Tuesday 17 January 2012

Reminder of USP Attendance Policy

Dear Students,

We were asked to announce the following in all our classes, from Francine Quesnel (Faculty of Theology):

20% Rule:  A student who is shown to have been absent from more than 20% of the lectures in a course will not be allowed to take the final examination.


Deferment:  Please refer all students asking for a deferment to my office, room 161 section A , without any exception. 


Monday 16 January 2012

USP - THO 3347 (H 2012) - Syllabus

THO 3347 (H 2012) – Byzantine Liturgy of the Hours and Liturgical Year

Class Meets – Guiges #50: Fri. 9-12 noon; Office Hours – Laframboise #237: by appointment (bbutcher@ustpaul.ca)

DESCRIPTION
An overview of the history, theology and practices related to the Byzantine Christian Liturgy of the Hours (especially Vespers and Matins) and the Liturgical Year (moveable and immoveable cycles)




OBJECTIVES
  • To study the theology borne by the services of the Horologion (Book of Hours) and their constitutive parts (psalmody, hymnography, intercessory prayer) and to analyze the worldview generating—and resulting from—this form of worship, especially the underlying ideas of time, history and memory
  • To trace the volatile history of the Byzantine office
  • To familiarize the student with the feasts, seasons and important commemorations of the moveable (paschal) and immoveable cycles (monthly & weekly) of the Byzantine liturgical year
  • To reflect on the issues arising from the attempt to celebrate the Byzantine Hours today, and to elucidate principles for responding to these concerns
EVALUATION
  • Class Participation 5%
  • Liturgical Journal (3 x 5% [500 words each])† 15%  
    • Reflection on a particular liturgical experience in light of the course readings
  • Reading Quizzes (3 x 5%) 15%
  • Research Essay (2500-3000 words)† 25%
  • Oral Presentation of Research 10%
  • Final Oral Exam 30%
May be submitted on-line, as attached MS Word (97-2003 compatible) file, formatted according to the Chicago Manual of Style. Marks will be deducted for grammatical/orthographic errors. Please (have a peer) proofread!
 
