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Resources

A 1998 course by Lissa McCullough at New York University explores religious themes in great works of Western literature.

A 2012 course by Eddie Randolph at Harding School of Theology "studies how small groups are used in contemporary Christian settings."

A 1998 course by Eliezer Segal at the University of Calgary explores "the principal streams of Jewish religious thought and activity from the end of the Talmudic era until the European Emancipation" with focus on philosophical rationalism, rabbinic activity, and Kabbalah.

A 1999 course by Peter Gilmour and Richard Ascough at Loyola University Chicago.

A 2014 course by Francis McAloon at Fordham University "provides a solid grounding in the history of Christian spirituality, both east and west."

A 2014 course by David Otto at Centenary College examines "Greco-Roman family life; early Christian moral teachings in the context of Jewish and Greco-Roman popular morality; the early Christian family with a focus on slaves and children, marriage and divorce; gender constructions of masculinity and homosexual behavior and the position of women in the early church."

A 2000 course by Jeffrey Carlson at DePaul University takes up "classical and contemporary arguments regarding the existence and meaning of 'God.'"

A course by Judith Berling and Jeff Richey at the Graduate Theological Union.

Adjudicating

Wabash Center Staff Contact

Sarah Farmer, Ph.D
Associate Director
Wabash Center

farmers@wabash.edu