2024-2025 Catalog

 

PROC - Proclamation

PROC-520 Transformational Communication

This course is designed to advance the graduate student's understanding of and facility with transformational communication and/or the task of feeding a congregation spiritual truth from the Word of God. The course will focus on the three primary areas: the analytical tools needed to understand the cultural context and personal needs of the audience, the exegetical tools required to bring scriptural and Christian truths to bear on those needs, and the personal tools needed to communicate truth clearly and with conviction. The overall thrust of the course is to prepare students to understand and enact the leadership role that preaching and transformative communication plays in shaping the life of a church and other ministry contexts.

3

PROC-525 Effective Communication With Children And Youth

This course exposes students to the tools of effective communication in teaching and preaching children and youth. It explores the role of biblical narratives in youth and family ministry and the impact of learning styles, culture, and personality on effective communication.

3

PROC-600 Christian Proclamation

This course is a comprehensive, integrative approach to Christian proclamation, beginning with biblical foundations and ending with the tools needed to communicate effectively in specific settings. Topics range from a theology of revelation to sermon preparation and various kinds of sermon. The course involves the practice of proclamation and so requires that a student currently be in an approved ministry setting. Prerequisite: MDIV-500

6

PROC-610 Narrative Preaching

In this course, students will explore and experience the narrative sermon form by listening to and preaching sermons built on a narrative structure. Students will understand the differences between narrative sermons and other sermon forms. The course will provide an overview of the historical shift from the Old Homiletic, one which emphasized preaching as proposition, toward the New Homiletic, which held up preaching primarily as story, or narrative.

3

PROC-615 Wesleyan Homiletics

This course explores the preaching of early British and American Methodism, along with its contributions to the broader Church. Students will develop a theology of preaching, as well as compare/contrast it to a Wesleyan homiletic. Students will discern and apply historic habits and practices for faithful preaching today.

3

PROC-620 Preaching With Empathy: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Incarnational Homiletics

This course aims to provide students with the resources to think theologically and practically about preaching incarnational sermons in context. Students will also engage interdisciplinary conversation partners from neurobiology, sociology, history, and anthropology in their pursuit of empathic preaching. Students will experiment with practices designed to cultivate empathy in them and their preaching.

3

PROC-630 Africana Preaching

In this course, students will examine the unique theological, historical, and cultural forces that have shaped traditional black preaching and traditional black preachers. Attention will also be given to the broader expectations that Africana congregations have of the person who occupies the role of preaching pastor in Africana congregations. Prerequisites: PROC-600 or an equivalent

3

PROC-631 Christian Proclamation

In this course students will design textual and topical sermons built on a variety of linear and narrative forms. Students will learn to evaluate sermons for biblical, theological, and contextual faithfulness. Students will develop and deliver sermons that are biblically substantive and contextually relevant. Prerequisite: BIBL-631

3

PROC-650 Preaching the Life of Christ

In this course, students will investigate the biblical world of the New Testament, particularly the Gospels. This exploration will focus on preaching the life of Jesus Christ, in a manner that is faithful to the historical context of the bible and fitting for the contemporary context. Students will consider how 1st century Palestinian geography, religion, social customs, architecture, art, archeology, and literature, impact bible interpretation and sermon development.

3

PROC-600ES Christian Proclamation

This course is a comprehensive, integrative approach to Christian proclamation, beginning with biblical foundations and ending with the tools needed to communicate effectively in specific settings. Topics range from a theology of revelation to sermon preparation and various kinds of sermon. The course involves the practice of proclamation and so requires that a student currently be in an approved ministry setting. Prerequisite: MDIV-500

6

PROC-631ES Christian Proclamation

In this course students will design textual and topical sermons built on a variety of linear and narrative forms. Students will learn to evaluate sermons for biblical, theological, and contextual faithfulness. Students will develop and deliver sermons that are biblically substantive and contextually relevant. Prerequisite: BIBL-631

3

PROC-711 Preaching Seminar: Formation of the Preacher

This doctoral-level seminar focuses on the holistic formation of the preacher. Students will experiment with and implement practices that foster spiritual, emotional, relational, intellectual, ministerial, and physical health and vitality by reading and reflecting on classic devotional texts and participating in the monastic rhythm of life.

3

PROC-712 Preaching Seminar: Biblical Interpretation for Preaching

In this doctoral-level seminar, students will engage in an in-depth exegetical study of selected biblical texts and learn advanced skills for exploring historical and literary biblical contexts, and interpreting meaning for contemporary contexts. Special attention will be given to discerning homiletical application of advanced exegetical skills.

3

PROC-713 Preaching Seminar: Preaching As Historical Movement

This doctoral-level seminar examines the historical trajectory of preaching, pivotal preachers, and their impact upon both history and culture from the earliest genesis of Christianity to the present.

3

PROC-714 Preaching Seminar: Creativity, Imagination, and Story

In this course, students will develop the skills necessary to increase their capacity for creativity, imagination and storytelling. Students will explore how narrative plot and creative imagery can be employed through Christian preaching to transform people and cultures.

3

PROC-715 Preaching Seminar: Incarnational Preaching in Context

In this doctoral-level seminar, students will explore the intersection of incarnational theology with contextual preaching. Students will analyze the dynamics of various preaching contexts in order to develop and deliver contextually appropriate sermons.

3

PROC-716 Preaching Seminar: Sermon Planning and Preaching for Special Occasions

In this doctoral-level seminar, students will explore ways to develop an annual preaching plan for congregational preaching that considers the theological, spiritual, and contextual needs of congregants. Special attention will be given to the role of the parish preacher, preaching in more public spaces for special occasions, such as weddings, funerals, Christmas Eve, Easter, camps, and community events.

3
Indiana Weselayan