Final Academic Bulletin 2017-2018 Fall
Final Academic Bulletin 2017-2018 Fall
Final Academic Bulletin 2017-2018 Fall
COLLEGE
Undergraduate Bulletin
2017-2018
Effective July 1, 2017
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Christendom
College
Bulletin:
Table
of
Contents
THE MISSION OF CHRISTENDOM COLLEGE ........................................................................................................6
1BAccreditation and Affiliation .....................................................................................................................................6
Policy of Non-Discrimination .........................................................................................................................................7
Disclaimer .......................................................................................................................................................................7
Faculty Profession of Faith and Oath of Fidelity ............................................................................................................8
Our Pledge ......................................................................................................................................................................8
Welcome to Christendom! ..............................................................................................................................................9
Christendom College: An Overview .............................................................................................................................10
Campus ..........................................................................................................................................................12
The Shenandoah Valley and Beyond .............................................................................................................13
Historical Notes on the Area Around Front Royal ..........................................................................13
Educational Principles ..................................................................................................................................................15
A Catholic Education .....................................................................................................................................16
A Personal Education .....................................................................................................................................18
An Education for the Laity .............................................................................................................................18
An Education Productive of Religious Vocations ..........................................................................................19
St. Thomas Aquinas and the Curriculum .......................................................................................................20
College Life ..................................................................................................................................................................21
Residence Halls ..............................................................................................................................................21
Campus Food Service .....................................................................................................................................21
Spiritual Life ...................................................................................................................................................22
Christendom Choir and Schola Gregoriana ....................................................................................................22
Student Activities ...........................................................................................................................................23
Athletics ..........................................................................................................................................................24
Major Speakers Program ................................................................................................................................24
Catholic Culture & the Fine Arts....................................................................................................................25
Student Conduct .............................................................................................................................................25
Library ..........................................................................................................................................................26
Student Academic Services ............................................................................................................................27
Writing Center ................................................................................................................................................27
Christendom Students with Learning Disabilities ..........................................................................................28
Achieving Balance: Technology at Christendom College .............................................................................28
Career Planning and Advising ........................................................................................................................29
Career Opportunities: Preparation for Graduate School ..................................................................30
Career Opportunities: Non-Academic Careers ................................................................................30
Curriculum ....................................................................................................................................................................32
The Core Curriculum ......................................................................................................................................32
The Sequence of Core Curriculum Courses ...................................................................................................34
Freshman Year Core Curriculum .....................................................................................................34
Sophomore Year Core Curriculum ..................................................................................................34
Junior Year Core Curriculum ...........................................................................................................35
The Core Curriculum at a Glance ...................................................................................................................35
The Advanced Curriculum and Majors ..........................................................................................................36
At the Heart of the ChurchJunior Semester in Rome .................................................................................36
Rome Junior Semester Curriculum ..................................................................................................37
Eligibility Requirements for the Junior Semester in Rome Program ...............................................37
Academic Policies .........................................................................................................................................................38
Requirements for the Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) Degree ...................................................................................38
Requirements for the Associate of Arts (A.A.) Degree ..................................................................................38
Participation in Graduation Ceremonies ........................................................................................................39
Policies about Registering for Courses...........................................................................................................40
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Academic Advisors ..........................................................................................................................40
Registration and Freshman Orientation ...........................................................................................40
Course Load .....................................................................................................................................40
Student Classification ......................................................................................................................41
Course Numbers and Course Prerequisites ......................................................................................41
Auditing Courses ..............................................................................................................................41
Adding and Dropping Courses .........................................................................................................41
Withdrawal from Courses After the Drop Period ............................................................................42
Repeating Courses ............................................................................................................................42
Policy on Directed Study Courses by Correspondence ...................................................................42
Policies Applicable to the Courses Students Take .........................................................................................44
Authority of Professor ......................................................................................................................44
Class Attendance ..............................................................................................................................44
Inclement Weather ...........................................................................................................................44
Student Intellectual Property Rights ................................................................................................45
Academic Ethics ..............................................................................................................................45
Student Electronic Devices in Class ................................................................................................46
Grading System ................................................................................................................................46
Term Papers .....................................................................................................................................47
Final Examinations ..........................................................................................................................47
Admission to a Major .......................................................................................................................47
Senior Thesis ....................................................................................................................................47
Policies about Honors, Incompletes, and Academic Difficulties ...................................................................50
Academic Honors .............................................................................................................................50
Graduation with Honors ...................................................................................................................50
Incompletes ......................................................................................................................................50
Academic Difficulties ......................................................................................................................50
Academic Warning and Probation ...................................................................................................51
Academic Dismissal .........................................................................................................................51
Creation, Permanence, and Disposal of Student Records ................................................................51
Student Access to Records ...............................................................................................................52
Transcripts ........................................................................................................................................52
Student Grievance Procedures .........................................................................................................52
Sexual Harassment ...........................................................................................................................53
Academic Departments .................................................................................................................................................54
Classical and Early Christian Studies .............................................................................................................54
Requirements for the Classical and Early Christian Studies Major and Minor ...............................55
Latin ...........................................................................................................................................56
Greek ...........................................................................................................................................57
Hebrew ...........................................................................................................................................58
Classical and Early Christian Civilization .......................................................................................58
English Language and Literature ....................................................................................................................60
Requirements for the Literature Major and Minor ...........................................................................61
Foundational Curriculum .................................................................................................................62
Advanced Courses ............................................................................................................................63
History ..........................................................................................................................................................67
Requirements for the History Major and Minor ..............................................................................67
Foundational Curriculum .................................................................................................................68
Advanced Courses ............................................................................................................................68
Mathematics and Science ...............................................................................................................................73
Requirements for the Mathematics Major and Minor ......................................................................73
Foundational Curriculum .................................................................................................................74
Natural Science Courses ..................................................................................................................77
Modern Languages .........................................................................................................................................79
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French ...........................................................................................................................................79
Spanish ...........................................................................................................................................79
Music ..........................................................................................................................................................80
Requirements for the Liturgical Music Minor .................................................................................81
Foundational Curriculum and Advanced Courses ...........................................................................81
Philosophy ......................................................................................................................................................83
Requirements for the Philosophy Major and Minor ........................................................................84
Foundational Curriculum .................................................................................................................84
Advanced Courses ............................................................................................................................85
Political Science and Economics ....................................................................................................................88
Theology .........................................................................................................................................................95
Requirements for the Theology Major and Minor ...........................................................................96
Foundational Curriculum .................................................................................................................96
Advanced Courses ............................................................................................................................97
Education for a Lifetime Program ................................................................................................................101
Junior Semester in Rome Courses ................................................................................................................102
Teacher Formation Practicum ......................................................................................................................103
Advanced Studies Certificate .......................................................................................................................104
Undergraduate Admissions .........................................................................................................................................105
Academic Requirements ...............................................................................................................................105
General Guidelines .......................................................................................................................................105
Early Action Option .....................................................................................................................................106
Application Procedure ..................................................................................................................................106
Home Schooled Students ...............................................................................................................106
Transfer Students ..........................................................................................................................................106
Transfer Credit Policy ....................................................................................................................107
Advanced Placement ....................................................................................................................................107
International Students ...................................................................................................................................108
Part-time Students ........................................................................................................................................109
Readmission .................................................................................................................................................109
Deposit ........................................................................................................................................................109
Financial Aid ...............................................................................................................................................................110
The Financial Aid Overview ........................................................................................................................110
How and When to make a Financial Aid Application?..................................................................110
Notice about US Federal Student Financial Assistance .................................................................110
1Yellow Ribbon Program ..............................................................................................................110
Need-Based Financial Assistance ..................................................................................................111
Merit Based Financial Assistance (Academic Scholarships) .........................................................111
Family Plan Discounts ...................................................................................................................112
Student Jobs (Work Study Program) .............................................................................................112
Financial Policy ............................................................................................................................................112
Tuition and Fees .............................................................................................................................112
Medical Dietary Need ....................................................................................................................112
Outstanding Accounts ....................................................................................................................113
Refund Policy .................................................................................................................................113
Withdrawal Refund ........................................................................................................................113
Withdrawal Procedure ....................................................................................................................114
Required Deposits ..........................................................................................................................114
Vehicle Registration and Parking Fee ............................................................................................115
Textbook Costs ..............................................................................................................................115
Summer Programs .......................................................................................................................................................116
Experience Christendom Summer Program .................................................................................................116
Summer Institutes .........................................................................................................................................116
Summer Study Abroad Program ..................................................................................................................117
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Christendom Press ......................................................................................................................................................118
Notre Dame Graduate School .....................................................................................................................................119
An Apostolic Institution ...............................................................................................................................119
History of the Notre Dame Graduate School ...............................................................................................119
Location 120
Graduate Programs .......................................................................................................................................120
Master of Arts Program ..................................................................................................................120
The Apostolic Catechetical Diploma Program ..............................................................................121
NDGS Summer Program ...............................................................................................................121
The Vita Consecrata Institute .........................................................................................................122
NDGS Certificate Program ............................................................................................................122
Online MA Program .......................................................................................................................122
Board of Directors.......................................................................................................................................................124
Advisors to the Board .................................................................................................................................................125
Administration ............................................................................................................................................................127
Undergraduate Full-Time Faculty...............................................................................................................................128
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THE MISSION OF CHRISTENDOM COLLEGE
The College provides a Catholic liberal arts education, including an integrated core
curriculum grounded in natural and revealed truth, the purpose of which at both the
undergraduate and graduate levels is to form the whole person for a life spent in the pursuit of
truth and wisdom. Intrinsic to such an education is the formation of moral character and the
fostering of the spiritual life. This education prepares students for their role as faithful,
informed, and articulate members of Christs Church and society.
The particular mission of Christendom College, both at the undergraduate and graduate
levels, is to restore all things in Christ, by forming men and women to contribute to the
Christian renovation of the temporal order. This mission gives Christendom College its name.
The College is located within the Diocese of Arlington and is submissive to the authority
of the Bishop of Arlington regarding the orthodoxy of Catholic doctrine taught at the College.
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Policy of Non-Discrimination
Christendom College does not discriminate against any applicant or student on the basis
of race, sex, color, or national origin.
Disclaimer
Christendom College issues this bulletin to furnish prospective students and other
interested people with information about the institution. Readers should be aware that courses
listed in this bulletin are subject to change without notice and may not be regarded as a binding
obligation of the College. Changes in policy or financial conditions may necessitate some
alterations in College policy, procedures, curriculum, tuition, or fees.
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Faculty Profession of Faith and Oath of Fidelity
In view of the institutionally Catholic character of Christendom College, and in view of
the principle that the truth of the Gospel illumines and is integrated with the entire curriculum at
Christendom College, all faculty contracts include the condition that the faculty member will
neither publicly reject nor defy either the official teaching of the Pope on matters of faith and
morals or the Popes authority as head of the Catholic Church. In addition, as a positive
expression of the specifically Catholic character of Christendom College, in accord with the
desire of the Holy See as expressed in the Apostolic Constitution Ex Corde Ecclesiae, members
of the faculty voluntarily make a public Profession of Faith (the Nicene-Constantinopolitan
Creed) and take the Oath of Fidelity at an annual convocation in the presence of the Ordinary of
the Diocese or his representative.
The text of the Oath of Fidelity, proposed by the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith (1 March 1989), is as follows:
Our Pledge
With the help of Gods ever-sufficient grace, we at Christendom College promise never to
depart from the truth as taught by the Magisterium of the Catholic Church under its head,
the Pope, and to uphold the highest Christian moral standards for ourselves and for our
students.
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Welcome to Christendom!
In the pages that follow, you will find a basic introduction to the educational philosophy,
curriculum, goals, and structure of Christendom College. All the administration, faculty, and
staff of the College are committed to providing you with the finest Catholic education possible.
We have a traditional, liberal arts core curriculum which properly grounds students by teaching
them to think critically. As we have entered into the second decade of the Third Millennium, we
invite you to become a vibrant part of our growing Christendom community. Our program seeks
to bear witness to the whole truth about God, man, and the created order. Here at Christendom,
the love of life, learning, and Catholic festivity go hand-in-hand with the desire for God. I
personally invite you to join us in our common effort to consecrate the intellect and will to Christ
our Lord and King.
Timothy T. ODonnell was the first layman to receive both his licentiate and doctoral degrees in Ascetical
and Mystical Theology from the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum) in Rome.
He has been with Christendom College since 1985 and has been President of the College since 1992. He
is a Knight Grand Cross in the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre. He was appointed by Pope John
Paul II as a Consultor to the Pontifical Council for the Family. He continues to teach in both the History
and Theology Departments of Christendom College. He is the author of Heart of the Redeemer and
Swords Around the Cross: The Nine Years War. He has filmed many programs for the Eternal Word
Television Network (EWTN) including Saint Matthew: Evangelist of the Church; The Lenten Stational
Churches of Rome; Saint John: Evangelist of the Heart of Christ; Glory of the Papacy; Luke: Meek
Scribe of Christ; The Gospel of Mark: the Memoirs of Saint Peter; and most recently, The Path to Rome:
The Captivity Epistles of St. Paul.
Dr. ODonnell and his wife, Cathy, have nine children and eleven grandchildren. They live on their farm
Tir Connaill in Stephens City, Virginia.
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Christendom College: An Overview
Christendom College is a coeducational liberal arts college, institutionally committed to
the Magisterium of the Catholic Church in conformity with the Apostolic Constitution Ex Corde
Ecclesiae.
The College was founded in 1977 in response to the Second Vatican Councils Decree on
the Apostolate of the Laity, with the vision of providing a liberal arts education that would fully
integrate natural and revealed truth. The purpose of a liberal arts college is to educate for life, to
lead the whole man to wisdom, not just to train a worker for a job. The liberal arts develop a
human beings personal abilities to reason, to discover the truth, and to judge rightly. As John
Henry Cardinal Newman so accurately observed in The Idea of a University,
The man who has learned to think and to reason and to compare and to
discriminate and to analyze, who has refined his taste, and formed his
judgment, and sharpened his mental vision, will not indeed at once be a
lawyer . . . or a statesman, or a physician . . . or a man of business, or a
soldier, or an engineer, or a chemist, or a geologist . . . but he will be
placed in that state of intellect in which he can take up any one of the
sciences or callings I have referred to . . . with an ease, a grace, a
versatility, and a success, to which another is a stranger. In this sense,
then . . . mental culture is emphatically useful. (I.vii.6)
To turn this vision into the reality which became Christendom College, a rigorous
program of studies was designed, with careful consideration for its scope and order. Today,
Christendom offers an exceptionally strong, integrated core curriculum in Catholic theology,
philosophy, history, literature, political science, economics, the classical and modern languages,
mathematics, and science. This core curriculum is required of all students. Only when a student
has completed the Core does he or she focus on major concentrations begun in the Core. To
potential enrollees, Christendom offers two programs. The three-year program consists of the
entire core curriculum and leads to the Associate of Arts degree. The four-year program adds a
major and leads to the Bachelor of Arts degree. Required of each major at the baccalaureate
level is a senior thesis, a scholarly piece of writing which culminates the students four-year
immersion in those arts that are called liberales (free) because they equip a person for the kind of
life that is worthy of a free human being.
To assure the proper relationship between the College and the Church, Christendom
requests all faculty members to affirm their loyalty to the official teaching of the Catholic
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Church. Faculty contracts state that public rejection of, or dissent from, the teachings of the
Catholic Church as interpreted by the Holy Father, or a rejection of the authority of the Pope as
head of the Catholic Church, is grounds for the termination of that contract.
Since the merger of the Notre Dame Institute with Christendom in 1997 as the Notre
Dame Graduate School of Christendom College, the College has also been able to offer graduate
programs in theological and catechetical studies. These, too, are taught in full accord with the
Magisterium of the Church. Please see the Catalogue of the Notre Dame Graduate School of
Christendom College for further information.
Dearly beloved, we have this common task: we must say together from East and
West: Ne evacuetur Crux! (cf. 1 Cor 1:17). The Cross of Christ must not be
emptied of its power, because if the Cross of Christ is emptied of its power, man
no longer has roots, he no longer has prospects, he is destroyed! This is the cry of
the end of the 20th century. It is the cry of Rome, of Moscow, of Constantinople.
It is the cry of all Christendom: of the Americas, of Africa, of Asia, of everyone.
It is the cry of the new evangelization.
John Paul II, Address after the Way of the Cross,
Good Friday (1 April 1994), n. 3: AAS 87 (1995), 88.
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Campus
Christendom College is located at 134 Christendom Drive along Shenandoah Shores
Road just a mile north of Front Royal, Virginia. The campuss over 200 acres of gently rolling
land near the Blue Ridge Mountains include both woods and open fields and are bounded on the
western side by scenic cliffs overlooking the graceful Shenandoah River. The quiet rural setting
and the spacious grounds are well-suited to academic pursuits and provide a variety of athletic
and recreational activities.
At the heart of the campus is the Chapel of Christ the King where the Holy Sacrifice of
the Mass is offered daily. The St. Lawrence Commons, a gathering place for the whole
Christendom community, contains the student dining hall and, on the lower level, classrooms.
The 40,000 square-foot St. John the Evangelist Library, overlooking the Shenandoah River,
architecturally conveys the ultimate unity of faith and reason as it serves as the primary
educational center of the College. Regina Coeli Hall houses the College administrative offices,
and it still maintains the welcoming atmosphere from original College days when it was the main
building of a four building campus!