REQUIRED TEXTS
  • George Guiver, Company of Voices: Daily Prayer and the People of God (Wipf & Stock, 2008)*
  • THO 3347 Supplemental Readings (SR) – available on-line (list with hyperlinks will be e-mailed)
RECOMMENDED TEXTS
  1. Robert Taft, Liturgy of the Hours in East and West, 2nd ed. (The Liturgical Press, 1993) [LHEW]*
  2. Alexander Schmemann, Great Lent (Saint Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1974)*
*Available for purchase in the Librairie Saint-Paul/Canterbury House Bookstore
DATE
TOPIC/EVENT
READING/ASSIGNMENT
Jan. 13
Intro/Liturgical Year I
Jan. 19
Thurs.
FIELD TRIP
5-7 pm
Great Blessing of Water for the Feast of Theophany (Julian Calendar)
Canadian Museum of Civilization, 100 Laurier Street, Gatineau, Quebec
Jan. 20
Liturgical Year II:
Nativity Fast (Advent), Christmas & Theophany
  • Guiver, Part I: “Prayer and Human Nature” (Ch. 1-4)
  • Taft, “What Is a Christian Feast?” (SR #1)
Taft, LHEW, Part I: “The Formation of the Tradition” (Ch. 1)
Jan. 27
Liturgy of the Hours I: Historical Contours & Theological Principles
  • Guiver, Part I: “Prayer and Human Nature” (Ch. 5-7)
  • Taft, “The Divine Office, Icon of Our Prayer Life” (SR #2)
 Taft, LHEW, Part I: “The Formation of the Tradition” (Ch. 2-3) 
 LITURGICAL JOURNAL #1
Feb. 1
Wed.
FIELD TRIP
6-7:30 PM
Great Vespers for the Feast of the Encounter (Presentation of Christ in the Temple)
St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic Shrine, 952 Green Valley Crescent, Ottawa
Feb. 3
Liturgy of the Hours II:
Vespers
  • Guiver, Part II: The History of Daily Prayer” (Ch. 8-13)
Taft, LHEW, Part I: “The Formation of the Tradition” (Ch. 4-5)
        READING QUIZ #1
Feb. 10
Liturgical Year III:
12 Great Feasts & Menaion
Schmemann, Great Lent, Introduction & Ch. 1
Feb. 17
Liturgy of the Hours III: Compline, Mesonycticon & Little Hours
  • Guiver, Part II: The History of Daily Prayer” (Ch. 14-16)
Taft, LHEW, Part I: “The Formation of the Tradition” (Ch. 10-11)
READING QUIZ #2
Feb. 19
Sun.
FIELD TRIP
6-7:30 pm
Forgiveness Vespers
St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic Shrine, 952 Green Valley Crescent, Ottawa
Feb. 24
Study Week
NO CLASS
Mar. 2
Liturgical Year IV: Lent
Triodion, Akathist Hymn &
Great Canon of St. Andrew
Approval of Research Paper Title & Bibliography
  • Wybrew, “The Development of Lent, Holy Week and Easter in the Byzantine Rite” & “The Pattern of Orthodox Lent, Holy Week and Easter” (SR #5)
  • Taft, “Great Lent, Icon of Our Prayer Life” (SR#2)
Schmemann, Great Lent, Ch. 2
LITURGICAL JOURNAL #2
Mar. 9
Liturgy of the Hours IV:
Matins
  • Guiver, Part III: The Content of Daily Prayer”
Taft, LHEW, Part II: “The Divine Office in the Christian East” (Ch. 17)
Schmemann, Great Lent, Ch. 3
READING QUIZ #3
Mar. 16
ORAL PRESENTATIONS
Schmemann, Great Lent, Ch. 4
Mar. 21
Wed.
FIELD TRIP
5:30-7:30 pm
Great Canon of St. Andrew of Crete
St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic Shrine, 952 Green Valley Crescent, Ottawa
Mar. 23
Liturgical Year IV:
Holy Week
Liturgy of the Hours V
Schmemann, Great Lent, Ch. 5
Guest presentation by Harold Visser, M.A., on the reform of the Hours and the domestic church
RESEARCH ESSAY
Mar. 24
Sat.
FIELD TRIP
5-7 pm
Vigil (Vespers & Matins) for the Feast of the Annunciation
Orthodox Cathedral of the Annunciation & St. Nicholas (OCA), 15 Eccles Street, Ottawa
Mar. 30
Liturgical Year IV:
Pascha (Easter) & Pentecost
  • Guiver, Part IV: Interpreting the Facts
Schmemann, Great Lent, Appendix
LITURGICAL JOURNAL #3
Apr. 6
Good Friday
NO CLASS
Apr. 10
Conclusion
According to USP schedule, this Tuesday class makes up for Good Friday
TBD
FINAL ORAL EXAM

USP - THO 3309 (H 2012) - Syllabus

THO 3309 (H 2012)—Contemporary Moral Issues in Eastern Theology

SbDcn. Dr. Brian A. Butcher

Class Meets – Guigues #202: Mon 5:30-8:30 pm; Office Hours – Laframboise #237: by appointment (bbutcher@ustpaul.ca)


DESCRIPTION

This course explores the nature of an Eastern/Orthodox Christian approach to ethics, in terms of its sources, methods and applications. The specific moral issues to be considered include sexual ethics; abortion & embryonic stem cell research; reproductive technologies; human cloning; physician-assisted suicide & euthanasia; capital punishment; the morality of war; environmental ethics; and social ethics.

OBJECTIVES

ü To probe the unique theological contours of Eastern/Orthodox Christian Moral Theology

ü To discern the actual ethical standpoints of contemporary Orthodox and Eastern Catholic believers

ü To examine in depth a topic of personal interest, as well as develop a greater awareness of, and critical perspective toward, the range of potential ethical concerns

EVALUATION

  • Class Participation 5%
  • Reflection Paper (500 words)† 5%
  • Reading Quizzes (2 x 5%) 10%
  • Research Paper (2500-3000 words) 30%
  • Oral Presentation of Research (15-20 min.) 10%
  • Final Oral Exam 40%

May be submitted on-line, as attached MS Word (97-2003 compatible) file, formatted according to the Chicago Manual of Style. Marks will be deducted for grammatical/orthographic errors. Please (have a peer) proofread!

