Previous Years' Course Catalogues

There are four categories for course delivery:

In-Person if the course requires attendance at a specific location and time for some or all course activities. These courses will have section codes starting in 0 or 4.

Online – Asynchronous if the course has no requirement for attendance at a specific time or location for any activities or exams. These courses will have the section code starting with 61.

Online – Synchronous if online attendance is expected at a specific time for some or all course activities, and attendance at a specific location is not expected for any activities or exams. These courses will have the section code starting with 62.

Hybrid if the course requires attendance at a specific location and time, however 33-66% of the course is delivered online. If online attendance is expected at a specific time, it will be in place of the in person attendance. These courses will have the section code starting with 31.

Some courses may offer more than one delivery method please ensure that you have the correct section code when registering via ACORN. You will not be permitted to switch delivery method after the last date to add a course for the given semester.

  • For such a time as this - Insights and Issues from the Books of Ruth and Esther for Today

    WYB3222HF

    We will read the books of Ruth and Esther together with a cloud of witnesses from the past and present who found them not only life giving but also, especially in the case of Esther, deeply troubling. We will examine techniques and strategies used for reading these and other Old Testament narratives through history. We will explore the contexts of Ruth and Esther within both the ancient world and Scripture. We will examine their contents making use of a variety of traditional and innovative interpretive techniques and strategies (including reading within the context of the Ancient Near East, theological exegesis, disaster and trauma studies, and narrative criticism). We will consider how these books speak to us as individuals and as the church in the twenty-first century.

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  • For such a time as this - Insights and Issues from the Books of Ruth and Esther for Today

    WYB3222HF

    We will read the books of Ruth and Esther together with a cloud of witnesses from the past and present who found them not only life giving but also, especially in the case of Esther, deeply troubling. We will examine techniques and strategies used for reading these and other Old Testament narratives through history. We will explore the contexts of Ruth and Esther within both the ancient world and Scripture. We will examine their contents making use of a variety of traditional and innovative interpretive techniques and strategies (including reading within the context of the Ancient Near East, theological exegesis, disaster and trauma studies, and narrative criticism). We will consider how these books speak to us as individuals and as the church in the twenty-first century.

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  • For such a time as this - Insights and Issues from the Books of Ruth and Esther for Today

    WYB3222HF

    We will read the books of Ruth and Esther together with a cloud of witnesses from the past and present who found them not only life giving but also, especially in the case of Esther, deeply troubling. We will examine techniques and strategies used for reading these and other Old Testament narratives through history. We will explore the contexts of Ruth and Esther within both the ancient world and Scripture. We will examine their contents making use of a variety of traditional and innovative interpretive techniques and strategies (including reading within the context of the Ancient Near East, theological exegesis, disaster and trauma studies, and narrative criticism). We will consider how these books speak to us as individuals and as the church in the twenty-first century.

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  • For such a time as this - Insights and Issues from the Books of Ruth and Esther for Today

    WYB3222HY

    • Instructor(s):
    • College: Wycliffe College
    • Credits: One Credit
    • Session: Summer 2023 Schedule: TBA  Time: 9:00
    • Section: 3101

    We will read the books of Ruth and Esther together with a cloud of witnesses from the past and present who found them not only life giving but also, especially in the case of Esther, deeply troubling. We will examine techniques and strategies used for reading these and other Old Testament narratives through history. We will explore the contexts of Ruth and Esther within both the ancient world and Scripture. We will examine their contents making use of a variety of traditional and innovative interpretive techniques and strategies (including reading within the context of the Ancient Near East, theological exegesis, disaster and trauma studies, and narrative criticism). We will consider how these books speak to us as individuals and as the church in the twenty-first century.

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  • Trinity

    RGT3223HF

    • Instructor(s):
    • College: Regis College
    • Credits: One Credit
    • Session: Fall 2016 Schedule: Wed  Time: 9:00
    • Section: 0101

    This is a textually attentive, historically conscious, and theologically disciplined exploration of the mystery of the Trinity through an explication of the Church's doctrine regarding the Trinity. It begins, therefore, in the definitive revelation of the triune identity of God through and in the person of Jesus Christ. It then traces the development of the Church's reflection and proclamation of this mystery through her controversies and councils, seeks to understand key systematic developments in the Patristic and Medieval periods, and contemplates and engages contemporary approaches and applications. This itinerary of reflection is intended to promote a personal and interior appropriation of the doctrine of the Trinity.

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  • Rhetorical Landscapes of the Jesuit Relations

    RGH3225HF

    • Instructor(s):
    • College: Regis College
    • Credits: One Credit
    • Session: Fall 2020 Schedule: Mon  Time: 10:00
    • Section: 9101

    A vast corpus of published letters written by various Jesuit missionaries to New France between 1632 and 1673, the Jesuit Relations are recognised by the historian, anthropologist, and theologian of missiology, as a corpus of published works that provide an essential perspective into the earliest days of Canada's both colonial and ecclesiastical history. This course introduces students to the Relations published between 1632 and 1650, and leads them in a detailed analysis of the particular Ignat!an worldview that shaped its authors' rhetorical landscape. In doing so, they will be exposed to concrete examples of how, in the early modern period, Jesuits, their lay companions, and Amerindian Christian communities lived out Ignatian spirituality in the mission field, obtain an essential perspective on the Relations useful for their further study of Canadian ecclesiastical history, and advance their basic skills in examining primary historical sources.

