This course combines moral theology with God’s mission (the Missio Dei) in a special way. Students read important writers from different times, places, and cultures. The class uses fun activities like visual storytelling, selected social media projects, field interviews, gathering data, and live online presentations with modern tools. Grades focus on what students contribute rather than just how well they perform. Students take part in lively group talks, projects reviewed by classmates, creative visuals, and spoken presentations. All of this helps everyone build knowledge together. Students gain a strong understanding of ethics in mission work. They learn to think critically and in new ways while creating original ideas that move the field forward. By the end, they can apply Bible-based ethics across cultures, create strategies that fit each place, and experience real change in how they view morality and God’s mission.
This course prepares students to use Bible-based ethics in God’s mission, even in complicated, cross-cultural situations. By reading major theologians and working on real-world mission problems through group, creative, and tech-supported activities, students sharpen their critical thinking and come up with new ideas. They learn practical ways to live ethically on mission, experience a shift in their own worldview, and grow confident to show God’s character in many different settings—ready for effective missional endeavors wherever God’s mission takes them.
In a divided world, true Christian witness needs ethics that come straight from God’s mission. This course matters because it moves Christian morality away from just following personal rules and toward a shared witness of God’s saving nature. By studying the mission-focused heart of Scripture across cultures and history, students learn to live out justice, mercy, and holiness as part of joining God’s mission. This prepares them to handle tough ethical issues and live as believable signs of God’s Kingdom everywhere.
This course is built on the Bible. It roots moral theology in the Bible’s big story of God’s mission. It looks at God’s character and actions—such as the Trinity’s love and redemption in John 13–15 and the call to care for creation in Genesis 1–2—to shape how we act. Students study Bible passages in their real-life settings and apply ideas like prophetic justice (Amos 5) and healing relationships (2 Corinthians 5). This helps them live a changed, faithful life in many settings and obey God’s mission through caring stewardship and grace-filled outreach.
This course puts God’s mission at the center. It turns ethics into a way of life that shows God’s saving love to others (Matthew 6:33; Acts 1:8). Students learn to spot where God is already working in communities, stay strong when things are hard (Hebrews 12:1), and grow into lifelong leaders through habits like prayer, serving others, and training people. This builds real-life strategies that show Jesus’ love and the Spirit’s power in daily situations.
This course teaches students to live like Jesus did when he entered our world (John 1:14). It helps them understand different cultures through tools like cultural mapping and careful listening (Acts 17:22–34). Students grow aware of different worldviews, handle cross-cultural situations with kindness (Ephesians 2:14–16), and create ethical plans that respect local ways while moving forward God’s saving mission in each unique place.
This course focuses on working across cultures. It bases moral theology on the Bible’s picture of people from every nation united (Revelation 7:9; Acts 2:4–6). Students learn to spot their own cultural bias (Jonah 4), share the gospel clearly across differences (1 Corinthians 9:19–23), build real relationships through humility and welcome (Luke 14:16–24), and develop a servant heart (Philippians 2:3–4). This prepares them to live and share ethical truth in ways that fit many cultures and honor God’s work of bringing people together.
This course turns moral theology into real steps people can take on mission. It builds honest, godly living (Micah 6:8) and research-based ways to work for justice (Isaiah 61:1). Through field interviews, creative projects, and small-to-large assignments, students connect faith with real-world situations. This trains them to solve problems in redemptive ways and speak God’s truth boldly in everyday mission settings.
This course changes students through hands-on practice—interviews, live presentations, and honest group talks—that test their own ethical views against God’s mission (Romans 12:2). Through curious questions, taking responsibility for helpful action, and open conversation (Acts 10), students experience full-life renewal. They learn to balance freedom with wise judgment so they can follow the Spirit’s leading, live out God’s mission, and keep growing together for a lifetime.