2012-2013 Bulletin 
    
    Nov 23, 2024  
2012-2013 Bulletin [ARCHIVED BULLETIN]

Religion, MA


Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: School of Religion

Unit Requirements

All MA degree programs require a minimum of 48 semester units of credit. Up to 10 units may be transferred from an accredited graduate institution, in courses relevant to the student’s program, for which a grade of B or better was earned. Students may submit a TRANSFER of CREDIT form (obtainable at www.cgu.edu) after they have completed 12 CGU units.  Addendum: Unit reduction approved for students entering during the 2017-2018 Academic Year and retroactively to any student active in the MA Religion degree program during the Summer 2017 term. Please see the 2017-2018 Bulletin for details.

Students in the General MA program must complete a minimum of 12 units in three different areas. Students in the Specialized MA program are required to register for a minimum of 28 units of credit in their area of specialization and a minimum of eight units of credit in an area or areas outside of their specialization. Students in both programs may register for up to 10 units of REL 399, Thesis Research. Language instruction taken to meet the Secondary Research Language Requirement does not count toward the required 48 units. However, students may count up to 12 units of courses in a primary text language toward the required minimum of 28 units of credit in their area of specialization.

Required Course

All MA students must take REL 362, Theories of Religion. This course will introduce the major approaches to the study of religion in the Modern and Contemporary West. Methodological issues in the study of religion will be introduced through readings of interpreters and observers of

religious beliefs and rituals. These issues will be studied in light of the rise of the humanities and the social sciences in the post-Enlightenment West. The course is also designed to help prepare students to teach an introductory course in religious studies.

Primary Text Language Requirement

Specialized MA degree programs in Comparative Scriptures, Hebrew Bible, Islamic Studies, and New Testament, require the completion of courses in a primary text language (see specializations below). Other specialized degree programs may, at the discretion of the area faculty, require a primary text language depending upon the nature of a student’s research plan.

Secondary Research Language Requirement

All MA students must have a reading proficiency in another language.

Thesis

An MA Thesis is to be prepared in consultation with the student’s advisor or advisory committee (advisor and second reader) and is normally 60-85 pages in length. Students may take a minimum of two units and a maximum of 10 units for thesis credit. All theses require a second reader. Guidelines for preparing the thesis are available from the SOR Office. All theses must conform in format and style to the CGU guidelines. A copy of the signed title page is to be submitted to the SOR Office upon completion. Two copies of the thesis are submitted to the registrar for deposit in Honnold Library.

Time Limit

The institutional time limit for completing the MA degree is five calendar years from initial registration, regardless of the student’s course load per semester. A student may petition for an extension of time. Extensions in the MA program are normally for one year.

Program Outline/Final Approval/Fees

During the semester in which the student expects to have met all requirements for the degree, the
―Master’s Program Outline and Final Approval of Master’s Degree‖ form must be completed. These are available in the SOR Office. Students should check the Academic Calendar for degree deadlines (including those for payment of fees and filing the ―Intent to Receive a Degree‖ form with the CGU Student Affairs Office). All forms are available at www.cgu.edu.

Descriptions, Courses, and Language Requirements for MA Programs

General

The general MA degree program in religion is designed to give students a strong foundation in the scholarly study of religion through courses and research in three major areas of the study of religion. Students may choose 3 areas from the following: History of Christianity and Religions of North America; Islamic Studies; Mormon Studies; Philosophy of Religion and Theology; and Women’s Studies in Religion. There is no primary text language requirement.

The degree will provide preparation for Ph.D. studies in religion and related disciplines, and for a wide range of work and service in religious communities. This MA degree program provides the greatest breadth of preparation for researching and teaching in the field of religion and religious studies.

Critical Comparative Scriptures

The specialized MA degree program in Critical Comparative Scriptures is designed to give students a strong foundation in the scholarly study of scriptures and their histories, including the Hebrew Bible and the Ancient Near East, the New Testament and early Christianity, and the Qur’an and early Islam. This foundation is given through courses and research in the following areas: biblical Hebrew, Greek, Arabic, and other ancient languages; the history of the Ancient Near East, the exegesis, theology, and hermeneutics of the Hebrew Bible, and Early Judaism; the diversification of Early Christianity, ascetic and world-renunciation pieties and ideologies, women’s traditions and forms of pieties, Gnostic Christianities, Greek epic and Gospel traditions; early Islam, the traditions of commentaries on the Qur’an, and contemporary interpretations of the Qur’an; the history, politics, and comparative phenomenology of scriptures in society and culture and histories of cultural (especially subaltern) representations of biblical rhetoric and piety. All students must pass an intermediate course in biblical Hebrew, biblical Greek, or Arabic to meet the primary text language requirement. The degree will provide preparation for a Ph.D. in Hebrew Bible, New Testament, and Qur’anic Studies, for Ph.D. studies in comparative textual studies and other areas of the study of religion and related disciplines, and for a wide range of work and service in religious communities.

History of Christianity and Religions of North America

The specialized MA degree program in History of Christianity and Religions of North America is designed to give students a strong foundation in the scholarly study of either or both the history of Christianity and/or religions in North America. This foundation is given through courses and research in the following areas: Early Christianity, Medieval/Reformation Christianity, Reformation/Early Modern Christianity, Modern Christianity, American History, American Religion, and theories and methods of historical research. Some students may need to pass a course in a primary text language depending upon their area of research. The degree will provide preparation for a Ph.D. in history of Christianity or religions of North America, for Ph.D. studies in other areas of the study of religion and related disciplines, and for a wide range of work and service in religious communities.

Islamic Studies

The specialized MA degree program in Islamic Studies is designed to give students a strong foundation in Islamic Studies through the study of Arabic and courses on the
Qur’an and hadith studies, Islamic law, theology, gender, history (classical, medieval, and modern), philosophy and mysticism, and modern developments in the Muslim world. All students must pass a course in intermediate Arabic to meet the primary text language requirement. The degree will provide preparation for a Ph.D. in Islamic studies, for Ph.D. studies in other areas of the study of religion and related disciplines, and for a wide range of work and service in religious communities.

Philosophy of Religion and Theology

The specialized MA degree program in Philosophy of Religion and Theology is designed to give students a strong foundation in Philosophy of Religion and Theology through a rich variety of courses in major issues, movements, and thinkers in philosophy of religion and theology. There is no primary text language requirement. The degree will provide preparation for a Ph.D. in philosophy of religion and theology, for Ph.D. studies in other areas of the study of religion and related disciplines, and for a wide range of work and service in religious communities. 

Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: School of Religion