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  • Cancelled on
    Rhetorical Landscapes of the Jesuit Relations

    RGH3225HF

    • Instructor(s):
    • College: Regis College
    • Credits: One Credit
    • Session: Fall 2021 Schedule: Mon  Time: 10:00
    • Section: 9101

    A vast‚ corpus of published letters written by various Jesuit missionaries to New France between 1632 and 1673, the Jesuit Relations are recognised by the historian, anthropologist, and theologian of missiology, as a corpus of published works that provide an essential perspective into the earliest days of Canada's both colonial and ecclesiastical history. This course introduces students to the Relations published between 1632 and 1650, and leads them in a detailed analysis of the particular Ignat!an worldview that shaped its authors' rhetorical landscape. In doing so, they will be exposed to concrete examples of how, in the early modern period, Jesuits, their lay companions, and Amerindian Christian communities lived out Ignatian spirituality in the mission field, obtain an essential perspective on the Relations useful for their further study of Canadian ecclesiastical history, and advance their basic skills in examining primary historical sources.

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  • Rhetorical Landscapes of the Jesuit Relations

    RGH3225HF

    • Instructor(s):
    • College: Regis College
    • Credits: One Credit
    • Session: Fall 2017 Schedule: Mon  Time: 9:00
    • Section: 0101

    A vast corpus of published letters written by various Jesuit missionaries to New France between 1632 and 1673, the Jesuit Relations are recognised by the historian, anthropologist, and theologian of missiology, as a corpus of published works that provide an essential perspective into the earliest days of Canada's both colonial and ecclesiastical history. This course introduces students to the Relations published between 1632 and 1650, and leads them in a detailed analysis of the particular Ignat!an worldview that shaped its authors' rhetorical landscape. In doing so, they will be exposed to concrete examples of how, in the early modern period, Jesuits, their lay companions, and Amerindian Christian communities lived out Ignatian spirituality in the mission field, obtain an essential perspective on the Relations useful for their further study of Canadian ecclesiastical history, and advance their basic skills in examining primary historical sources.

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  • Cancelled on
    Rhetorical Landscapes of the Jesuit Relations

    RGH3225HS

    • Instructor(s):
    • College: Regis College
    • Credits: One Credit
    • Session: Winter 2026 Schedule: Tue  Time: 14:00
    • Section: 0101

    A vast corpus of published letters written by various Jesuit missionaries to New France between 1632 and 1673, the Jesuit Relations are recognised by the historian, anthropologist, and theologian of missiology, as a corpus of published works that provide an essential perspective into the earliest days of Canada's both colonial and ecclesiastical history. This course introduces students to the Relations published between 1632 and 1650, and leads them in a detailed analysis of the particular Ignatian worldview that shaped its authors' rhetorical landscape. In doing so, they will be exposed to concrete examples of how, in the early modern period, Jesuits, their lay companions, and Amerindian Christian communities lived out Ignatian spirituality in the mission field, obtain an essential perspective on the Relations useful for their further study of Canadian ecclesiastical history, and advance their basic skills in examining primary historical sources.

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  • Jesuits and Globalization

    RGH3227HS

    • Instructor(s):
    • College: Regis College
    • Credits: One Credit
    • Session: Winter 2022 Schedule: Tue  Time: 14:00
    • Section: 0101

    This seminar-style course examines the history and development of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits) in global context, and as an agent of globalization, from its founding in the mid-16th century to the early 21st century and the era of a Jesuit pope. Emphasis is on how Jesuits may have both effected change and themselves been changed in their interaction with diverse peoples and cultures around the world. Reading and discussion of primary sources, as well as key examples of
    recent work on these topics. In the past 25 years or so, Jesuits have become a very hot topic in scholarly research, and we will consider why and how this is so. Sources to include both written texts as well as visual materials such paintings or photographs.

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  • Jesuits and Globalization

    RGH3227HS

    • Instructor(s):
    • College: Regis College
    • Credits: One Credit
    • Session: Winter 2021 Schedule: Tue  Time: 14:00
    • Section: 0101

    This seminar-style course examines the history and development of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits) in global context, and as an agent of globalization, from its founding in the mid-16th century to the early 21st century and the era of a Jesuit pope. Emphasis is on how Jesuits may have both effected change and themselves been changed in their interaction with diverse peoples and cultures around the world. Reading and discussion of primary sources, as well as key examples of
    recent work on these topics. In the past 25 years or so, Jesuits have become a very hot topic in scholarly research, and we will consider why and how this is so. Sources to include both written texts as well as visual materials such paintings or photographs.

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  • Jesuits and Globalization

    RGH3227HS

    • Instructor(s):
    • College: Regis College
    • Credits: One Credit
    • Session: Winter 2019 Schedule: Wed  Time: 9:00
    • Section: 0101

    This seminar-style course examines the history and development of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits) in global context, and as an agent of globalization, from its founding in the mid-16th century to the early 21st century and the era of a Jesuit pope. Emphasis is on how Jesuits may have both effected change and themselves been changed in their interaction with diverse peoples and cultures around the world. Reading and discussion of primary sources, as well as key examples of
    recent work on these topics. In the past 25 years or so, Jesuits have become a very hot topic in scholarly research, and we will consider why and how this is so. Sources to include both written texts as well as visual materials such paintings or photographs.

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