REL3800EN - Comparative Religion

Course description

Introduction to the world’s great religions and to the social scientific methods and approaches used to study and compare religions. Students will survey, explore and describe: the nature of religion; the indigenous religions of Africa, the Americas, China, and Japan; the great religions of Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam; their own Biblical understanding of religion; their own faith commitment and religious perspective.

How this course benefits students

It has been said of religions, “He (or she) who knows one, knows none,” which is to say that a missionally-minded follower of Jesus may learn more about her or his own faith by learning how other people believe, think and feel. This course serves student needs by surveying the world’s great religions in order to help in the understanding and appreciation of different belief systems. Christian missionaries who understand other religions are better suited to proclaiming the Gospel in pluralistic and cross-cultural contexts.

Why this course is important

The church’s missional strategy has often been to conform new converts according to the social expectations of the sending culture rather than understanding, respecting and appreciating the indigenous culture. This course gives students the tools needed to understand, respect and appreciate the world’s religions as a God-given drive designed to help people seek Him (Acts 17:27).

Credit hours
3 hours
Subject area
Religion Studies
Educational level
Bachelor
Learning type
Instructional
Prerequisites
None
Upcoming terms
Pending
* Schedule subject to change. Please contact the Registrar's office with schedule questions.

How this course relates to missional core values

Biblically based

This course studies the Bible’s definitions of religion, including James 1:27, Deuteronomy 10:12, Ecclesiastes 12:13, Micah 6:8, Romans 13:10, Mark 12:33.

Missionally driven

The aim of this course is to contextualize Christian faith within the broader realm of the history of religion, as a missional-relational belief system that is fulfilled by satisfying the Great Commission in light of the Great Commandment.

Contextually informed

Students will understand and appreciate how religion works so that they can listen and hear members of other faith communities on their own terms, build meaningful relationships, and share their faith in cross-cultural and religiously pluralistic settings.

Interculturally focused

Students will formulate a basis and approach to proclaiming the Gospel and making Christ-like disciples among the nations.

Practically minded

Real-life situations and case study examples of Christian relations with different religious groups will be utilized so that students can begin to imagine and prayerfully implement interactions among people with non-Christian belief systems.

Experientially transformed

This course presumes that God’s Holy Spirit is already at work among the nations and that the Missional University student whose commitment to sharing the Gospel with people from a different religion will also go in the Incarnational, redemptive and transformational power of the Spirit with boldness, unhindered (Acts 28:31).