Dedicated on the first anniversary of the death of the beloved Pope whose inspiration and
moral support were so influential in the growth of Christendom College, the Pope John Paul the
Great Student Center is home to comfortable St. Kilians Caf, a student game room, and student
services offices. It is the central student and faculty gathering place for the joyful Christian
society distinctive of Christendom College.
Recreation facilities include the St. Louis the Crusader Gymnasium, outdoor tennis and
volleyball courts, and playing fields. The Crusader Gymnasium, with its imposing classical
facade, contains a college-size basketball court adaptable for full-court volleyball as two half
courts or as two indoor volleyball courts for the intramural program. In addition there is a full-
size weight room and an aerobic exercise room, along with two racquetball/handball courts for
intramural sports. The gymnasium also features locker rooms and a second floor viewing area.
The playing fields provide for such sports as soccer, football, and rugby, among others.
Christendom College also offers intercollegiate sports in mens and womens soccer, mens and
womens basketball, womens volleyball, and mens rugby. A music practice room with a
Boston 7' 10" grand piano is regularly used by student musicians. Furthermore, the woods and
grounds of the campus are delightful for hiking and jogging, and the Shenandoah River is a
favorite site for boating and fishing.
The Christendom Trail, a system of walking and jogging paths through forty acres of
woodland on campus, leads to picnic areas, the Grotto of Our Lady, scenic river overlooks, and
the eastern bank of the Shenandoah River. The trail and woods provide opportunities for the
quiet enjoyment of nature, outdoor exercise, prayer, study, and meditation.
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The Shenandoah Valley and Beyond
Downtown Front Royal, four miles from campus, and Winchester, twenty miles distant,
provide students with needed commercial and entertainment opportunities, including shopping
centers, malls, banks, cinemas, restaurants, tennis courts, fitness centers, and full medical
services. The international headquarters of both Human Life International and Seton Home
Study School are just a mile from campus. Shenandoah National Park, George Washington
National Forest, and Skyline Drive are close to Front Royal and contain hiking trails, camping
grounds, and boating and fishing areas. The famous Appalachian Trail lies five miles to the east
of campus. The Shenandoah River is a popular site for canoeing and white-water rafting; there
are several commercial ski slopes in the area and numerous systems of extensive natural caverns
open to the public.
The nations capital, Washington, D.C., is only 70 miles from Christendom College, and
its museums, monuments, libraries, and cultural events offer students a wide variety of
entertainment and educational opportunities, as do the historic cities of Northern Virginia, such
as Alexandria, Arlington, Fairfax, and Manassas. Charming and historic Harpers Ferry, at the
confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac Rivers where Virginia, West Virginia, and Maryland
meet, is just a forty-five-minute drive from Front Royal. The Basilica of the National Shrine of
the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C., and the St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Basilica
Shrine in Emmitsburg, Maryland, are both within 90 minutes of campus.
Not far to the north, the little town of Harpers Ferry where the Shenandoah River joins
the Potomac was the scene of one of the most famous episodes in American history, when in
1859 John Brown and his band of revolutionaries were attacked and captured by Robert E. Lee.
Despite his bloodthirsty intentions, Browns admirers in the North made him into a hero, and
men marched to the Civil War singing John Browns body lies a-moulding in the grave; but his
soul goes marching on!
During the Civil War, the Shenandoah Valley was the scene of the prodigious marches of
Stonewall Jackson, whose campaign, which was conducted almost entirely in the Valley, is still
studied in military academies all over the world. The Shenandoah Valley was a route for
surprise Confederate efforts to invade the North, outflanking the Union Army of the Potomac
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that fought in northern Virginia. One of the most dramatic Civil War battles was the Battle of
Cedar Creek, near Front Royal, in 1864. Confederate General Robert E. Lee had sent a
substantial part of his Army of Northern Virginia secretly to the Valley to catch by surprise the
Union army then sweeping down the Valley from the north under the command of General Phil
Sheridan. The Confederates attacked at dawn and drove the Union army back in near-rout. But
General Sheridan had been on a journey in the rear; riding south that morning, he saw the fleeing
Union troops coming toward him, apparently decisively defeated. He called on them to turn
around and counterattack. Among the knots and groups of retreating men the word flashed:
Phil Sheridans here, boys! Were going back! They did turn back, attacked the Confederates,
and won the battle.
Driving to Front Royal from Washington, D.C., via Interstate 66, one passes through
Thoroughfare Gap where, in happier times for the Confederates, Robert E. Lee outmarched the
Union army under General John Pope and joined Stonewall Jackson at Manassas to win the
Second Battle of Manassas (or Bull Run) in 1862, now memorialized in Manassas National
Battlefield Park.
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8B Educational Principles
Fides Qurens Intellectum
Faith Seeking Understanding
Christianity, and nothing short of it, must be made the element and principle
of all education. . . . Where revealed truth has given the aid and direction to
knowledge, knowledge of all kinds will minister to revealed truth. But if in
education we begin with nature before grace, with evidences before faith,
with science before conscience, with poetry before practice, we shall be doing
much the same as if we were to indulge the appetite and passions and turn a
deaf ear to reason. In each case we misplace what in its place is a Divine gift.
-John Henry Newman, Discussions and Arguments
Inevitably, an educational program will be based upon some view of mans nature and
end. The understanding of human nature implicit in the vast majority of university curricula
today is secular humanism, a world-view in which man is ultimately no more than an animal, a
by-product of blind evolution, having no ends or values but those which he determines for
himself. Hence contemporary college and university curricula are at odds with the view of man
that formed Western civilization itself -the Catholic view that man is uniquely endowed with a
rational and immortal soul, that he is created in the image and likeness of God, that his life is
subject to objective moral norms, and that he is called to an end that transcends this life. As
todays parents and students have been learning to their sorrow, educational institutions at odds
with Western civilization cannot hand it on; they can only attack it with ideological violence or
abandon it altogether, as they pursue lesser goals, pragmatic and utilitarian.
A century and a half ago, Blessed John Henry Newman was already doing battle with a
utilitarian view of higher education. He, too, had heard the shortsighted demand with which we
are all too familiar: that education be of immediate utility or usefulness (i.e. lucrative). In the
nine discourses of The Idea of a University, Newman outlined a nobler view of education and
summarized it thus:
Following Newmans lead, Christendom College does not limit its aims to the training of
students for particular careers. It seeks, rather, to give them the arts that are fundamental to the
life of reason itself. These liberal arts are universal in application, both inside and outside a
chosen career and allow our students to take up their careers with an ease, a grace, a versatility
not available to others who may choose this career .
15
The liberal arts student learns to think logically and to express himself clearly -skills
absolutely necessary for one who wishes to influence his society for the better. He immerses
himself in the great ideas and works of the Western tradition in order to appropriate that tradition
and make his own contribution to it. He studies the past actions of mankind in history and the
morality of individual and corporate deeds in order more prudently to determine his own actions,
assess his society, and influence the course of events. For this very reason, no graduates are
more eagerly sought in law, business, journalism, politics, teaching or other professions than the
graduates of traditional liberal arts colleges such as Christendom.
The classical tradition of the liberal arts was based on a philosophic understanding of the
innate dignity of man and the nobility of his intellect. The Church appropriated that tradition as
conducive to the development of the intellectual faculties in submission to revealed Truth. As
Newman stated, Liberal education, viewed in itself, is simply the cultivation of the intellect, as
such, and its object is nothing more or less than intellectual excellence (I.v.9). Newman,
however, was also at pains to note that Liberal Education makes not the Christian, not the
Catholic, but the gentleman. It is well to be a gentleman. Newman continues,
Clearly, liberal education for Catholics must entail the guiding hand and nourishing spirit
of the Church in an integral manner, lest both students and faculty eventually fall away from the
Truth, as Newman so prophetically described in The Idea of a University. Newman asserts,
A University cannot exist externally to the Catholic pale, for it cannot teach
Universal Knowledge if it does not teach Catholic theology. This is certain; but
still, though it had ever so many theological Chairs, that would not suffice to
make it a Catholic University; for theology would be included in its teaching only
as a branch of knowledge, only as one out of many constituent portions, however
important a one, of what I have called Philosophy. Hence a direct and active
jurisdiction of the Church over it and in it is necessary, lest it should become the
16
rival of the Church with the community at large in those theological matters
which to the Church are exclusively committed. (I.ix.1)
This is precisely what has come to pass in the vast majority of nominally Catholic
colleges and universities in the United States since the Land OLakes conference in 1967, with
the development of a second or parallel Magisterium of dissident theologians over and
against Rome. [See Msgr. George A. Kelly, Catholic Higher Education: Is It In or Out of the
Church? Brownson Studies 3 (Front Royal: Christendom Press, 1992), 7 ff.]
Two years before the founding of Christendom College, Pope Paul VI, in an address to
the presidents of Catholic colleges and universities, warned against the secularizing of Catholic
universities:
In recent years some Catholic universities have become convinced that they can
better respond to the various problems of man and his world by playing down
their own Catholic character. But what has been the effect of this trend? The
principles and values of the Christian religion have been watered down and
weakened; they have been replaced by a humanism which has really turned out to
be a secularization. Morals within the university community have degenerated to
the point where many young people no longer perceive the beauty and
attractiveness of the Christian virtues.
Two years after the foundation of Christendom College, and within a year of his
ascension to the papacy, Pope John Paul II, on October 7, 1979, defined the mission of the
Catholic college as follows:
A Catholic college must make a specific contribution to the Church, must train
young men and women to assume tasks in the service of society and to bear
witness to their faith before the world, and must set up a real community which
bears witness to a living Christianity. Yours is the qualification of affirming God,
His revelation and the Catholic Church. The term Catholic will never be a mere
label, added or dropped according to pressures. This is your identity. This is your
vocation.
At Christendom College, in their academic, spiritual and social lives, the faculty and students
aim at living out this Catholic vocation and identity in its integrity.
17
A Personal Education
The education at Christendom College is classical and traditional, emphasizing our
Graeco-Roman and Judaeo-Christian heritage as understood in the light of the Catholic Faith.
Rather than offering an array of different ideas all seen as equally valuable, courses at
Christendom College focus on the truth, examining different theories not merely for their
historical position but precisely for their truth. Fides quaerens intellectum, Faith seeking
understanding, describes the intellectual pursuits of the Christendom student.
The primary aim of Christendom College is academic; but intellectual formation is never
severed from spiritual, social, and personal formation. Just as the different disciplines are
integrated in the Christendom curriculum, so too that curriculum is integrated with the rest of the
students life at Christendom College. Education is furthered not only in the classroom but also
in the chapel, at mealtime, in leisure time, and throughout the entire day as students converse
with each other and with their professors. Christendom College is not merely a curriculum of
courses: it is a season of life in which the whole person matures in wisdom, in virtue, and in
ability -intellectually, morally, socially, and spiritually.
The Second Vatican Councils Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity stresses the
importance of the laitys share in the priestly office of Christ and in the salvific mission of the
Church. In their jobs, their families, their schools, their society, and their personal relationships,
the Catholic laity are called to promote salvation by their example and witness, by bringing the
message of the Gospel to men, and most especially by informing and penetrating their temporal
society with the spirit of the Gospel. It is Christendom Colleges hope and expectation that the
graduate of Christendom is, in the words of the Apostolic Exhortation Christefideles Laici, to
take an active, conscientious and responsible part in the mission of the Church in this great
moment of history in this Third Millennium of Grace.
18
Those men and women who take seriously their vocation as Christian laity will find in
the integrated program of studies at Christendom College excellent preparation for whatever type
of apostolic activity they may undertake in later life. The liberal arts curriculum which develops
students into leaders capable of influencing others and changing their society, when totally
informed by the truths of the Faith, produces men and women whose natural leadership will be
apostolically oriented.
The liberal arts education provided by Christendom College, then, enables its students to
respond enthusiastically to the call of the Second Vatican Council (Decree on the Apostolate of
the Laity, Apostolicam Actuositatem, 33):
The Council, then, makes an earnest plea in the Lords name that all lay people
give a glad, generous, and prompt response to the impulse of the Holy Spirit and
to the voice of Christ, who is giving them an especially urgent invitation at this
moment. Young people should feel that this call is directed to them in particular,
and they should respond to it eagerly and magnanimously. The Lord himself
renews His invitation to all the lay faithful to come closer to Him every day, and
with the recognition that what is His is also their own (Phil 2:5), they ought to
associate themselves with Him in His saving mission. Once again He sends them
into every town and place where He himself is to come (cf. Luke 10:1).
Thus, when the question is asked, What can you do with a liberal arts education? the
answer should be clear: Whatever I am called to do.
Our curriculum in the liberal arts with its emphasis on Thomistic philosophy and on
Sacred Theology provides a superlative preparation for seminarians and pre-seminarians, and for
those young men and women who will be the leaven of new or revitalized religious orders.
Christendom College is proud of its alumnae and alumni who have joined such orders as
the Benedictines, Carmelites, Dominicans, Fathers of Mercy, Miles Jesu, the Oblates of Our
Lady of Fatima, the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter, Poor Clares, Salesians, and many others. We
are likewise proud of those who have joined the ranks of the diocesan clergy in, for example, the
dioceses of Arlington, Virginia; Burlington, Vermont; Lincoln, Nebraska; Manchester, New
Hampshire; Peoria, Illinois; Sioux Falls, South Dakota; St. Augustine, Florida; and several
19
foreign nations. Through the development of actively faithful and liberally educated clergy and
religious, Christendom College is playing a role beyond all human calculation in the universal
task to restore all things in Christ.
From the Address on the Perennial Philosophy of St. Thomas for the
Youth of Our Times, at the Angelicum, Rome, 1979.
Therefore, in accordance with the mind and discipline of the Church for the formation of
the young, Christendom College is committed to a Thomistic educational policy: programs of
instruction in philosophy and Sacred Theology shall be taught according to the spirit, method,
and principles of the Common Doctor.
20
College Life
To know what God wants, to know where the path of life is found
this was Israels joy, this was her great privilege. It is also our joy:
Gods will does not alienate us, it purifies us even if this can be
painful and so it leads us to ourselves. In this way, we serve not only
him, but the salvation of the whole world, of all history.
His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI, Inaugural Homily, 24 April 2005
Residence Halls
Residence Hall facilities for men and women are separate and under the supervision of Resident
Assistants. Inter-visitation in the residence halls is not permitted. The main womens residence
halls are St. Edmund Campion Hall, St. Catherine of Siena Hall, and Blessed Margaret of
Castello Hall. These are well-designed buildings with double- and triple-occupancy rooms for
female students. The main mens residence halls are St. Joseph Hall, St. Francis of Assisi Hall,
and St. Benedict Hall. Other on-campus residences include St. Augustine Hall, St. Pius X Hall,
St. Dominic Hall, St. Anne Hall and St. Teresa Hall (home-style residences on Berbusse Lane),
and neighboring St. Padre Pio Hall (Chaplains Residence). Additional new residence halls are
planned to accommodate continuing growth in the student body.
Please note that the College is officially closed during Thanksgiving, Christmas and
Easter recess, as well as during Fall and Spring Breaks. No food service is available during these
times. Students must plan on vacating the campus for the duration of the Fall and Spring breaks.
However, students are permitted to remain on campus during the Thanksgiving and Easter
recesses, with prior permission from the Dean of Student Life.
For students who may have medical dietary needs, please see Medical Dietary Need
under Financial Policy below.
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Spiritual Life
From the beginning, the Church has faithfully carried on the three-fold mission of Christ
to proclaim the truth of salvation through faith in the Lord Jesus, to celebrate the beauty of the
faith in the grace of the sacred liturgy and of the sacraments, and to live the goodness of the faith
in charity. The Chaplaincy at Christendom College, through a variety of activities, integrates the
truths of the faith learned in the classroom with the life of the Spirit celebrated in the sacred liturgy
and lived in charity.
The Chaplaincy fosters the celebration of the Christian mystery, of the beauty of Gods
grace, lived in the sacred liturgy, in the sacraments, in prayer. The daily celebration of the Mass
is the center of College life, and is complemented by Adoration of the Most Blessed Sacrament,
by the regular offering of the Sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation, and by ample
opportunities for devotions and for prayer.
Formed by the truth and nourished by the celebration of the sacred mysteries, the
Christendom College community lives the faith in works of charity, with numerous opportunities
offered by the Chaplaincy to reach out to our brothers and sisters with Christian love. The
Chaplaincy also assists the men and women of Christendom College in discerning the Lords will
for their lives, whether it be answering the call to the priesthood or to the religious life, embracing
marriage and family, or serving the Lord as a single person.
The Chaplains serve the students, faculty and staff of the College, and are available for
Confessions, spiritual direction, and other pastoral needs.
Part of this effort naturally includes the cultivation, in performance by volunteer student
groups such as the Christendom College Choir and the Schola Gregoriana, of the treasury of
sacred music whose integral parts include Gregorian chant and the sacred vocal polyphony of
great Catholic masters such as Palestrina, Victoria, and Josquin des Prez. Under the direction of
a competent Master of the Choristers, the students strive to render present, in resonant beauty,
the sonic vesture of divine worship. In this way, the Christendom student is able to experience
Catholic culture at its best, to breathe Catholic air when the community gathers for worship.
22
To develop in students a deep understanding of the Churchs rich tradition of music for
divine worship as well as advance in their ability to participate in and present such music,
Christendom offers a demanding minor in liturgical music. For further details on this program,
see Music under Departmental Requirements and Courses.
Student Activities
Student clubs and activities are initiated by the studentswith faculty cooperation under
the Student Activities Directorand thus reflect the interests of the current student body. The
Student Activities Council exists for the purpose of planning recreational, athletic, social,
cultural and religious activities for students.