REQUIRED TEXTS*

v Vigen Guroian, Incarnate Love: Essays in Orthodox Ethics, 2nd ed. (University of Notre Dame Press, 2002), henceforth IL

v John Breck, The Sacred Gift of Life: Orthodox Christianity and Bioethics (Saint Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1998

RECOMMENDED TEXTS*

Ø Joseph Woodill, The Fellowship of Life: Virtue Ethics and Orthodox Christianity (Georgetown University Press, 1998)

Ø Vigen Guroian, Ethics after Christendom (Wipf & Stock, 2004), henceforth EC

*Available for purchase in the Librairie Saint-Paul/Canterbury House Bookstore


DATE

TOPIC

READING/ASSIGNMENT

Jan. 9

Introduction

Jan. 16

Sources, Methods, Themes I

v IL: Introduction & Chs. 1-2, “The Shape of Orthodox Ethics” & “Love in Orthodox Ethics,” 1-48

Ø EC: Ch. 1, “Is Christian Ethics Any Longer Possible?” 11-28

Jan. 23

Sources, Methods, Themes II

v Breck, Introduction & Ch. 1, “The Theological Foundations of Orthodox Christian Ethics,” 5-54

Ø EC: Ch. 3, “The Bible in Orthodox Ethics,” 53-82

µ REFLECTION PAPER DUE

Jan. 30

Sexual Ethics I

Divorce, Contraception,

Homosexuality

v Breck, Ch. 2: “Sexuality, Marriage & Covenant Responsibility,” 55-126

Feb. 6

Sexual Ethics II

Topics cont’d from Jan. 30

v IL: “An Ethic of Marriage & Family,” 102-40

v Breck, Ch. 3: “Procreation & the Beginning of Life,” 127-44

Ø EC: “Family & Christian Virtue,” 102-32)

Feb. 13

Sexual Ethics III:

Abortion, Embryonic Research, Reproductive Technologies, Cloning

v Breck, Ch. 3, “Affirming Life’s Sacredness” & Appendix 1 (145-202 & 259-64)

Feb. 20

Study Week

NO CLASS

Feb. 27

Physician Assisted Suicide & Euthanasia

v Breck, Ch. 5: “’A Blessed Pascha,’” Summary & Appendices 2-3 (203-258 & 265-82)

Ø EC: “Death and Dying in the Orthodox Liturgical Tradition,” 175-99

µ RESEARCH PAPER OUTLINE & BIBLIOGRAPHY DUE

Mar. 5

Capital Punishment

War

Alexander Webster, “Justifiable War as a ‘Lesser Good’ in Eastern Orthodox Moral Tradition” in Saint Vladimir’s Theological Quarterly 47, no. 1 (2003), 3-57

Full-text available on-line through ATLA database (access through Allie Library website, on library computers); hard-copy in library also

Mar. 12

Environmental Ethics

v EC: “Ecological Ethics,” 155-74

µ STUDENT ORAL PRESENTATIONS

Mar. 19

Varia

µ STUDENT ORAL PRESENTATIONS cont’d

Mar. 26

Social Ethics

Politics & Economics

v IL: Chs. 7-8, “The Problem of a Social Ethic” & “Orthodoxy and the American Order,” 141-188

Ø EC: Ch. 4, “The Struggle for the Soul of the Church,” 83-101

Mar. 30

µ RESEARCH PAPER DUE

Apr. 2

Conclusion

v IL: Ch. 3, “Liturgy and the Lost Eschatological Vision of Christian Ethics” & Ch. 5, “Seeing Worship as Ethics” (49-61 & 75-101)

Ø EC: Ch. 2, “Tradition and Ethics,” 29-52

µ READING QUIZ #2

µ ORAL FINAL EXAM