 3001. Many of the most compelling and controversial issues facing North American Christians today challenge our longstanding moral convictions as God's people-about abortion, gender, human sexuality, war and peace, use of wealth, homelessness, race relations, friendship. This course seeks to address these issues in two ways. First, to help students learn what the Christian Bible teaches us about Christian living-what core beliefs and resurrection practices provide the biblical foundation for a manner of life that truly pleases God. Second, to help students learn how to use Scripture as a resource in making moral choices and when participating in moral debate as God's people are called on to engage the wider culture. Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course
  • 5.00 Credits

    Offerings Prerequisite: UFDN 3100. The Bible is the church's Scripture-a sacred text that communicates a word from the living God for the ongoing people of God. This simple definition provides the course with its essential focus: to train students of Scripture how to interpret faithfully and skillfully the richness of its diverse but integral parts, Old Testament and New Testament, in order to hear a fresh word from God for today. Students of this course will learn the terms of Scripture's authority for believers and will discuss the variety of practical issues staked out whenever the Bible is studied as a witness to the Holy Trinity. Students will study the various attempts, ancient and modern, to integrate the church's theology and its biblical texts in coherent and useful ways. Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course
  • 5.00 Credits

    Offerings Prerequisite: UFDN 3000 or 3100. Considers the work of a major Christian theologian or group of theologians who share a distinctive theological approach. Provides models of the "craft" of theological inquiry and probes the distinctive emphases of various Christian traditions and theological movements. Examples of theologians considered include: the Eastern and Western Christian Fathers and Mother, John Wesley, Karl Barth, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, C.S. Lewis, feminist theologians, and contemporary global theologies. May be repeated for credit 2 times. Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course
  • 3.00 Credits

    Offerings This course will deal with contemporary issues facing Latin American Christians, with attention to history, theology, ethnicities, ministry among the poor, and contextualized Christian witness. Hispanics in the Pacific Northwest will also be a focus. Field experience in Spanish-speaking churches in Metro Seattle will be part of the class. Offered alternate years. Attributes: Upper-Division
  • 3.00 Credits

    Offerings This course will deal with contemporary issues facing Asian and African Christians, with attention to history, theology, ethnicities, ministry among the poor, and contextualized Christian witness. Field experience in African and Asian churches in Metro Seattle will be part of the class. Offered alternate years. Attributes: Upper-Division
  • 3.00 Credits

    Offerings Primal religions, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, Confucianism, Taoism, and Shinto are explored. Each faith is studied in philosophical and cultural context. Applications for effective Christian witness are developed, showing appreciation for the faiths and contrasting with them. Attributes: Upper-Division
  • 5.00 Credits

    Offerings Prerequisites: THEO 2620 and THEO 3630, 3640, or 4610. This course studies the complexity of 21st-Century urban culture, including systems such as health care, media, social services, politics, education, entertainment, business, as well as the influence of various ethnic, religious, and social groups and their values. Students will identify their own cultural biases and assumptions and develop a personal theology of urban ministry. This course is an interdisciplinary course utilizing theology and the social sciences. Attributes: Upper-Division
To find college, community college and university courses by keyword, enter some or all of the following, then select the Search button.
(Type the name of a College, University, Exam, or Corporation)
(For example: Accounting, Psychology)
(For example: ACCT 101, where Course Prefix is ACCT, and Course Number is 101)
(For example: Introduction To Accounting)
(For example: Sine waves, Hemingway, or Impressionism)
Distance:
of
(For example: Find all institutions within 5 miles of the selected Zip Code)