Popular extracurricular activities include the Christendom Choir and Schola Gregoriana,
St. Genesius Society drama club, Legion of Mary, Shield of Roses, Chester-Belloc Debate
Society, and intercollegiate and intramural athletic sports. Typical weekend activities include
College-sponsored parties and dances, movies, cookouts, talent and variety shows, music
appreciation evenings, concert trips, ski trips, hikes, canoeing, and visits to the many historical
and recreational sites of the surrounding area. The College vans provide students with daily trips
to Front Royal and occasional trips to Winchester and Washington, D.C.
The St. Genesius Society is the drama club of Christendom College. The name refers to
the patron saint of actors. The purpose of the St. Genesius Society is to foster an appreciation
and knowledge of drama, in all its forms, among members of Christendom College and the
surrounding community. This may include such activities as play readings; workshops on
acting, make-up, and the like; viewing and discussion of classic films; attendance at plays
performed in the Virginia/Washington, D.C. area; and the production of other, shorter plays in
addition to the major productions performed each year by the Christendom Players.
The Christendom Players present at least one major, full-length production each year,
normally in the spring. Past productions, since the Players began in 1988, have included
Shakespeares Hamlet, A Midsummer Nights Dream, and Much Ado About Nothing; Oscar
Wildes Ideal Husband, The Importance of Being Earnest, and Lady Windermeres Fan; G. B.
Shaws Pygmalion; the Broadway musicals Oliver! and The Sound of Music; Agatha Christies
Witness for the Prosecution; American comedies such as Cheaper by the Dozen and Harvey; and
one-act plays such as Terence Rattigans The Browning Version.
23
Athletics
The athletic program is designed for the purpose of enhancing the physical well-being of
the College students as well as developing important virtues and strengths in individuals to help
form a solid character. The program consists of varsity intercollegiate sports as well as
intramurals. The Athletic Department sponsors intramural sports in indoor-soccer, tennis,
volleyball, flag football, basketball, dodgeball and racquetball, along with a variety of other
sporting events. All students are encouraged to participate in the intramural program. A member
of the United States Collegiate Athletics Association (USCAA), the College also sponsors
intercollegiate teams in mens and womens soccer, mens and womens cross country, mens
and womens basketball, womens volleyball, womens softball, mens baseball, and mens
rugby. The goal of the intercollegiate sports program is to offer Christendom College student-
athletes the ability to use and develop their God-given talents in athletics while competing
against other colleges and universities at a high level as a Catholic witness in the world.
Among the speakers have been Raymond Arroyo, Patrick Buchanan, Gerald Bradley,
Rev. Romanus Cessario, O.P., Rev. J. Augustine Di Noia, O.P., Rev. Robert J. Fox, Elizabeth
Fox-Genovese, Scott Hahn, Rev. John A. Hardon, S.J., James Hitchcock, Helen Hull Hitchcock,
Rev. Stanley Jaki, Bishop John R. Keating, Archbishop William H. Keeler, Ambassador Alan
Keyes, William Kirk Kilpatrick, Russell Kirk, Peter Kreeft, Ronald MacArthur, Ralph McInerny,
Bishop Morlino, Bernard Nathanson, M.D., Rev. Richard John Neuhaus, Camille Pauley, Joseph
Pearce, Charles E. Rice, Rev. George William Rutler, Rev. James V. Schall, S.J., Joseph
Scheidler, Ambassador Frank Shakespeare, Russell Shaw, Mary Shivanandan, Rev. Robert
Sirico, C.S.P., Janet E. Smith, Donna Steichen, Duncan Stroik, Jim Towey, Paul Vitz,
Ambassador Vernon Walters, George Weigel, and Frederick D. Wilhelmsen.
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Catholic Culture & the Fine Arts
The pursuit of what is true, beautiful and worthy of praise is not limited to the spiritual or
intellectual spheres. God in His Goodness can also be found in the beauty of the fine arts. Since
works of art, especially music, influence man tremendously, these should generally lead students
and faculty towards God. This is accomplished especially in the Liturgy and in sacred music, but
also in the beautiful paintings that are displayed on the campus grounds and in halls and
buildings, which are pleasing to the eye and reflect the order and beauty of the students
intellectual and spiritual formation.
No less than in the spiritual and intellectual spheres, the social life of the student body is
governed by the principles of Christian morals found in the Gospels for the development of
charity, civility, and modesty in daily living. For example, rules governing dress code and non-
intervisitation of the opposite sex in residence halls further support a healthy Christian way of
life.
Key aspects of student life likewise reflect the joy found in Catholic culture and festivity,
such as the annual celebrations of Oktoberfest, St. Cecilias Musical Evening, St. Patricks Day,
and the Solemnity of St. Joseph. In their activities students thus learn to distinguish those
elements within contemporary culture that are conducive to good morals from those that are not.
Beyond the daily experience of a college centered on the Good, the True, and the
Beautiful, The Beato Fra Angelico Fine Arts Program offers our students a further opportunity to
experience directly the higher and more aesthetically praiseworthy fruits of Western civilization
and our contemporary culture through live dramatic performances, chamber music recitals,
lectures, art exhibitions and other on-campus events throughout the academic year.
Student Conduct
Life at Christendom is serious in purpose, but relaxed and friendly. The rules are
designed to support the Christian environment necessary for the students moral development
and growth in responsibility, and to provide for the common good of the College community.
All students are expected not only to reflect in their dress and behavior compliance with
Christian norms of morality and a respect for the rest of the community, but also to strive for the
interior possession of the Cardinal and Theological Virtues. In other words, they are called to
live a life worthy of the name Christian.
Serious breaches of college rules will be met with prompt and firm disciplinary action.
All college regulations pertaining to students are published in the Student Handbook, which is
made available to all students and may be obtained from the Dean of Student Life.
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Library
All the glory of the world would be buried in oblivion, unless God had
provided mortals the remedy of books.
Richard de Bury
Completed in 2004, the beautiful St. John the Evangelist Library, named in honor of Our
Lords beloved disciple, is the hub of the educational resources for Christendom College. The
Library has a high quality collection of more than 100,000 volumes specifically designed to
support the Catholic liberal arts curriculum of the undergraduate college, the theological,
philosophical, and catechetical studies of The Notre Dame Graduate School of Christendom
College, and faculty research. The library serves and supports the intellectual and spiritual
formation of the students, faculty, administration, and staff. With this in mind, the library aims
to provide an uplifting atmosphere and excellent instructional, reference, collection services, and
other educational and cultural events to the constituencies of Christendom College.
The Reference Collection, located on the Main Level, contains general and specialized
encyclopedias, dictionaries, handbooks, maps, and other resources which aid students in their
studies and research. The collections include such important sources as the Leonine Edition of
the Opera Omnia of St. Thomas Aquinas, the Acta Apostolicae Sedis, the complete Acta
Synodalia of the Second Vatican Council, more than 250 volumes of the United States Supreme
Court Reports, and the collection of Senior Theses from the first Christendom Class of 1981 to
the present.
Internet Public Access terminals are available in the Information Commons in the central
area of the Main Level, providing access to in-house and online electronic resources and the
librarys catalog. The catalog is also available at several computers located among the general
collections in both the Main and Gallery Levels. In addition, the library is equipped with wireless
access for immediate access on personal laptops to all those resources. A public photocopier is
available in the Reference area on the Main Level. The Library also has a growing multi-media
collection providing both educational and popular titles.
The Main and Gallery Levels house the monograph collections supporting the academic
disciplines taught at Christendom College. These levels also offer numerous individual study
carrels, four small group study areas, and one larger Senior Study Room. The Rare Book and
Special Collections Room in the Gallery Level includes a Special collections room showcasing
the lives of saints and religious who died in the odor of sanctity; histories of religious orders and
other ecclesiastical, spiritual, and literary works in several European languages from the
sixteenth through the nineteenth centuries; in addition it houses a thorough collection of works
by and about G.K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc, and other Catholic luminaries, many of them
first editions and fine printings, including a rare complete run of the journal G.Ks Weekly.
26
The Periodicals Collection is housed in the Main Level, surrounding a comfortable
reading area containing the current issues of the collection. A Microform reader-printer is
available in this general area. The Library receives some 250 periodicals and has a developing
collection that includes access to more than 600 titles in electronic format, primarily through
VIVA, the Virtual Library of Virginia Consortium; these are available at any of the terminals
located in the Information Commons, adjacent to the periodicals reading area, or on computers
anywhere on campus.
Interlibrary Loan services are readily available to students, faculty and staff, offering
access to the collections of libraries throughout the country and the world. The Reference
Department provides instruction on research techniques for students at all collegiate levels. This
instruction includes structured sessions for groups of students, a five-week, 1-credit Advanced
Library Research course, and walk-in or private sessions for help on specific projects.
The St. Paul Library is a branch of the Christendom College Library at the Notre Dame
Graduate School facility in Alexandria, Virginia. It houses over 13,000 volumes in the fields of
Systematic and Moral Theology, Sacred Scripture, Spirituality, Pastoral Catechetics, and
Philosophy. For more information about this library branch, see the Notre Dame Graduate
School of Christendom College Catalogue.
The St. John the Evangelist Library has been designed to grow to a collection size of
approximately 130,000 monographic volumes, 5,000 audio and video cassettes or alternate
media, 30,000 bound periodical volumes, and a total of some 500 current subscription titlesin
both print and electronic formats. The Librarys Lower Level houses seven classrooms, and a
multipurpose room. St. John the Evangelist Library is the center of the academic life of the
Christendom College campus, and is open 98 hours every week during the academic yeat.
Writing Center
The Christendom College Writing Center provides students with an important academic
support service. The Center, which is staffed by a group of trained students (Peer Tutors) under
faculty direction, offers students guidance and encouragement in all phases of the writing
process.
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Under the direction of the Center Director, Peer Tutors advise students about how to
develop and organize essays, conduct research, document research sources, and improve their
writing style. The Writing Center, located in the St. John the Evangelist Library, is open during
the evening Sunday through Thursday. Students are strongly encouraged to take advantage of
this important aid to better writing and may schedule appointments for assistance with planning,
writing, and revising class papers and portions of senior theses.
Students with learning disabilities for which they are requesting reasonable
accommodations must present current, complete, and sufficient documentation of the learning
disability to the Academic Dean. Documentation should be presented to the Academic Dean as
early as possible, in most cases in the week before the start of classes, so that a timely decision
can be made. Any questions students might have should be directed to the Academic Dean.
For creating fuller opportunities to participate in our community, the campus computer
network does not extend to any of the student halls of residence, but is duly provided in public
spaces with defined hours of availability. Similarly, the code of student life represents an
articulation of time-tested principles that foster Christian fellowship and discourage inordinate
attachment to contemporary media such as movies and video games. Again, a proper balance and
reserve in this area should be characteristic of the free man.
The College provides generous technological support for the academic life of each
student. Personal computers on the Lower Level of the Saint John the Evangelist Library may be
28
used in preparation of essays and advanced research, as well as to gain access to the Internet and
email accounts. Numerous network connections are available throughout the Library by which
laptop users can connect to the campus network for the Internet and printing needs. Use of these
resources is governed by published policies and procedures. Computer use is a privilege
extended freely to all Christendom students, faculty, and staff. Students are also welcome to
bring their own personal computers, tablets, or laptops with them while at the College.
As with all branches of the College, the Department of Computer Services believes that a
Catholic liberal arts education essentially concerns the pursuit and acquisition of wisdom and not
merely the communication of information. Life at Christendom College, as a life to be spent in
the common pursuit of wisdom within the Catholic tradition, necessarily involves a communion
of souls. Behavior and the abuse of technology that diminish human dignity and isolate the
individual from a fuller life are discouraged. Instruction on the proper use of technology is
provided by the student computer staff under the direction of the Director of Computer Services
and the Computer Services Assistant Manager.
The Career Development Office at Christendom College provides career counseling and
orientation for students about potential career choices; provides information on deadlines for
GRE and LSAT examinations, graduate fellowships, etc.; and assists students with rsum
writing, mock job interviews, and graduate and law school applications. The office also
maintains a listing of job opportunities for seniors and Christendom College graduates and acts
as a clearinghouse for graduate job seekers and employment opportunities, including lay
apostolates.
Students are strongly encouraged to begin career planning no later than their sophomore
year, so that they have time to learn more about themselves and about the opportunities available
to them. Liberal Arts graduates are in great demand because they possess the high moral values,
communication skills, and habits of problem solving and high level thinking sorely lacking in
graduates of so many of the modern universities. A Liberal Arts education is an excellent
preparation for the professions, and Christendom counselors can guide students so that they can
29
complete programs in nursing, engineering, accounting, and the like quickly and efficiently,
should they be called to those fields.
Located in the John Paul the Great Student Center, the Career Development Office
maintains close contact with alumni and helps current students to network with alumni who are
in professions of interest.
Generally, the student chooses as a major that discipline in which he plans to pursue an
advanced degree. The selection of a graduate school and discrete program often will depend
upon the quality of professors at a given school and whether the student desires an academic
career (which usually requires a Ph.D.) or one in any of several other professions, including
teaching and lay apostolates. Past graduates of the College have earned master degrees or
doctorates in Theology, Philosophy, English, Political Science, History, and Classics.
To support and encourage those students disposed to advanced study, the Colleges
Career Development Office disseminates information about the GRE, graduate schools, and
educational funding, and offers aid in the application process. Christendoms faculty members
also advise students regarding graduate school and help them with some application
preparations.
The entire liberal arts program of the College, emphasizing truth, logical thought, and
effective expression, is a superb preparation for law school. Regardless of major, a pre-law
student is advised to select a minimum of two courses from among those in the Political Science
curriculum which deal specifically with the law (e.g., PSAE 311 American Government
Institutions, PSAE 333-334 Constitutional Law I & II, PSAE 479 Jurisprudence and the Catholic
Lawyer). Pre-law students will find that any major offered at Christendom will provide excellent
preparation for law school.
30
An authentically Catholic approach to the study and practice of politics is precisely what
is needed for the renovation of the social order. Young Catholics interested in pursuing a career
in politics must be properly formed and trained to fill this need, and this is precisely what the
Politics Program is intended to accomplish. For students not majoring in Political Science and
Economics, two special courses for the Program (PSAE 382 Politics Practica and PSAE 521
Practica Internship) are designed to convey a basic familiarity with the opportunities, problems,
and techniques of a career in politics. Interested students should see the Political Science and
H
Christendom College recognizes the need for excellent Catholic teachers in diocesan
Catholic schools, parish religious education programs, and public and private schools.
Christendom Colleges liberal arts majors, in conjunction with its superior core curriculum,
provide an excellent foundation for a career in primary or secondary teaching. With a B.A. from
Christendom College, an additional program of usually no more than two years will be necessary
for teacher certification and a Master of Education (M.Ed.) or Master of Arts in Teaching
(M.A.T.) degree. Furthermore, Christendom Colleges core curriculum with certain additional
courses in political science, American history, mathematics, and science meets or exceeds the
general studies component for most teacher certification programs, except in health and
physical education. Students should investigate the specific requirements for teaching in their
subject and geographic location of interest, and the Career Development Office will help them to
do so. Christendom College does not offer teacher certification but does offer a pre-certification
program which provides its undergraduate students the opportunity to explore a career in
education and to develop teaching skills through the Teaching Apprentice Practicum. See the
Teacher Formation Practicum section of this bulletin for details and requirements. The Career
H H
Development Office highly recommends that students interested in the teaching profession enroll
in Christendoms Teacher Apprentice Program and take six credits of student teaching. These
six credits are very helpful for students seeking certification to teach in the Catholic Diocese of
Arlington and elsewhere.
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1 Curriculum
. . . from the greatness and beauty of created things comes a corresponding
perception of their Creator. Wisdom 13:5
Studies at Christendom College are both demanding and exciting. In addition to its core
curriculum of liberal studies, which may lead to the degree of Associate of Arts (A.A.), the
College offers a number of carefully selected majors in Classical and Early Christian Studies ,
H H
English Language and Literature , History , Mathematics, Philosophy , Political Science and
H H H H H H H
Economics , and Theology for students seeking the degree of Bachelor of Arts (B.A.). The
H H H
various B.A. program majors are described in succeeding sections of this Bulletin. It is
recognized, however, that some students who would profit from Christendoms Catholic
instruction and high academic quality will desire a major outside the liberal arts offered by this
institution, and this is one important reason for the clear division between the required
curriculum of 86 semester hours and the freer selection of electives and major courses for juniors
and seniors.
The Colleges core curriculum, is designed to provide the orderly, sequential presentation
of fundamental principles of mathematics and natural science, philosophy, and theology in
conjunction with the historical and literary knowledge which is foundational for an
understanding of our civilization. To these subjects is added the study of a foreign language,
particularly of an inflected language such as Latin or Greek, this leads the student to an
understanding of the nature and structure of language as such, and hence to a true command of
language.
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language requirement for the A.A. degree is somewhat different from that of the B.A. degree,
however. See Requirements for the Associate of Arts (A.A.) Degree below.
H H
To the core curriculum is also added two courses designed to enhance the student
learning environment by integrating students' career discernment into their liberal arts education.
This Education for a Lifetime Program (ELP) consists of two one-credit classes that meet as
announced in the Freshman-Sophomore year and in the Junior-Senior year help students reflect
on the purpose and value of their liberal arts education; on the virtues required for effective
leadership and service; and on their own personality preferences.
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The Sequence of Core Curriculum Courses
The core curriculum sequence is an ordered, integrated program of study, and therefore
deviations from the core sequence will be permitted only in special cases with the permission of
the Academic Dean.
The Education for a Lifetime Course CCOL 101 (1 credit hour) meets as announced during the
Freshman and Sophomore years.
1
The numbering of the Classical Greek sequence of language courses begins with Greek 301: Elementary Greek I;
no prior study of Greek or of any foreign language is assumed or expected for students who wish to enroll in Greek
301: Elementary Greek I.
34
Junior Year Core Curriculum
First Semester (6 credit hours)
Philosophy 301: History of Medieval Philosophy
Theology 301: Moral Theology
The Education for a Lifetime Course CCOL 301 (1 credit hour) meets as announced during the
Junior and Senior years.
Fall of Catholic
H H to Western Biblical Latin ,
H H Natural
Doctrine I Philosophy H Civilization I H World H Spanish, Science
French , or
H H
Greek I
H H
Freshman Fundamentals
H Philosophy
H Literature of
H The
H Elementary Natural
H
Greek II
H H
Sophomore Introduction
H H Ethics H Literature of
H The Division
H Intermediate
H H Principles
H
III H French , or
H H
Greek I
H H
Sophomore Introduction
H H Metaphysics H Literature of
H Church and
H Intermediate Social
H
Greek II
H H
Junior Moral
H History of
H
Junior Catholic
H History of
H
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The Advanced Curriculum and Majors
The curriculum of the junior and senior years rests on the foundation of a six-hour
requirement in the history of Philosophy conjoined with a six-hour requirement in Theology,
including moral theology and apologetics. These courses complete the instructional Core which
enables the student both to defend the Faith rationally and to apply it effectively to his or her
own life. At Christendom College, then, a student probes deeply into truth, practices effective
communication with others, learns from the past, and prepares to shape a Christian future.
Rounding out the Christendom liberal education in the junior and senior years are
extensive studies in a major of the students choice, including electives and a senior thesis in the
chosen discipline. Majors are offered in Classical and Early Christian Studies , English
H H H
Language and Literature , History , Mathematics , Philosophy , Political Science and Economics ,
H H H H H H H H H
and Theology . Minor concentrations also are available in each of these disciplines and also in
H H
Specific course requirements for each major are found below, in the section
Departmental Requirements and Courses. Note that no course in which the final grade is
below C-minus can be used to fulfill a major or minor requirement.
Almost all students elect to participate during either the Fall or Spring semesters in the
Junior Semester in Rome, which is the spiritual, cultural, and educational culmination of
Christendoms Core and an excellent preparation for the students final year of study at
Christendom. However, participation in the Junior Semester in Rome is not mandatory, and of
course a student who chooses not to participate continues to benefit from the liturgical,
educational, and social life of the Front Royal campus.
The Rome curriculum includes the Theology Junior-year core course and three courses
designed specifically to take advantage of the historical and cultural riches of Roma aeterna. In
addition to taking full advantage of the artistic, cultural, ecclesiastical, and spiritual riches and
resources of the Eternal City, the program includes a weeks visit to Florence, home of
Michelangelos David,
Brunelleschis dome of the cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore, and countless other artistic
and architectural treasures, with side trips to Assisi and Siena.
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Rome Junior Semester Curriculum
Students must have had at least one year of full-time student status at Christendom prior
to the Rome semester.
Students are expected to have completed the entire first two years of the core curriculum
and be prepared to take the full Rome Semester curriculum listed above.
Students must have at least a 2.00 cumulative GPA to apply for the Rome Program and to
participate in the Rome Program.
Students on Academic Warning or Probation may not participate in the Rome semester.
Students with Incompletes on their transcripts may not participate in the Rome semester.
Students must have health and disciplinary clearance from the Dean of Student Life.
Students must obtain valid passports and medical insurance valid in Europe.
The College reserves the right to remove students from the Rome program at any time.
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Academic Policies
128 hours, including all standard requirements of the core curriculum and of the major;
134 hours are required for students who elect to major in two disciplines;
completion of the requirements for a major, either 30 or 27 upper-division hours,
including the Senior Thesis;
a minimum 2.0 GPA in the students major, with no course grade lower than C-minus;
a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.0;
passing grades in their assigned Education for a Lifetime (ELP) courses; and
a minimum of one year full-time enrollment in two consecutive semesters.
a Christendom College academic department chair may allow a student to apply one (and
only one) cross-listed course toward the major or minor requirements of his department,
even if it is simultaneously counted toward the requirements of another
department.
1) a student may only do this once, with one class
2) this will not double-count the credits towards the total required for graduation.
The Associate of Arts degree is designed for those students who plan to spend no more
than three years in higher education, and thus it is generally regarded as a terminal degree in
Liberal Studies, concluding the students matriculation at the College. The requirements are
85 hours, including all requirements of the core curriculum except as noted below;
a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.0; passing grades in their assigned
Education for a Lifetime (ELP) courses; and a minimum two semesters (at least 30 credit
hours) of enrollment.
For the Associate of Arts degree only, one of the following four substitutions for the two-
year Core language requirement may be elected:
One year of one foreign language and six (6) semester-hour credits of 200-level or
above college mathematics;
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OR one year of one foreign language and six (6) semester-hour credits of 200-
level or above college science
OR twelve (12) semester-hour credits of 200-level or above college mathematics;
OR six (6) semester-hour credits of 200-level or above college mathematics and
six (6) semester-hour credits of 200-level or above college science
A student participating in the annual May graduation ceremonies at Christendom College must
have completed all the requirements for the B.A. degree in the chosen major or for the A.A.
degree. Exceptions are rare and apply to students who would, under normal circumstances, be
eligible to participate. These exceptions fall into two categories:
1. If a failing grade or an incomplete grade in a course necessary for graduation (or a grade
below C minus in a course needed for the major) is awarded at the end of the spring
semester moments before the start of the graduation weekend, the student may participate
in the graduation ceremonies.
2. If approved credits necessary for graduation will be transferred in from another institution
from courses taken during the spring semester before graduation, the student must show
proof of enrollment for those credits to the Registrar prior to the end of Christendom
Colleges Add period and, if the Registrar has not received the official transcript for
those credits by the last day of the final exams, proof must be shown once again of
continued current enrollment in the necessary course(s) in order for the student to
participate in the graduation ceremonies.
If the requirements for the B.A. or A.A. degree have not been completed by the end of the
calendar year in which participation takes place, the student to whom the exception has been
granted will no longer be considered as attempting to graduate from Christendom College; the
student will be required to contact the registrar if graduation in a subsequent year is still desired.
39
Getting Started:
51B Policies about Registering for Courses
Academic Advisors
Christendom College assigns each student upon matriculation a faculty Academic
Advisor to assist him in registering for his courses each semester and to advise him in academic
matters. Once a student is accepted into a major, the students advisor becomes the major
department chairman or his delegate. However, it is ultimately and primarily the individual
students responsibility to comply with all academic requirements and policies, and the College
may not be held responsible for a students failure to fulfill any academic requirement.
Each faculty member keeps scheduled office hours when students may meet formally or
informally with their professors. A distinctive feature of a Christendom education is the
individual and small-group interaction of students and professors that takes place outside of
class: students are strongly encouraged to make consultation with their professors outside of
class a regular feature of their learning and study. In addition to being available by
appointment, full-time faculty promise to keep at least five hours per week devoted to announced
on-campus office hours; part-time faculty are available by appointment and at scheduled times.
Freshmen should consult the Student Handbook and the Dean of Student Life about the
date they are expected to arrive on campus for orientation. Only under very unusual
circumstances, and only with the permission of the Dean of Student Life, will new students be
allowed to arrive late for their orientation. Normally a new student who misses the first week of
classes will not be allowed to register for that semesters courses.
Course Load
The standard course load for full-time students during the Freshman and Sophomore
years is 18 credit hours per semester; subsequently it is 15 hours per semester. Permission is
required to reduce or increase this load, and 19 hours is normally the maximum load permitted.
Normally, only students with a minimum 3.25 GPA and upper-division status are granted
permission to elect more than 19 credit hours a semester, for which an overload tuition fee is
charged. In the Freshman and Sophomore years, permission must come from the Academic
Dean; in Junior and Senior years, permission must come from the students faculty advisor, who
is his majors department chairman. Students desiring to take fewer than 12 hours must have the
permission of the Academic Dean. Twelve (12) semester hours is the minimum course load for a
full-time student.
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Student Classification
Students are classified by class as follows:
Freshmen: 0-35 credit hours completed
Sophomores: 36-65 credit hours
Juniors: 66-98 credit hours
Seniors: 99 or more credit hours
Normally only students pursuing a program of studies leading to the A.A. or B.A. degrees may
enroll in Christendom College courses. The circumstances of the rare exceptions to this norm
are described below under Part Time Students .
H H
Auditing Courses
Only students who have a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or better, or who were on the Deans
H
Honor List for the previous semester, may be granted the privilege of auditing courses. Students
H
who audit are not responsible for taking exams or writing papers, but are expected to honor the
rule of class attendance. A student who audits a course receives no credit, but the course will be
recorded on the permanent academic record followed by AUDIT. An Audit does not add to the
computed total credit hours. A course taken as an audit may not subsequently be converted to a
for-credit course.
Freshmen and Sophomores must have the permission of the Academic Dean to add or
drop a course. Juniors and Seniors must have the permission of their academic advisor, who is
the chairman of their major department, to add or drop a course.
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For either action, an Add-Drop form with the required signature must be submitted to
the Registrar within the announced deadlines to add or drop a course.
Students who withdraw from the College before the end of the semester must have an
exit interview and file a Withdrawal Notice with the Dean of Student Life before leaving
campus. It is strongly recommended that the student also see the Student Billing Office to
determine the financial consequences of withdrawal. The date of withdrawal used to compute a
refund is the date that a completed Withdrawal Notice is filed with and dated by the Dean of
Student Life.
In the case of a medical withdrawal, the student or parent should, within a reasonable
time, submit a written letter requesting withdrawal to the Dean of Student Life and complete and
return a Medical Withdrawal Certification Form. In this case, the date of withdrawal will be
determined from the day of departure from campus because of the medical condition or
emergency. This assumes the student has not returned to campus for any overnight stay or class
attendance during this period.
This process of withdrawal is distinct from the determination of the final course grades at
the time of withdrawal. Normally the grades earned at the end of the semester are assigned to
students who withdraw from the College, except in cases of withdrawal for a grave reason of
health or other serious incapacity. For information on financial and other policies on withdrawal
from the College, see Withdrawal Procedure and Withdrawal Refund Policy below.
H H H H
Repeating Courses
1
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off-campus directed study. This decision is made by the Academic Dean in consultation with the
Vice President for Academic Affairs and the appropriate department chairman.
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In the Classroom:
Policies Applicable to the Courses Students Take
Authority of Professor
1
Any professor may at any time exclude from his class any student whose conduct in the
professors judgment is uncivil or unbecoming; who fails to fulfill an academic assignment; or
who is out of dress code. With the concurrence of the Academic Dean, a professor may expel
from the course any student guilty of serious incivility or unbecoming conduct or any student
who, in his judgment, has pertinaciously neglected the work of the course. In such cases a
failing grade will usually be recorded.
Class Attendance
B
Since the interaction of students and professor in the classroom is an essential feature of
the educational program at Christendom College, all students are expected to attend all classes.
If a student must miss a class, he must, if possible, contact the professor in advance, or provide
an explanation of the absence before the next class meeting. Under no circumstances may a
student miss a test without a grave reason, and professors are under no obligation to make up
tests for students who have missed classes.
Regular class attendance, promptness, and preparedness are expected of all students. Out
of respect for the professor and the other students in the class, students are expected to be
prompt, to be in their seats, and to be ready for class at the beginning of the class hour. Specific
attendance requirements appear in course syllabi but minimally they are:
A student who misses a total of four (4) weeks of classes (12 M,W,F classes, 8 Tu,Th
classes, or 4 weekly classes) will receive an F for the course, unless an Incomplete is
H H
granted under the usual conditions or the student has withdrawn from the College.
H nH
Students must clearly understand the nature of this minimal attendance requirement: it covers
cases of forced extended absences, primarily due to illness, and states that a student simply
cannot be passed in a course in which he or she has missed four weeks, regardless of the fact that
the absences were not the students fault. Each professor will have a specific course attendance
requirement with penalties for unexcused absences that may result in a failing grade in the course
for students with far fewer than four weeks of unexcused absences.
Inclement Weather
Because the overwhelming majority of Christendoms students live on-campus the
College administration does not cancel classes because of inclement weather, even though
College administrative offices may be closed, except in instances of extreme conditions which
are hazardous even on campus. Normally, therefore, the decision to hold or cancel class because
of weather conditions is made by individual professors.
Students who live off-campus should exercise prudence in deciding when it is safe to
travel to campus even if their professor has not canceled class. Professors should grant an
excused absence when off-campus students are not able to attend class because of the weather; in
44
such cases students should contact their professors promptly to inform them of the reason for the
absence and to request direction in making up missed work.
Academic Ethics
Cheating on tests or other assignments and plagiarism in papers are totally inconsistent
with Christian moral standards. Either offense may result in academic dismissal.
Cheating is defined as the use of books, notes, or assistance from other students, or the
giving of such assistance, to fulfill requirements - during tests, quizzes, or exams, or by
collaboration in the writing of papers or other course-related work -unless specifically authorized
by the professor.
Plagiarism is defined as copying verbatim from another persons writing and inserting it
into a paper without quotation marks and a bibliographic citation, or paraphrasing information or
presenting ideas or a line of argumentation without indicating ones indebtedness in the text and
without documentation by a note and bibliographic citation, thus dishonestly presenting
anothers work, words, organizational structures, or ideas as the students own.
Use of a paper written for one course to fulfill a similar assignment in another course is
academically dishonest; this practice, which in effect deceptively passes off one piece of work as
if it were two or more independent assignments is completely unacceptable and incurs the same
penalties as other forms of academic dishonesty, namely plagiarism and cheating.
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offending student will receive an F for the senior thesis course and will be unable to graduate
from Christendom with a B.A. degree.
Grading System
Christendom employs a 4.0 scale of grades, and uses pluses and minuses with the
traditional letter grades, except that grades of A+ or D- are not allowed for final grades. For
purposes of indicating letter grade equivalents of numerical grades, the College uses the
following scale:
Each students Grade Point Average (GPA) for each semester, as well as the cumulative
GPA, is recorded on the report card and on the transcript. The GPA is computed by use of
quality points, which for any given course are computed by multiplying the number of credit
hours of the course by the grade point for the course. The total quality points divided by the total
credit hours yields the grade point average (GPA). A grade point below 1.7 (C-) in a course does
not count toward fulfilling requirements for the major. A cumulative GPA of at least 2.0 is
required for a degree.
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At the end of each semester report cards are sent to each student. A students report card
may be withheld if the student has any outstanding debts to the College.
Term Papers
Term papers are usually between ten and twenty double-spaced typewritten pages in
length. Neither a term paper nor the total for all papers required in a course should exceed
twenty-five pages, freshman composition courses and the Senior Thesis excepted. Extensions
for papers, if given at all by the course instructor, will never extend into Finals Week. Because
of the 18-hour freshman course load, term or research papers are restricted to ENGL 101-102
and HIST 102 in the freshman year.
All essays, term papers, and research papers at Christendom College are to conform to
the format and style mandated by Kate L. Turabian, A Manual for Writers of Term Papers,
Theses, and Dissertations (latest edition) and the supplementary guidelines found in the in-house
publication, A Vade Mecum for Christendom Writers of Essays and Research Papers.
Final Examinations
The Registrar issues a final examination schedule to which faculty and students should
adhere. Only when a student has three final exams on the same day may he request a
rescheduling of one of the exams; the request should be made to the Registrar. Students or their
parents should not make travel plans which require the student to depart campus before the last
day of finals announced in the Academic Calendar (www.christendom.edu).
Admission to a Major
Majors are offered in Classical and Early Christian Studies, English Language and
Literature, History, Mathematics, Philosophy, Political Science and Economics, and Theology.
All students working toward the B.A. degree must choose a major upon completion of the
first 66 hours of the lower division core curriculum. This ordinarily occurs in the second
semester of the sophomore year. To become a major in a particular department, a student must
apply on the form provided by the Registrar to the department chairman and fulfill departmental
requirements for acceptance into the major. Acceptance or rejection is given in written form and
filed by the chairman with the Registrar.
To change a major, the student must notify the former major department chairman, and
make application with the chairman of the new department. Selection of courses in the major
program is to be made by the student in consultation with his departmental advisor.
Senior Thesis
A senior thesis in the discipline in which the student is majoring is required for the B.A.
degree. The 512 Senior Thesis seminar or tutorial is the capstone course for each baccalaureate
candidate at Christendom College. The student must have senior status to enroll for the Senior
Thesis.
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As the culmination of the students four years of study in the liberal disciplines, the
senior thesis is to be a scholarly paper of substance, demonstrating the students ability to do
significant research in his discipline, and employing the seniors developed skills in the arts of
discourse, especially mastery of the techniques of research, exposition, and argumentation. The
student may as part of the 512 course be required by his department to defend the thesis in an
oral examination.
Senior thesis topics must be pre-approved by the department chairman. It is advisable for
the student to present for approval a short prospectus to the chairman outlining the thesis project
the semester before enrolling in Senior Thesis 512 to make sure that the topic is acceptable.
Students working on their senior theses must register for the thesis course number 512 in
the department in which they are majoring, whether they are in residence at the College or not.
Rough drafts are required and are due approximately five weeks prior to the end of the semester.
The due date is published in the current Academic Calendar ( www.christendom.edu ). Twenty-
H H
five percent (25%) of the final grade for the senior thesis will be based on the quality of the
rough draft. The rough draft will be returned by the thesis director with recommendations and
suggestions within ten days. The final draft, typed with full, correct scholarly apparatus, is due
one week before the last day of classes. The thesis advisor is not authorized to extend either of
these deadlines more than five days under any circumstances.
Continuous enrollment at the College is required for all students working on the thesis. If
a student completes all degree requirements except for the thesis, and is no longer enrolled in
courses at the College (excluding the thesis course itself, 512), he has one calendar year in which
to complete the thesis. If the work is not completed during this period, the student will be
awarded the A.A. degree but will not be eligible for the B.A. degree. A reasonable extension
beyond the deadline of one calendar year may be granted by the Academic Dean and the Vice
President of Academic Affairs acting together, after consultation with the appropriate department
chairman, but only for medically documented instances in which the students serious ill health
or the serious ill health of an immediate family member prevents completion of the Senior Thesis
within the calendar year. This possibility of an extension is not available to mitigate effects of
the students choices in life which have resulted in the Thesis not being completed within one
calendar year of leaving Christendom.
The student is responsible for providing two (2) copies of the final version of the senior
thesis, one to be submitted to the thesis director and the other to the Vice President for Academic
Affairs. The latter copy, after the students graduation from Christendom College, will be bound
and placed in the permanent College Library collection.
A copy of the senior thesis accepted in partial fulfillment of the academic requirements
for the Bachelor of Arts degree becomes the property of Christendom College for the purpose of
adding the senior thesis to the Library Collection. Otherwise, the senior thesis remains the
intellectual property of the student according to the Colleges Intellectual Property Rights Policy
for Students. It should be noted that, by accepting a senior thesis, Christendom College does not
thereby endorse the opinions expressed therein. A graduate who wishes to publish his senior
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thesis may not use the name of Christendom College in that publication without the express
written permission of the Vice President for Academic Affairs.
If the thesis is not completed during any given semester, the student cannot under normal
circumstances be given an Incomplete, but will receive an F and must re-register for the thesis
course in the next semester. Petition for an Incomplete on a senior thesis due to serious
incapacity must be made to the Academic Dean.
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At the end of semester:
Policies about Honors, Incompletes, and Academic Difficulties
Academic Honors
1
A student earns First Honors and is placed on the Deans Honor List if he receives a
semester grade point average of 3.50 or better, and Second Honors with a 3.25 or better.
Students graduate with the following honors depending on their cumulative grade point
averages:
Cum laude: equal to or above 3.600
Magna cum laude: equal to or above 3.750
Summa cum laude: equal to or above 3.900
Students whose current enrollment began prior to Fall 2013 are subject to the
honors criteria in place at the time of their enrollment. Consult the College Registrar.
Incompletes
B
If for a grave reason a student is unable to complete the requirements for a course by the
end of a semester, he may apply to the professor for an Incomplete, which, if granted, would give
him eight (8) additional weeks from the last day of the semester for which the Incomplete is
given, to complete the requirements. Incompletes are granted at the discretion of the professor
only for grave reasons such as illness or other serious incapacity. Failure to complete the course
within the eight additional weeks results in an automatic F, except where continuing incapacity
(such as prolonged illness) prevents completion of the work-a judgment to be made by the
Academic Dean in response to the students petition for an extension of an Incomplete. The
Academic Dean shall respond in writing either rejecting the students petition or stating the
conditions and terms of its acceptance.
Under normal circumstances a student cannot be given an Incomplete for the senior thesis
(512) but will receive an F and must re-register for the thesis course in the next semester.
Petition for an Incomplete on a senior thesis due to serious incapacity must be made to the
Academic Dean.
Academic Difficulties
117B
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Academic Warning and Probation
A student with a semester grade point average (GPA) below 2.000 but above 1.699 is on
Academic Warning for the following semester. Two consecutive warnings result in Academic
Probation.
A student with a semester grade point average below 1.700 is on Academic Probation for
the following semester. He may be placed in a special program under the supervision of the
Academic Dean, involving certain restrictions which normally include a limitation on the
students maximum semester course load and academic counseling. These same restrictions
apply to students who are on Academic Probation because of two consecutive semesters of
Warning-category averages.
Academic Dismissal
A student who in his first semester at Christendom College fails to achieve a minimum
1.000 GPA will be dismissed from the College without probation.
A student with any consecutive combinations of warnings and probations totaling two
probations (e.g., WWWW, WWP, PWW, PP, PWP, WPW) will ordinarily be dismissed. After
an absence, normally of one year, he may reapply, but will be readmitted only if he shows
evidence that he is more capable of completing the College program. At the discretion of the
Academic Dean, a student with the combinations WPW or PWW may be allowed to continue if a
pattern of considerable improvement has been demonstrated. Students readmitted after
academic dismissal are admitted on academic probation and must meet regularly with the
H H and must eet
Also, as stated above in Repeating Courses , if a student fails a core course twice, the
H H
student will be dismissed from the College and may not reapply. Further, a student may not
graduate in a semester in which he receives an action of academic dismissal.
Only such records as are demonstrably and substantially relevant to the educational
purposes of the College shall be generated or maintained.
Permanent retention of student records is limited to those records which are of long-range
value to the individual or the College.
All duplicate copies of permanent records, other than those maintained by the custodian
of the permanent record (e.g., the Registrar) and all non-permanent student records shall
be maintained only for the minimum period of time required to serve the basic official
function of the individual or department generating or maintaining them. Such records
shall be destroyed two years following graduation or three years after last date of
attendance. A student will be granted access to his records prior to their destruction when
the student has an unsatisfied request outstanding.
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Student Access to Records
Students have supervised access to records in their academic and student life files.
Academic files are kept by the Registrar and will routinely contain the students course and
grade transcript, copies of report cards, curriculum and transfer worksheets, transfer transcripts,
and copies of correspondence pertaining to academic actions. Student life files are kept by the
Dean of Student Life and will routinely contain housing and medical questionnaires and
correspondence pertaining to disciplinary actions. In the case of dependents as defined by the
Internal Revenue Service, parents and legal guardians have similar access.
Access to the student academic files is permitted to the Chairman of the Board of
Directors, the President, Executive Vice President, Vice President for Academic Affairs,
Academic Dean, and any other administrative officials whom the Registrar determines to have a
legitimate educational interest. Access to the student life files is permitted to the Chairman of
the Board of Directors, the President, Executive Vice President, and any other administrative
officials whom the Dean of Student Life determines to have a legitimate educational interest.
Transcripts of courses and grades, academic dismissals, and disciplinary expulsions are
matters of permanent record. Academic transcripts contain semesters of attendance, records of
course credit and grades received, grade point averages and notices of academic honors or
academic warning or dismissal. Notices of disciplinary expulsion are not contained on the
academic transcript. Academic and student life files are released only with the written
permission of the student.
Transcripts
An official transcript is one that has been received directly from the sending institution.
It should bear the college seal, date, and appropriate signature. Transcripts presented that do not
meet these requirements will routinely be rejected for any official use.
Academic transcripts will be released only with the written permission of the student,
or in the case of a dependent a parent or legal guardian. The normal processing time for a
transcript request is within 7 days of receiving permission in writing and a $3.00 service charge.
A processing time greater than 7 days is possible during peak times for the registrar (August
registration and May graduation). All official transcripts are sent by first-class mail. Only
unofficial transcripts will be released directly to the student. No students transcript will be
released if the student is not in good financial standing with the College.
Students are encouraged to make efforts to resolve misunderstandings and conflicts with
College staff or faculty members before serious problems develop. Students are encouraged to
seek resolution through informal means as a first-approach to resolving the issue at hand. If
normal channels of communication breakdown and/or a situation does not permit or lend itself
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(e.g. sexual harassment) to informal resolution or does not seem to be resolving itself, students
may seek recourse through the formal grievance process.
A students appeal of a course grade is handled according to a distinct policy and does
not fall under the College-wide Grievance Procedures. In those cases in which a student has
filed a written appeal of a course grade with the Vice President for Academic Affairs, the appeal
is reviewed by the Department Chairman (or by the Vice President for Academic Affairs when
the grade was issued by the Chairman) who, after gathering relevant information, adjudicates the
students appeal. The Department Chairman has the power to issue a new grade (which may be
lower than the original) if the appeal is upheld. An appeal of a grade for coursework must be
filed within eight business days after the grade has been communicated to the student; if the
grievance concerns a final grade, then the appeal must be filed within eight business days after
the beginning of the following semester.
1 Sexual Harassment
If anyone believes he or she is the victim of sexual harassment by any student, staff,
faculty, visitor, or guest of the college, he or she should report the matter to the Vice President
for Academic Affairs (VPAA) or to the Dean of Student Life immediately so that the complaint
can be quickly and fairly resolved. Complaints will be handled by the College in as confidential
a manner as possible.
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Academic Departments
Greek and Roman literature preserve the wisdom of the ancients, the noble heritage
that is the thought of the peoples of antiquity. We should regard it as the first traces
of the coming dawn of Gospel truth that the Son of God, the Master and Teacher of
the life of grace, the Enlightener and Guide of the human race, announced on earth.
In this, the indisputably pre-eminent legacy bequeathed from antiquity, the Fathers
and Doctors of the Church recognized that hearts were being prepared to receive
the heavenly riches of which Christ Jesus made mortals sharers in His plan realized
in the fullness of time. The clear consequence of this is that nothing true, nothing
positive, nothing noble, nothing beautiful that past ages had produced was in any
way lost in the renewed order of Christendom.
John XXIII, Apostolic Constitution Veterum Sapientia 1
Classical and Early Christian Studies has two major focuses. The first is to have the
student increase his knowledge of the literature, history, and mores of Graeco-Roman civilization
even as he develops his grammatical, lexical, and rhetorical command of Greek, Latin, andto a
lesser degreeHebrew. The second is to have the student appreciate how that civilization was
transformed into Christendom beginning from the Apostolic Age through late antiquity and into
the Middle Ages.
Greek, Latin, and Hebrew were the three languages in which Christ the King was
acclaimed on the Holy Cross; Greek, Latin, and Hebrew are the languages in which Sacred
Scripture and the pure doctrine of the Fathers of the Church were written. The Church has,
therefore, always considered the study of these three tongues a field of special importance for the
intellectual formation of Christian scholars. As John XXIII expressed it, the Church fosters the
Greek and Latin languages and literature because they have had no small role in the
advancement of the human race. As recently as 2006, Benedict XVI underscored the
significance that Latin, and by inference classical studies, continues to hold, Our Predecessors
have quite rightly considered knowledge of Latin of great importance for those who deal with
ecclesiastical and liberal studies to be able to make fully their own these disciplines
tremendously rich teaching. Therefore, we urge those scholars zealously to endeavor that as
many as possible have access to this treasure and obtain the excellent knowledge that it has to
bestow. (General Address of February 22, 2006)
Historically, classical studies, that is, learning Latin and Greek and reading, commenting
upon, editing, and transmitting a canon of traditional texts, was the mother and perpetual
handmaiden of other disciplines in the monastic schools of early Christendom, as well as in
medieval universities. It is fitting, therefore, that the mater atque ancilla studiorum continue to
54
form those who will dedicate their lives to the transmission and interpretation of Christian and
Classical literature, a patrimony that includes Homer and the Pentateuch, Aristotle and
Chrysostom, Cicero and Jerome.
In answer, then, to the wishes of recent Roman Pontiffs, the Classical and Early Christian
Studies program at Christendom College is designed to promote the study of Latin and Greek at
all levels, and Hebrew to a lesser extent, so as to read Sacred Scripture and the works of the
Fathers of the Church in their original languages, a worthy and ultimately necessary preparation
for those engaged in the defense of the Faith. To lack knowledge of Greek and Latin is, to
borrow the language of Veterum Sapientia, to risk losing the true, the positive, the noble, the
beautiful that past ages produced and that has been a part of the patrimony of Christendom. To
be unlettered in Latin or Greek impoverishes a Christian scholar, since the accident of what has
been translated would determine what he knows of our sacred or secular heritage.
Requirements for the Classical and Early Christian Studies Major and Minor
1
Thirty (30) semester hours of advanced courses (300-level and above) are required for the
major; they include the Senior Thesis (CECS 512, 3 credits) and a minimum of twenty-one (21)
upper-division hours of Latin and Greek language. Of these twenty-one hours a minimum of six
(6) must be in upper-division Latin and six (6) hours in Greek. Up to six (6) hours of Biblical
Hebrew may also be credited toward the major.
A student may apply to his major up to nine (9) hours of coursework under rubrics other
than LATN, GREK, and HEBR that explore significant aspects of Graeco-Roman or early
Christian civilization. Six (6) of these nine hours should be selected from courses under the
CECS rubric. Such courses may include, but are not limited to
CECS/ENGL 321 Classical and Early Christian Literature
CECS/HIST 309 History of Ancient Greece
CECS/HIST 310 History of Ancient Rome
CECS/HIST 311 History of the Byzantine Empire
PHIL 322 Plato
PHIL 323 Aristotle
PHIL 324 Philosophy of St. Augustine
PSAE 421 The Classical Political Theory
THEO 341 The Ante-Nicene Fathers
THEO 342 The Post-Nicene Fathers
The minor in Classical and Early Christian Studies is attractive for the student of another
discipline who would like to ground his studiesliterary, historical, theological, philosophical, or
otherwisein the Classical or early Christian world. The minor requires eighteen (18) credit
hours of advanced courses (300-level and above). Twelve (12) of these hours must be attained
through a combination of Latin, Greek, or Hebrew classes; the remaining six (6) hours may be in
approved coursework under rubrics other than LATN, GREK, and HEBR that treat some aspect
of Graeco-Roman or early Christian civilization.
A course grade of at least C-minus is necessary for a course to fulfill the departments
major or minor requirements.
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Latin
The language of the Catholic Church and of traditional Western Christendom is an
indispensable discipline for restoring Catholic learning and training future Christian scholars.
The department offers one year each of elementary and intermediate Latin for students to fulfill
the foreign language requirement. This cycle is obligatory for students majoring in Philosophy or
Theology, and is recommended for those majoring in English, unless they have attained
qualifying competence already. Competence may be demonstrated by successfully completing
an upper-division course (300-level and above). Students majoring in Philosophy may opt to
take two years of Greek in place of Latin. In addition, courses in Classical, Patristic, Medieval,
and Scholastic Latin literature are available for the advanced student. All courses carry 3
semester hours unless otherwise specified. All Latin courses at the 300-level or above require
the permission of the chairman and individual professor, or the simple pre-requisite of LATN
202. With the permission of the chairman and individual professor, all upper-division Latin
electives may be repeated for credit.
LATN 101-102 Elementary Latin I & II An introduction to the grammar, syntax, and lexicon
of Latin. Students are expected to progress as readers and writers of Latin.
LATN 199 Freshman Transitional Latin An accelerated review of Latin grammar couple
with a course of readings in Latin literature, this course is intended for freshmen who have had a
least two years of high school Latin. Building on the foundation of their elementary studies,
students will advance in active Latin fluency and read Latin literature of increasing
sophistication. Readings will be drawn from Classical authors and the literary corpus of
Christian Latin, e.g. Patristic, medieval or modern ecclesiastical Latin. N.B.: Successful
completion of LATN 199, LATN 201, or permission of the departmental chairman is the
prerequisite for entrance into LATN 202. To enroll in LATN 199, students must complete a
placement exam administered by the instructor of the class.
LATN 201-202 Intermediate Latin I & II Building on the foundation established in the first
year, students will advance in Latin fluency and read Latin literature of increasing sophistication.
Courses will draw from Classical authors or the literary corpus of Christian Latin, e.g., Patristic,
medieval, or modern ecclesiastical Latin. N.B.: Successful completion of LATN 201 or the
permission of the departmental chairman is the prerequisite for entrance into LATN 202.
LATN 307 Latin Composition and Reading Training in written and spoken expression,
emphasizing refinement of vocabulary and natural Latin syntax. The course emphasizes
rudimentary original composition and conversation, rendering fine English prose into Latin, and
rapid sight-reading.
LATN 311 The Augustan Age Advanced survey of the literature that formed the Augustan
Age (1st century B.C.1st century A.D.), including authors like Lucretius, Virgil, Horace, or Livy.
LATN 312 The Imperial Age Advanced study of poets and prose writers of the first and
second centuries of the Christian era, including authors like Ovid, Seneca, Pliny, or Tacitus.
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LATN/THEO 421 Patristic Latin Latin Fathers from the second to the eighth century will be
read in this course. A variety of Patristic authors or topics may be examined in this course, or
the focus may be on one major author or subject to be studied in depth. The focal author, work,
or topic will vary each time the course is offered.
LATN 422 Medieval Latin A study of the literature of the Latin Middle Ages. Course
readings can include a variety of authors and periods from the fifth through the fifteenth
centuries and of genres like lyric poetry, Christian hymnody, historiography, hagiography, fable,
or satire. Selected authors of the late Renaissance like Erasmus or St. Thomas More may also be
studied.
LATN 490-499 Special Topics in Latin Language and Literature May include such topics
as Roman comedy, Latin historiography, Patristic homiletics, Roman law, or other advanced
study in Latin language or literature.
Greek
The great patrimony of Holy Mother Church in Greek includes the writings of or about
some of the finest intellects and most glorious saints that she counts among her children. Without
doubt the crown of Christian Greek literature, though, is the New Testament and the Septuagint.
This sacred literature, no less than Classical drama, philosophy, and history, can only be fully
appreciated by those conversant with classical and Hellenistic Greek. The department offers one
year each of elementary and intermediate Attic Greek for students to fulfill the foreign language
requirement. This cycle is the alternative language requirement for students majoring in
Philosophy, unless they have already attained qualifying competence. Competence may be
demonstrated by successfully completing an upper-division course beyond GREK 304. In
addition, courses in Classical, Hellenistic, or Patristic Greek literature are available for the
advanced student. All courses carry 3 semester hours unless otherwise specified. All Greek
courses at the 300-level or above require the permission of the chairman and individual
professor. With the permission of the chairman and individual professor, all upper-division
Greek classes may be repeated for credit.
GREK 301-302 Elementary Greek I & II An introduction to the grammar, syntax, and
lexicon of Attic Greek to prepare the student for studying the best Classical authors, the Fathers
of the Greek-speaking East, and Sacred Scripture.
GREK 303 Intermediate Greek I An introduction to more complex Attic Greek grammar and
syntax via reading and composing classical Greek. Readings typically are drawn from or
modeled on the writings of Thucydides, Herodotus, and Aristophanes. Supplementary readings
may include readings from the New Testament or the Cebetis Tabula.
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GREK 304 Intermediate Greek II Students will read selected writings of fifth- and fourth-
century B.C. Greek prose authors, e.g., Herodotus, Xenophon, Thucydides, Plato, Lysias, or
Demosthenes.
GREK 313 Homer Readings in the Iliad or the Odyssey, with attention to Homeric grammar
and vocabulary.
GREK 314 Classical Greek Theater Readings in works of Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides,
Menander, or Aristophanes.
GREK/THEO 425 Patristic Greek Readings from the New Testament, Apostolic literature,
or from the Greek Fathers of the first nine centuries of the Christian era.
GREK 426 Advanced Readings in Greek Philosophy and Rhetoric An advanced study in
Greek of selections from Plato, Aristotle, and contemporary rhetoricians. The readings illustrate
key concepts of Greek philosophy and the use of classical rhetoric in argumentation and
dialectic.
GREK 490-99 Special Topics in Greek Language and Literature May include topics like
the Septuagint, Thucydides, Plutarch, the Pauline Epistles, Byzantine authors, or other special
study in Greek language and literature.
Hebrew
HEBR 301-302 Introductory Biblical Hebrew A combination of the classical and inductive
approaches to learning the language of the Old Testament may be used. Students will be
familiarized with the Hebrew alphabet, pointing system, and grammar. The second semester will
develop greater proficiency in reading the Old Testament in Hebrew. Prerequisite: LATN 202 or
GREK 302.
CECS/HIST 310 History of Ancient Rome This course examines ancient Roman civilization
from its legendary origins through the Republic and Empire to the conversion of Constantine the
Great with special emphasis on the Punic Wars, the impact of Ciceros thought on Western
society, the reorganization of the Roman world under Augustus, provincial life in the Empire,
and the chief factors leading to the transformation of Roman political power in the West. This
course is built around reading and discussing primary texts by writers like Cato the Elder,
Polybius, Cicero, Sallust, Quintillian, Tacitus, Julian the Apostate, or Eusebius. The course
concludes with a reflection on history and political life by Saint Augustine.
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CECS/HIST 311 History of the Byzantine Empire This course examines late Roman and
Byzantine civilization from the conversion of Constantine into the Middle Ages with special
focus on the establishment of an enduring Christian empire, the impact of the Fathers on
Christian civilization, the age of Justinian, the variety of Eastern Christianity, and the
confrontation between Byzantium and Islam. This course is built around the reading and
discussion of primary texts by writers and works like St. Ephrem the Syrian, Ammianus
Marcellinus, Libanius, St. John Chrysostom, John Cassian, the Theodosian Code, John Lydus,
Procopius, George of Pisidia, St. John of Damascus, the Digenis Akritas, Anna Comnena, or
Demetrius Cydones. The course concludes with a reflection on the various reunions of the
Eastern dissidents with the Catholic Church.
CECS/ENGL 321 Classical and Early Christian Literature An advanced survey of pagan
and early Christian Greek and Latin literature through Late Antiquity, emphasizing the classical
antecedents to later Christian and secular literature. Among the authors studied may be
Euripides, Seneca, Horace, Ovid, the Apostolic Fathers, Marcus Aurelius, or Prudentius.
CECS 490-99 Special Topics in Classical or Early Christian Studies May include topics not
otherwise covered in the departmental curriculum like Classical or Christian archaeology,
architecture, history, literature, science, or other aspect of Classical or early Christian
civilization.
CECS 512 Senior Seminar and Thesis Each senior Classical and Early Christian Studies
student prepares his senior thesis in this course and may be required to defend it in an oral
examination. Majors will seek the departmental chairmans approval for their intended senior
thesis topics prior to registering for CECS 512. Departmental guidelines for the thesis are
available from the chairman.
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English Language and Literature
In reading great literature I become a thousand men and yet remain myself.
Like the night sky in the Greek poem, I see with a myriad eyes, but it is still I
who see. Here, as in worship, in love, in moral action, and in knowing, I
transcend myself; and am never more myself than when I do.
C. S. Lewis, An Experiment in Criticism
Great literature, of which C. S. Lewis speaks, is the gateway to that vast range of human
experience which can be expressed and shared with a countless multitude only by means of
verbal language transfigured by the moral imagination. Great literature allows the serious reader
to enter into the very heart and mind of man, wherein the perennial conflict between good and
evil is waged.
The study of literature and language, as uniquely human, is central to a balanced liberal
arts curriculum. It should, indeed, train the student to express himself coherently and read
critically. But it is also a gateway to the great achievements of the human imagination
throughout the ages. It is the purpose of our Department of English Language and Literature to
lead the student on that spiritual, intellectual, and aesthetic journey in pursuit of the human heart
and soul which is the essence of literary study. As Ezra Pound wrote, Great literature is simply
language charged with meaning to the utmost possible degree, and the student of great literature
may thus become aware, perhaps for the first time, of the power of language to convey a wide
range of human and transcendent truths.
The Christendom student of literature enters into the great conversation with the best
practitioners of the literary art, who have also been the seers (cf. L. vates) of our civilization.
The student learns to see through the eyes of the literary artist both the concrete reality of human
life and the ultimate reality of human destiny. The great conversation with some of the best
minds of the Western world, which literary study entails, is made all the more fruitful when
engaged within the context of the certainties of the Catholic Faith. Thus we are not at sea with a
multitude of options; we are secure in the Bark of Peter as the glory and misery of Gods image
in this world spreads before us in masterworks of literature.
At Christendom the study of literature does not take place in a vacuum. During the first
four semesters, the Literature of Western Civilization core curriculum runs parallel with the
History of Western Civilization core, in which each discipline is mutually informed and
illumined by the other, as well as by Thomistic philosophy and theology and the study of
languages. By writing essays and research papers in the context of analyzing and appreciating
major works of imaginative literature, the student develops the skills required for composition
and critical reading. These skills are learned through close reading of classic texts and guidance
in literary criticism. The Literature Department does not employ large anthologies, in which
small fragments of texts are quickly scanned; students are expected to read and master complete
works.
The Literature core curriculum consists of a two-year study of the great tradition in
Western literature from Homer, Dante, and Shakespeare, to T. S. Eliot, Evelyn Waugh, and
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Flannery OConnor, with concomitant development of the students skills in composition and
literary analysis. See the individual course descriptions of ENGL 101-202 The Literature of
Western Civilization I-IV for particulars.
The Literature Department also offers a variety of upper-division period and genre
courses covering British and American literature from their beginnings through the twentieth
century. The literatures of the Greek, Roman, and Patristic eras, as well as that of Medieval
Christendom, are also studied, both for their own sake, and because of their formative influence
on the Anglo-American literary tradition. In addition to the comprehensive treatment of
literature in the vernacular from the Middle Ages to the present, students have access to a wide
range of electives. Courses in the History of the English Language and in Old English
(language), as well as on Chaucer in his original Middle English, the font of English undefiled,
also are available for those willing to delve more deeply into the linguistic foundations of our
Mother Tongue.
At Christendom College language is understood in the light of the divine Logos, the
incarnate Word who communicates the love of the Father for His creation. We understand God
to be the guarantor of meaning in human languagethat is, that a true representation of reality
may be expressed in wordsand of the possibility of transmitting meaning from one soul to
another through the medium of literature as well as the spoken word. Our literature courses are
intended to make available the rich patrimony of Western culture, and to form a Christian
perspective on the ways the great writers have used their intellects and imaginations to
understand and convey the mystery of mans place in the world.
Twenty-seven hours of advanced work (300-512) are required for the major, including
Eighteen credit hours of advanced courses (ENGL 300-499) are required for the minor.
A course grade of at least C-minus is necessary for a course to fulfill the departments major or
minor requirements.
Most advanced courses are taught annually or in a two-year cycle, so that required
courses will be available to every student, though some courses are offered only every three or
four years. Students should see the department chairman for a list of courses to be offered during
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the students two-year matriculation in the major. Courses carry three semester hours of credit
unless otherwise noted.
Foundational Curriculum
ENGL 100 Grammar Workshop A review of the fundamentals of English grammar (parts of
speech, parts of the sentence, the phrase, the clause). Required only of students who do not
demonstrate sufficient competency in grammatical analysis. (1 credit hour)
ENGL 101 Literature of Western Civilization I This first-semester freshman course begins
Christendom Colleges two-year literature core curriculum studying masterworks of the Western
literary imagination. Beginning with the wisdom of St. Basil the Greats Address to Young Men
on Reading Greek Literature, the course focuses on reading, analyzing, and writing about the
Homeric epic and Classical Greek tragedy, including the Iliad and the Odyssey, Sophocles
Oedipus the King, and Aeschyluss dramatic trilogy, the Oresteia, in the light of the Poetics of
Aristotle. Developing the students writing skills through practice in composition, specifically
exposition and argumentation, conforming to academic standards of format and style, is a
complementary goal of the Literature of Western Civilization core curriculum. Required of all
students.
ENGL 102 Literature of Western Civilization II The second semester of the Western
literature core focuses on the literary, philosophical, and thematic continuity from late Classical
Antiquity through the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Included are Ciceros Dream of Scipio and
three forms of the epic: Virgils Aeneid, the Old English Beowulf, and Dantes Divine Comedy.
In addition to extensive writing practice, students receive an introduction to the conduct of
academic research. Required of all students.
ENGL 201 The Literature of Western Civilization III The third semester of the Western
literature core treats vernacular literature of the High Middle Ages through the seventeenth
century, beginning with a work of medieval Arthurian romance, Sir Gawain and the Green
Knight . Students then consider work by Chaucer, followed by the medieval Mystery play, the
Second Shepherds Play, and the morality play Everyman; Christopher Marlowes Tragical
History of Dr. Faustus; Shakespeares A Midsummer Nights Dream and Macbeth; and finally,
Miltons Paradise Lost. Required of all students.
ENGL 202 The Literature of Western Civilization IV The fourth semester of the literature
core examines literary developments within the context of the secularization of Western culture
consequent to the fragmentation of Christendom by the Protestant Revolt and the Enlightenment.
Focusing on the tensions emerging between a Christian understanding of mans nature and
destiny and the various distorted modern views of man, students will study Shelleys
Frankenstein, Hawthornes short stories, Dostoevskys Crime and Punishment, and T. S. Eliots
The Waste Land. A recovery of the Christian vision of man in the twentieth century will be
investigated in Eliots Ash Wednesday, Evelyn Waughs Brideshead Revisited, and short
stories by Flannery OConnor. Required of all students.
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Advanced Courses
ENGL 312 Advanced Rhetoric and Composition A theoretical and practical study of the art
of effective persuasive writing. By being introduced to the classical rhetorical tradition, the
student is able to achieve greater proficiency in exposition, argument, and persuasion.
ENGL 317 History of the English Language A philological and literary study of the English
language from its Old English monuments to the beginning of the Modern English period, with
some consideration of English in its role as a global language.
ENGL 319 Literary Criticism A survey of the varied explanations of the merit and purpose
of imaginative literature from Plato to such modern and post-modern literary theories as
structuralism and deconstruction. Authors studied may include Aristotle, Longinus, Horace, St.
Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas, Sidney, Jonson, Dryden, Pope, Johnson, Wordsworth,
Coleridge, Shelley, Arnold, T. S. Eliot, C. S. Lewis, and important contemporary critical
theorists. In addition to aesthetics and theory, students will be introduced to techniques of
practical criticism. This course is required for the Literature major.
ENGL 320 Poetry and Poetics This course seeks to impart to the student a panoramic
knowledge of the lyric tradition and contemporary developments in poetry in the English
language. Special attention will be given to developing the students close-reading and
interpretive skills through fluency in prosody and figurative language. This course is required
for the Literature major.
ENGL/CECS 321 Classical and Early Christian Literature An advanced study of Greek
and Latin literature, both the pagan classics and the early Christian authors who drew from them.
The course focuses on the genres of poetry, tragedy, oratory, and satire, and includes such
authors as Plato, Aristotle, Aeschylus, Plutarch, Horace, Seneca, Longinus, Prudentius, St.
Augustine, and other Church Fathers. The course aims at encouraging the student to be a
judicious and conversant reader of classical and early Christian literature. (Cross-listed in
Classical and Early Christian Studies)
ENGL 322 The Literature of Medieval Christendom This course examines works of
imaginative and mystical literature which reflect major literary, intellectual, and spiritual
currents of the Middle Ages on the continent and in England, such as the chanson de geste,
Arthurian romance, troubadour and Goliard lyric, and allegorical dream-vision.
ENGL 331 Literature of Anglo-Saxon England A survey of Old English and Anglo-Latin
literature from the eighth through the eleventh centuries. Works of St. Bede the Venerable, Old
English heroic poetry, elegies, wisdom poems, and religious poetry and prose are studied in light
of the Christian transformation of Anglo-Saxon culture (A.D. 597-1066).
ENGL 332 Middle English Literature Survey of Middle English literature (12th-15th
centuries), including lyric poetry, Arthurian epic, chivalric romances, dream visions, religious
prose, and medieval drama.
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ENGL 334 Chaucer Close study of the works of Geoffrey Chaucer, with special emphasis on
The Canterbury Tales. The student gains facility in reading and understanding the Middle
English text of Chaucer, and comes to an appreciation of Chaucers mind and literary art in the
context of late fourteenth-century Catholic culture.
ENGL 341 Renaissance English Literature Survey of dramatic and non-dramatic prose and
verse literature up to 1660. Among the important authors studied are St. Thomas More, Sir
Thomas Wyatt, Henry Howard, earl of Surrey, Sir Philip Sidney, Edmund Spenser, Christopher
Marlowe, William Shakespeare (non-dramatic works), Ben Jonson, and the early Milton.
ENGL 343 Shakespeare: Comedies and Romances Study of a representative selection from
the comedies and romances, including the so-called problem comedies. Includes study of
Shakespeares enduring dramaturgy and thematics. This course or ENGL 344 is required for
the Literature major.
ENGL 346 The Metaphysical Poets This course involves the study of the seventeenth-
century English poets referred to since the time of Dr. Johnson as Metaphysical, with special
focus on John Donne, George Herbert, and Richard Crashaw.
ENGL 361 English Romantic Literature (1798-1832) A survey of verse and prose of major
authors of the English Romantic movement, with reference to their Continental counterparts.
Included are such authors as William Blake, William Wordsworth, S. T. Coleridge, Lord Byron,
John Keats, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Sir Walter Scott, Robert Southey, and William Hazlitt.
ENGL 362 English Victorian Literature (1832-1901) A survey of major verse and prose of
the Victorian Era in England. Included are such authors as Thomas Carlyle, Robert Browning,
John Henry Newman, Alfred Lord Tennyson, John Ruskin, Matthew Arnold, Gerard Manly
Hopkins, Walter Pater, and Rudyard Kipling.
ENGL 417 Old English This course provides an introduction to Old English, the language of
the Anglo-Saxons in Britain from the sixth through the eleventh centuries, with a focus on Late
West Saxon, the dialect in which the vast majority of extant Old English documents was written.
The goal of the course is to give the student sufficient reading knowledge of Old English to
enable him to appreciate the literature in its original language. The student will read selections
from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the OE version of Bedes Ecclesiastical History, portions
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of Beowulf, and The Battle of Brunanburh (A.D. 937) in its entirety. In addition to the study of
Old English grammar and lexicon, consideration will be given to the historical importance of the
OE period in the cultural, literary, and religious development of the English-speaking peoples.
ENGL 418 Readings in Old English Literature Building upon the facility gained from
ENGL 417 in reading Old English, the student undertakes progressively more difficult texts:
prose from the homilies of lfric, the elegies, and finally longer poems such as The Dream of
the Rood, The Battle of Maldon, and Beowulf.
ENGL 421 The English Novel A survey of the emergence and development of the novel as a
genre of English literature. Close attention is paid to the novels antecedents among other
literary forms, its characteristic techniques in style and structure, and to the social conditions and
philosophic outlook associated with the rise of the novel. Included are a selection of works by
such authors as Defoe, Fielding, Richardson, Sterne, Scott, Austen, Thackeray, the Bront
sisters, Dickens, Trollope, George Eliot, Hardy, Conrad, Greene, or Waugh.
ENGL 422 The American Novel A survey covering the growth and development of the
American novel, with attention to English and Continental antecedents and the particular
conditions of the American social order. Authors studied may include James Fenimore Cooper,
Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Henry James, Theodore Dreiser, Stephen Crane, Willa
Cather, William Faulkner, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Walker Percy, or Wendell
Berry.
ENGL 431 American Literature I: Foundations through the Nineteenth Century American
literature offers a unique medium in which to observe the tensions between the Old World and
the New. This course studies the fundamental conflicts and features intrinsic to American
literature through a survey beginning with the New England Puritans Winthrop, Bradstreet, and
Taylor, and the Great Awakenings Jonathan Edwards. The investigation continues by
evaluating the establishment of a national literature, with Franklin and Irving, and then goes on
to examine the rich texture of American romanticism, including Emerson, Thoreau, Dickinson,
Whitman, Hawthorne, Melville, and Poe. The course concludes with Twain, Crane, and the rise
of realism in the nineteenth century.
ENGL 432 American Literature II: Twentieth Century to the Present This course builds
on the characteristic features of American literature as studied in ENGL 431. Continuing to
observe the tensions and trends which help define American literature, ENGL 432 complements
its predecessor by focusing on the development of American literature during and after the 20th
century. The works examined may include the poetry of E. A. Robinson, T. S. Eliot, Ezra
Pound, Robert Frost, Wallace Stevens, John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate, or Robert Penn Warren;
the fiction of Willa Cather, F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway, Eudora
Welty, Flannery OConnor, Walker Percy, or Wendell Berry; and the drama of Eugene ONeill,
Tennessee Williams, or Arthur Miller.
ENGL/HIST 460 The Catholic Literary Revival This course examines the literary revival of
orthodox Catholicism in modern Britain. It treats a wide variety of genres, including realistic
fiction, fantasy literature, poetry, history, and social criticism. Students discuss texts in seminar
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discussions and conduct original research on the work of a modern Catholic author. Among the
writers studied are G. K. Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, Graham Greene, Evelyn Waugh, David
Jones, Christopher Dawson, J. R. R. Tolkien, and such members of high Anglo-Catholic circles
as T. S. Eliot, C. S. Lewis, and Dorothy L. Sayers. (Cross-listed in History)
ENGL 489 Honors Seminar A seminar on a special topic in literature to be determined by the
department chairman in consultation with interested and qualified students and faculty.
Prerequisites: Minimum 3.25 GPA and permission of the Department Chairman. (4 credits
hours)
ENGL 490-99 Special Topics or Directed Studies in Literature Specially designed courses
of readings and research in areas not sufficiently covered by another course already in the
curriculum.
ENGL 512 Senior Seminar and Thesis Each student prepares his senior thesis in this course,
and may be required to defend it in an oral presentation. For the Literature major, this course is
the culmination of his four-year concentration on the arts of language, written and spoken. The
topic and thesis statement must be approved by the thesis director or Department Chairman the
semester before the Senior Thesis is undertaken.
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History
This dictum of the Colleges founding president Warren H. Carroll aptly indicates the
spirit and the purpose of the courses offered in the History Department. Dr. Carroll reminds us
that cultures, like individuals, derive their identity in large measure from their memories.
Historians are a civilizations designated rememberers, those who introduce new generations to
their heritage and encourage a vision that expands ones awareness beyond his own age, and
therefore makes him aware of the fundamental issues of human life and the ways in which
different societies have grappled with them.
In particular, both in the Core Curriculum and in the Advanced Courses offered to
History majors and other interested students, the History faculty at Christendom College seeks to
hand on a Catholic vision of the human past. It seeks to clarify the difference made by the
Incarnation in time and how its successor, the Church, has influenced history both as an
institution and through the actions of its members. It therefore presents a point of view informed
by the Catholic orthodoxy that engages both substantive material and historical interpretation in
an effort to integrate faith and reason, and also to show the relationship in time between faith and
culture.
This Catholic vision of history is what makes the History Department at Christendom
distinctive. Within the context of the College, however, the department seeks to serve the
broader goal of educating the whole man in Christ. As every department at Christendom seeks
to develop in its students the skills fundamental to a liberal education, so also the History
Department labors to pass on excellence in reading, writing, and public speaking. For these
reasons, and for the breadth of cultural literacy offered by historical studies, the major in History
is an excellent preparation for graduate or professional studies, teaching, and work in
government and commerce.
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1 Foundational Curriculum
HIST 101 History of Western Civilization I: The Ancient and Biblical World This course
presents the historical reality of Old Testament history, the rise and decline of classical Greece,
and the building of the Macedonian, Hellenistic, and Roman empires, the wars of the Maccabees,
the age of Herod, and the Incarnation as an historical event. Primary texts include substantial
portions of the Old Testament, Plutarchs Lives, and essays by Cicero. Required of all
students.
HIST 102 History of Western Civilization II: The Formation of Christendom The course
treats the rise and development of Christian Europe, from the foundation of the Church at
Pentecost through the end of the Crusade to the Holy Land in 1291. Topics covered include the
decline and fall of the Roman Empire and the triumph of Christianity, the challenge of the great
heresies and how the Church overcame them, the conversion of the barbarians, the assault of
Islam, the founding of the Holy Roman Empire, the Crusades, and the development of medieval
Christendom. Primary texts include St. Athanasius Life of St. Anthony, St. Augustines
Confessions, the Rule of St. Benedict, and the Song of Roland. Required of all students.
HIST 201 History of Western Civilization III: The Division of Christendom This course
treats the division of Western Europe by the rise of incipient nationalism in the late-medieval
period and the Protestant revolution of the 16th and 17th centuries. Topics covered include Spain
and Portugal in the Age of Discovery, late-medieval religious culture, The Renaissance, the
causes and character of the Protestant Revolt and the Catholic Reform, and the division of
Western Europe into confessional kingdoms. Primary texts include William Langland, Piers
Plowman; Martin Luther, On Christian Liberty; Francis Bacon, New Atlantis; and Pedro
Calderon de la Barca, Life is a Dream. Required of all students.
HIST 202 History of Western Civilization IV: Church & World in the Modern Age This
course treats the secularization and dechristianization of Europe and the rise of the culture of
death. Topics covered include the Enlightenment, the French Revolution, the Industrial
Revolution, Nationalism, Communism, Fascism, the growth of modern science, World Wars I
and II, the Cold War, the Second Vatican Council, and the Pontificate of John Paul II. Primary
texts include Voltaire, Letters concerning the English Nation; Marx & Engels, Communist
Manifesto; Pius XI, Quas Primas; and John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae. Required of all
students.
Advanced Courses
HIST 301 Art & Architecture of Rome and Florence. See Rome Program below.
H H
HIST/CECS 309 History of Ancient Greece This course examines ancient Greek culture
from the Bronze Age to the Hellenistic period with a special interest in the Heroic Age of
Homer, the Persian and Peloponnesian Wars, Periclean Athens, and the establishment of
Hellenistic order. This course is built around the reading and discussion of primary texts by
writers such as Hesiod, Homer, Aeschylus, Thucydides, Isocrates, Aristotle, Xenophon,
Polybius, and Philo. The course concludes with a reflection upon the Hellenistic influence on
the Greek Fathers of the Church. (Cross-listed in Classical and Early Christian Studies)
HIST/CECS 310 History of Ancient Rome This course examines ancient Roman culture
from its legendary origins through the Republic and Empire to the conversion of Constantine the
Great with a special emphasis on the Punic Wars, the impact of thought of Cicero on western
society, the reorganization of the Roman world under Augustus, provincial life in the empire,
and the chief factors leading to the transformation of Roman political power in the West. This
course is built around the reading and discussion of primary texts by writers such as Cato the
Elder, Polybius, Cicero, Sallust, Quintillian, Tacitus, Julian the Apostate, and Eusebius. The
course concludes with a reflection on history and political life by Saint Augustine. (Cross-listed
in Classical and Early Christian Studies)
HIST/CECS 311 History of the Byzantine Empire This course examines late Roman and
Byzantine culture from the conversion of Constantine into the Middle Ages with a special
interest in the establishment of an enduring Christian empire, the impact of the Fathers on
Christian culture, the Age of Justinian, the variety of Eastern Christianity, and the confrontation
between Byzantium and Islam. This course is built around the reading and discussion of primary
texts by writers and works such as St. Ephrem the Syrian, Ammianus Marcellinus, Libanius, St.
John Chrysostom, John Cassian, The Theodosian Code, John Lydus, Procopius, George of
Pisidia, St. John Damascene, the Digenis Akritas, Anna Comnena, and Demetrius Cydones. The
course concludes with a reflection on the various attempts to reunite the two halves of
Christendom. (Cross-listed in Classical and Early Christian Studies)
HIST 312 The Medieval World A seminar treating community life, worship, and a variety of
forms of artistic expression in the Latin West between the Carolingian Age and the early 16th
century. Special attention is given to the contribution of Benedictine monasticism to the
formation of Medieval Christian culture. Students read sources such as the Pilgrims Guide to
Santiago de Compostela and the Golden Legend and works by St. Bernard of Clairvaux and
Abbot Suger of St. Denis, while considering works of art ranging from icons and panel paintings
to sculpture and church architecture.
HIST 322 History of Modern Britain British history from the accession of Henry VII (1485)
to the present. Focus on Tudor-Stuart absolutism and the Protestant Revolt; the rise of the
British Empire and industrialism; the resurgence of the Catholic Church during the Victorian
period led by John Henry Newman and other converts from the Oxford Movement; Britains role
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in World War II; and the decline and disappearance of the British empire in the second half of
the twentieth century.
HIST 331 History of Ireland This course examines the character of Irish Catholic culture in
the Golden Age, with special emphasis on the role of the early Irish monasteries; the English
penetration and conquest, and the Irish resistance culminating in the Nine Years War (1594-
1603); the oppression and persecution of the Irish Catholics in the 17th and 18th centuries; the
building of an independent Ireland; and the great emigration from Ireland since 1845.
HIST 341 American History and American Catholicism to 1860 This course combines a
basic survey of American history with a detailed study of the experience of Catholics in North
America. Against the background of American political history are studied such Catholic
elements as early missionary activity, the development of colonial Maryland, the expansion of
the American Church, Catholic immigration, and anti-Catholic prejudice.
HIST 342 American History and American Catholicism, since 1860 This course presents
the development of the United States into a major industrial and world power while concurrently
surveying the presence of Catholics in American life. Of particular concern are Catholic
immigration from Europe, the transplanting of Catholic ethnic traditions onto American soil, the
decline of Catholic identity in the face of industrialization and secularization, and the more
recent phenomenon of Latin-American immigration to the United States.
HIST 351 Renaissance, Revolt, and Reformation An introduction to the intellectual history
of early-modern Europe, with particular attention to Martin Luthers new theology, the variations
of the Protestant churches, and Catholic responses to the heresy of salvation by faith alone.
Figures or topics to be studied include Erasmus, Luther, Calvin, the Council of Trent, and St.
John of the Cross.
HIST 352 The Enlightenment and its Critics The Enlightenment, as the attempt of European
and North American thinkers in the 18th century to found a secular and rationalist social order is
typically called, met with eloquent and sustained criticism from Catholics in the 19th century and
since. This course considers the writings of such partisans of modernity as Bayle, Voltaire,
dAlembert and Kant, as well as defenders of tradition such as Joseph de Maistre, Louis de
Bonald, Jane Austen, John Henry Newman, and the contemporary Catholic philosopher Alasdair
MacIntyre.
HIST 361 Religion and Culture in Early-Modern France France under the first three
Bourbon kings was the scene of a struggle for cultural dominance between Renaissance
Humanism and the resurgent Catholic faith of the post-Tridentine era. The course begins by
considering the opposition between Montaigne and St. Francis de Sales as representative of that
struggle and then follows their respective influences throughout the century, as seen in the plays
of Corneille, Molire, and Racine; the religious essays of Pascal; and the sermons of Bossuet.
HIST 399 Historiography Historiography is the study of the methods and goals of the writing
of history. This course will introduce students to the major figures and schools of historical
interpretation from Ancient Greece through the modern period. The course will also involve the
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critical analysis of differing interpretations of persons, events, and trends by modern historians.
The chief goal of the course is to assist students in articulating a Catholic vision of history,
informed by the reading of selections of St. Augustine's City of God.
HIST/THEO 401 History of the Papacy A survey of the development of the Papacy and its
impact on history from St. Peter to the present. Emphasis is placed on institutional growth, the
advancement of papal ecclesiology, major challenges to the Papacy, and both the elements and
effects of papal leadership in the Church as a whole. (Cross-listed in Theology)
HIST 411 Reconquista and Crusade This course treats the relations between Christianity and
Islam from the 7th century to the 15th, placing particular emphasis upon the Reconquista, that is,
the war for the reconquest of Christian Spain from Pelayo to Isabel la catolica, and the Crusades
to the Holy Land between 1095 and 1291. Students will read sources such as the Koran, the
relations of the sermon of Urban II at the Council of Clermont, the Poem of El Cid, and Jean de
Joinvilles Life of St. Louis.
HIST 412 Spain, Portugal, and the New World since 1492 This course begins with the reign
of the Catholic kings of Spain, Fernando and Isabel, and then charts the rise of the Spanish
colonial empire, paying special attention to the reigns of Carlos I (the Holy Roman Emperor
Charles V) and Philip II. The second half of the course treats the influence of the Enlightenment
and French Revolution upon the Iberian peninsula and Latin America and culminates in a
consideration of the Cristero rebellion in Mexico, the apparitions of Our Lady of Fatima in
Portugal, and the Catholic victory in the Spanish Civil War.
HIST 431 Causes and Effects of the French Revolution A study of the pivotal political event
of modern Western history, with special attention to its antagonism to the Christian Faith, the
Catholic Church, and Christian moral teachings. Its causes and essential character as manifested
in its principal events are carefully examined and its consequences traced in detail to the fall of
Napoleon and, somewhat more briefly, to the Paris Commune in 1871, with emphasis on the
causes and manner of its apparent defeat by 1815 and its subsequent revival.
HIST 432 Causes and Effects of the Communist Revolution This course studies the
totalitarian movements so fundamental to the history of the twentieth century. It traces their
roots in the history of Western civilization and focuses in particular on the communist seizure of
power in Russia, and the rule of Stalin. It also pays substantial attention to the emergence of
fascism, and to the response of the Church to totalitarianism.
HIST/THEO 451 The General Councils The history and theology of the ecumenical
councils from Nicaea I to Vatican I. A knowledge of Latin is recommended. (Cross-listed in
Theology)
HIST/ENGL 460 The Catholic Literary Revival This course examines the revival of
orthodox Catholicism in modern Britain. It treats a wide variety of genres, including realistic
fiction, fantasy literature, poetry, history, and social criticism. Students discuss texts in seminar
discussions and conduct original research on the work of a modern Catholic author. Among the
writers studied are G. K. Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, Graham Greene, Evelyn Waugh, David
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Jones, Christopher Dawson, J. R. R. Tolkien, and such members of high Anglo-Catholic circles
as T. S. Eliot, C. S. Lewis, and Dorothy L. Sayers. (Cross-listed in English)
HIST 463 History of Germany and Austria, 1648-1991 The political and intellectual history
of the German-speaking peoples from the end of the Thirty Years War to the reunification of
West and East Germany, including coverage of major thinkers such as Goethe, Kant, and Marx,
as well as German and Austrian political leaders, including Frederick II, Maria Theresa,
Bismarck, Franz Josef, Dollfuss, Hitler, Adenauer and Kohl.
HIST 480 The Pontificate of John Paul II An in-depth study of one of the most important
pontificates in the history of the Church, based on George Weigels biography, Witness to Hope,
which is the text for the course. The course covers the teachings and theology of Pope John Paul
II in an historical framework, with particular emphasis on the steps he has taken toward the
destruction of the Modernist heresy which had come to dominate much of the Church in the
twentieth century, and the building of a vibrant youth movement in the Church in preparation for
the third Christian millennium. The course also includes a study of Pope John Paul IIs
episcopal appointments and their consequences in the Church.
HIST 489 Honors Seminar A seminar on a special topic in history to be determined by the
department chairman in consultation with interested and qualified students. Prerequisites:
Minimum 3.25 GPA and permission of the Department Chairman. (3 or 4 credit hours)
HIST 490-99 Special Topics or Directed Studies in History Specially designed courses of
readings in areas not sufficiently covered by another course already in the curriculum.
HIST 512 Senior Seminar and Thesis Senior History majors prepare their senior thesis in this
course. Students are required to defend their theses in an oral examination.
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Mathematics and Science
The Department offers a major that is in accord with the standards of the profession. A
graduate will be able to enter into graduate programs throughout the country or pursue any of the
innumerable careers available to graduates with undergraduate degrees in Mathematics.
Mathematics has always been considered an essential part of a liberal education: the
unique simplicity of its subject matter allows its students to practice logical thought in a realm in
which truth is readily apparent; and its instrumental use opens insights into the nature of physical
reality that are not apparent by other means. Christendom offers one elementary course in
Euclidean Geometry and another in the historical development and philosophical aspects of
mathematics. College Algebra and several more advanced courses deepen a students
mathematical knowledge, as well as prepare him for programs in business, engineering,
mathematics, or science. Any of the courses in mathematics fulfill the one course requirement of
the core curriculum. In all courses the student is helped to understand the place of mathematics
in mans understanding of the world around him.
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MATH 401 Real Analysis (4 cr)
MATH 402 Abstract Algebra
MATH 512 Senior Seminar and Thesis (4 cr)
In addition the department requires students to have a competency in basic physics, demonstrated
by passing SCIE 205 General Physics II and its lab course.
Courses listed below are for 3 credit hours unless otherwise noted. A course grade of at
least C- is necessary for a course to fulfill the departments requirements for a major or minor.
Foundational Curriculum
MATH 101 Introduction to Mathematical Thought This course focuses on our changing
conception of the notion of extension leading to the rise of the various branches of mathematics
and the application of mathematics to describing the universe.
MATH 103 Euclidean Geometry A study of selected books from Euclids Elements. Topics
covered include plane geometry, theory of proportions, and classical arithmetic. Students will
also investigate the relation between mathematics and more comprehensive philosophical issues.
MATH 105 College Algebra and Trigonometry Topics include theory of equations,
inequalities, trigonometry, logarithms, exponentials, and analytic geometry.
MATH 150 Introduction to Statistics The purpose of the course is to introduce the student to
the ideas and concepts of statistics and the statistical models used for the decision making in
different areas of life. Topics covered include description of sets of data, elementary probability,
discrete and continuous random variables, the Binomial and Normal Random variables,
confidence intervals and hypothesis testing.
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Advanced Courses
MATH 302 Calculus II Continuation of MATH 201. Topics include inverse functions,
techniques of integration, sequences and series, the conic sections, and the polar coordinate
system. Prerequisite: At least a C- in MATH 201 or equivalent. Required of all majors (4
credit hours)
MATH 303 Calculus III Continuation of MATH 202. Topics include limits and continuity in
three dimensions, vectors, vector functions, partial derivatives, multiple integrals, the notions of
gradient, divergence, and curl, and the basic theorems of vector calculus. Required of all
majors.
MATH 304 Differential Equations This course covers the basic techniques for solution of
ordinary differential equations. Topics include first and second order linear equations, non-linear
equations, systems of linear equations, the fundamental matrix, series solutions of differential
equations, numerical methods and introduction to stability theory. Required of all majors.
MATH 332 Probability and Statistics Introduction to the basic notions of probability and
statistics. Topics covered include combinatorial probability, distribution functions, discrete and
continuous random variables and distributions, conditional probability, sums of random
variables, the central limit theorem, and typical applications in reliability, sampling, and
estimation theory.
MATH 351 Fundamentals of Advanced Mathematics This course introduces the student to
modern mathematical structures that are not present in introductory mathematics courses and
aims to develop a students skill in composing and writing proofs. Topics include elementary
logic, methods of proof, philosophies of mathematics, set theory, functions and relations,
cardinality, elementary number theory, rings and domains. Required of all majors.
MATH 353 Linear Algebra Introduction to the concepts and theory of linear algebra. Topics
include vector spaces, bases, matrices, linear mappings, scalar products and orthogonality,
determinants, bilinear forms, eigenvalues and eigenvectors, diagonalization, the spectral theorem
and the SVD decomposition. Required of all majors (4 credit hours)
MATH 373 Symbolic Logic Introduction to symbolic logic and the theory of formal systems.
Topics include the traditional logic of categorical sentences, truth functional logic, the first order
predicate calculus, higher order systems, the notions of decidability and completeness, and some
typical applications, among them a brief look at the design of digital computing machinery.
Prerequisite: PHIL 101 or equivalent.
MATH 374 Modal Logic An introduction to the structure and techniques of the logic of
necessity and possibility from an axiomatic standpoint. Topics include sentential modal logic
and the systems T, S4, and kS5; validity; decision procedures and completeness; and quantified
modal logic. Prerequisite: MATH 353 or permission of the instructor.
MATH 375 Mathematical Logic Development of the principal topics of mathematical logic.
Through an axiomatic approach, the course treats the foundations of mathematics and illustrates
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the power as well as the limitations of mathematical reasoning. Topics include propositional and
quantificational logic from an axiomatic standpoint; formal number theory; recursive functions,
Gdels theorem, and recursive undecidability; and an introduction to axiomatic set theory.
Prerequisite: MATH 353 or permission of the instructor.
MATH 401 Real Analysis This course is a rigorous introduction to the fundamental theorems
of the introductory calculus courses. It aims to develop in the student a sense of the unity of
mathematics and further expose him to the importance of rigorous proof in mathematics. Topics
include: the real number system, sequences & limits, continuity of functions, the derivative and ,
the Riemannian integral. Required of all majors. (4 credit hours).
MATH 402 Abstract Algebra This course is an introduction to the ideas of modern algebra
which enables one to reinterpret the results of classical algebra, giving them a greater unity and
generality. Topics include: equivalence relations, functions, properties of the integers, groups,
rings, integral domains, ideals and fields. Required of all majors.
Math 512 Senior Thesis Direction of the students with his senior thesis, a major scholarly
paper on a mathematical topic of his interest. The student receives instruction and individual
assistance in development of a topic, research methods, organizing and writing a mathematical
paper. Includes a one hour per week seminar. Corequisite: MATH 511 (3 credit. hrs.)
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Natural Science Courses
In his Physics Aristotle laid the foundations for a philosophical knowledge of the natural,
changeable world, but he failed to fully develop what modern scientists, beginning with Galileo
and Newton have exploited : the potential of mathematics to describe and systematize our
knowledge of the natural world. In the context of the broad Thomistic vision, the student is
shown how the modern discipline is placed in the hierarchy of human knowledge and taught the
valid insights of both traditions.
The College offers one introductory course dealing with the historical and philosophical
principles of science, and another concentrating on the first quantified knowledge of the natural
world: Descriptive Astronomy. The more advanced courses: the three semester sequence in
General Physics and the special topics courses, deepen the students understanding of the nature
of physical reality while not neglecting philosophical questions. Any of the science courses
satisfies the core requirement in science.
Foundational Curriculum
SCIE 102 Introduction to Scientific Thought This course focuses on our changing
conception of the universe, the rise of the various physical sciences, and the development of the
scientific method.
SCIE 104 Descriptive Astronomy A study of astronomy beginning with its historical roots
and leading to our current understanding of the universe. Major developments are placed in their
historical and philosophic context by appropriate study of original works. Students also study
the night sky and methods used by astronomers, by means of activities outside the classroom.
Advanced Courses
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SCIE 205 General Physics II Continuation of SCIE 204. Topics include Fluids,
Thermodynamics, geometric optics, electricity and magnetism.
Prerequisite: SCIE 204 or permission of the instructor.
SCIE 306 General Physics III Continuation of SCIE 205. Topics include wave motion, the
nature of light and optical phenomena, special relativity, atomic and nuclear physics.
Prerequisite: SCIE 205 or permission of the instructor.
SCIE 204L-205L, 306 L Laboratory for General Physics I, II & III Students conduct
experiments illustrating the physics discussed in the classroom and learn and practice principles
of data acquisition and data analysis. (Required with SCIE 204-205, 306) (1 credit hour per
semester)
SCIE/PHIL 420 Philosophical Issues in Modern Science The aim of the course is to
familiarize students with the basic scientific discoveries of the 20th Century regarding the origin
of the universe, the existence of a creator, and the immaterial nature of man and how they relate
to the Thomistic understanding of the same issues. Topics include Big Bang Cosmology,
Anthropic coincidences, human mind and the computer, Quantum Mechanics and reality, and
philosophical issues in contemporary evolutionary biology.
SCIE 490-99 Special Topics or Directed Studies in Physics A topic chosen according to the
interests of the students and the instructor, such as Mechanics, Continuum Mechanics
Thermodynamics, Electromagnetism and Quantum Theory.
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Modern Languages
The study of language itself -its grammatical structure, syntax, and lexicon -is essential to
the discipline of the liberally educated mind. A knowledge of foreign languages provides the
student with a greater understanding of his own language and aids him in developing greater
precision and effectiveness in discourse. Furthermore, a knowledge of classical or modern
languages opens vistas for the student of history, literature, philosophy, and theology largely
closed to the monolingual student.
The study of foreign languages also is vital to the undertaking of any form of advanced
scholarly work, important to many types of governmental and professional research, and
valuable in the acquisition of knowledge of current events and new developments around the
world. Most graduate programs leading to the doctorate require a knowledge of at least one
ancient and one modern language in addition to English. Language study likewise puts the
student in touch with some of the richest treasures of the Catholic heritage. Consequently, every
student at Christendom College is required to develop a reasonable proficiency in at least one
language other than English, by taking first and second years of Latin, French, Greek or Spanish.
Audio-lingual, reading, and writing skills are developed in the modern language courses,
including up-to-date conversations, translations into and from the language under study,
memorization, readings, and intensive grammar study. The goal of each course is to make the
student as intimately and totally conversant with the foreign language as is possible without
living within the foreign culture itself. Courses earn three credit hours each semester, unless
otherwise noted.
French
FREN 101-102 Elementary French I & II Introduction to French as a spoken and written
language. Includes extensive oral and written practice of the basic grammatical structures.
FREN 390-399 Special Topics or Directed Studies in French Literature Specially designed
courses of readings in French prose, poetry, and drama.
Spanish
SPAN 101-102 Elementary Spanish I & II Introduction to Spanish as a spoken and written
language. Includes extensive oral and written practice of the basic grammatical structures.
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Music
Because true education involves the domesticationnot the suppressionof the souls
raw passions, and since music touches this non-rational part of man, an education in good music
is vital. Aristotle, for instance, held music to be the most important of subjects in the early
education of the children of his day, not because it is necessary, or because it is useful, but
simply because it is liberal and something good in itself. And this is precisely the definition of
the liberal arts: the study of things that make us free, more human and truer to our nature, and
not simply the acquisition of particular vocational skills that help in getting a job.
It was with the coming of the Christian dispensation, however, that a significant new
facet was added to the Ancient Worlds high estimation of music in education. With the regular,
even daily, celebration of the Mass and Divine Office, music became an important partan
integral part as various 20th century popes and Vatican II would later teachof the worship of
the Triune God. So to the end of improving the musical ars celebrandi of the Church in the first
millennium, for example, Charlemagne ordered in 789 AD that schoolboys needed to learn
psalms, notes, chants, the computus, and grammar in each monastery and bishops house.
Thus the monastery and episcopal schools of the daythe equivalent of todays grammar and
secondary schoolswere in essence turned into choir schools.
This was a normal means of education for youth for centuries, but this was not merely the
learning of practical skills necessary for the performance of a religious ritual; this was
schooling in a liberal art which enabled its practitioners to be free, more human, truer to their
nature in their leisure time. And what is the most important thing that a man, understood
properly as homo religious, can do in his leisure time, especially on the day of restthe Dies
Dominibut to worship God in song? As St. Augustine wrote, Cantare amantis est. (song is
an expression of love, the love of God)
To this end, Christendom College cultivates the treasury of sacred music whose integral
parts include Gregorian chant and the sacred vocal polyphony of masters such as Palestrina,
Victoria, and Josquin des Prez. Under the direction of a competent Kapellmeister, the students
strive to render present, in resonant beauty, the sonic vesture of divine worship. This is a part of
the Colleges proud heritage of maintaining a high liturgical culture which includes choral
ensembles that sing at the Colleges liturgy: the Christendom Choir, which sings polyphonic
motets and Mass settings, and the Schola Gregoriana for men, which beautifies the Sunday
liturgy as well by chanting the traditional propers. Four annual choral scholarships and a minor
in liturgical music are also a part of the Colleges liturgical music program. Along with Pope
Benedict XVI, we endeavor to seek what is worthy of the Churchs worship . . . [for] beauty and
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love form the true consolation in this world, bringing it as near as possible to the world of the
resurrection.
Required courses:
MUSC 302Music Theory and Composition (3 credits)
MUSC 305History of Music in Western Civilization (3 credits)
MUSC/THEO 303Theology of Worship and Its Music (3 credits)
MUSC 304Gregorian Chant (3 credits)
MUSC 310Choir Apprenticeship (2 credits)
MUSC 311Lessons (1 credit)
One of
THEO 402Ecclesiology (3 credits)
THEO 404The Sacraments (3 credits)
THEO 451Second Vatican Council (3 credits)
MUSC 303 and 304 require minimal reading competency of the Roman Rites liturgical texts.
For students considering a Minor in Liturgical Music, Latin is encouraged as the core curriculum
language requirement.
MUSC 101-102 (A-Modern and B-Chant) These courses involve learning how to read,
respectively, basic modern and Gregorian notation, in preparation for other courses (MUSC 302
and MUSC 304 ) or for admission to the choir or schola at the directors discretion. Exemption
from the course may be earned by successfully passing a departmental exam. Each course is the
equivalent work-load of a one-credit course. MUSC 101-102 do not count toward the students
GPA or as fulfilling graduation requirements.
MUSC 302Music Theory and Composition This course begins with a brief review of the
fundamentals of music and proceeds to the study of species counterpoint and figured bass. These
two disciplines were considered prerequisites to the study of composition during what was
known as the Common Practice Era (c. 1600-1900), a period of harmonic common practice
which included the Baroque, the Classical, and the Romantic eras. Thus students will be drilled
in some of the basic harmonic and part-writing principles learned by the greatest composers of
Western civilization. Students will also learn to read melodies at sight and transcribe them by
ear. At the end of the semester, the student will be required to write some simple compositions.
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(3 credits) Prerequisite: A basic reading knowledge of music (in both treble and bass clefs) is
required.
MUSC/THEO 303Theology of Worship and Its Music This course provides an introduction
to the subject by analyzing and expounding the apposite documents of the ecclesiastical
Magisterium, from the Motu Proprio of St. Pius X (1903) to the Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy (Sacrosanctum Concilium) of Vatican II and the instruction Musicam Sacram of 1967. (3
credits)
MUSC 304Gregorian Chant This course will involve a systematic study of the different
genres of Gregorian chant in the Mass and Divine Office. (3 credits) Prerequisite (not a co-
requisite): MUSC 101B and 102B or demonstrated competency.
THEO 304 Practicum: Theology of Worship and of its Music This course offers practical
experience in applying sound theological principles to weekly sung worship, including the music
proper to the Roman liturgy, Gregorian chant, according to the Classic Solesmes Method.
Pre- or co-requisite: THEO 303; no musical prerequisites. (1 credit hour: Practicum may not be
repeated for credit.)
MUSC 310Choir Apprenticeship In this course the student works with the professor and a
chaplain to organize, present, and direct a significant liturgical event (e.g. Sunday sung Vespers)
in the life of the College. (2 credits) Prerequisite (not a co-requisite): One-years participation
in Choir. Open only to students minoring in Liturgical Music.
MUSC 311Lessons Private musical lessons on a weekly basis for Liturgical Music Minors.
Students may enroll in this course only by permission of the Director of Liturgical Music.
Normally, only lessons in organ or voice meet the requirements of this course. Students should
consult the Director of Liturgical Music for more information about MUSC 311. (1 credit)
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Philosophy
The ultimate happiness that man can have in this life must consist in the
contemplation of the first causes; for the little that can be known about them
is more lovable and excellent than everything that can be known about lesser
things. . . . And it is through the completion of this knowledge in us after the
present life that man is made perfectly happy, according to the words of the
Gospel: This is eternal life, that they may know thee, the only true God.
St. Thomas Aquinas, Commentary on the Book of Causes
Philosophy, the love of wisdom, begins in wonder and ends in an organized natural
knowledge of the ultimate causes of all things. It is an essentially speculative discipline, one that
seeks knowledge for its own sake and not for its usefulness. It is not a means to a liberal
education but, along with theology, is the very purpose and end of a liberal education. Desirable
in itself, philosophy also prepares the mind for the understanding of theology, the study of God
based on Divine Revelation.
The beauty of wisdom imposes upon philosophy an orderly communication of its riches.
Philosophy imparts to its students the tools of rational thought, applies them first to an
investigation of the physical world and its most noble part, mankind, then looks to ordering our
practical lives for the sake of wisdom, and finally considers each thing in its highest aspect,
namely as a being participating in a limited way in the unlimited being of God. At Christendom
College, this communication is reflected primarily in the arrangement of courses studying
philosophy systematically and secondarily in the arrangement of courses studying philosophy
historically. In the first semester a student is introduced to philosophy through a course which is
both historical and systematic. This initial course focuses both on early Greek philosophy, a
historical framework within which the systematic problems and aims of philosophy are
presented, and through logic, the systematic science providing the intellect with its most
powerful tools. He then takes a course on the philosophy of human nature, man being the
greatest of Gods changeable creations. He proceeds to study ethics, a consideration of human
action in its relation to human happiness. Finally the student investigates metaphysics, the
culmination of philosophy and the natural fulfillment of liberal education. Metaphysics is the
science of being qua being, a science that ultimately aims at a natural knowledge of God. Two
courses in the history of philosophy, Medieval Philosophy and Modern Philosophy, end the core
sequence with an inductive approach to philosophical problems. These latter courses also have a
practical aim: they prepare the student to live and act effectively in the modern world by showing
him the patterns of thought which have molded it.
The philosophy courses in the core curriculum not only introduce the student to wisdom,
they also provide the ability to integrate the liberal arts by showing their relation to each other
and to philosophy and theology in an organized view of the whole of reality. The elective
courses in philosophy build on the knowledge acquired in the core curriculum, deepening an
understanding which in the core curriculum itself inevitably remains somewhat elementary.
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Requirements for the Philosophy Major and Minor
The philosophy major, which requires a student to take 30 credit hours in upper division
courses, deepens his understanding of what is studied in the core. It also prepares students for
graduate studies in philosophy or theology. The philosophy department requires that every
major be competent in Latin or Greek, which is demonstrated by passing at least Latin 202 or
Greek 304, and take the following courses:
301 History of Medieval Philosophy and 302 History of Modern Philosophy, required of
all students
PHIL 401: Recent Philosophy
PHIL 404: Philosophy of God
PHIL 512 Senior Seminar and Thesis: Each student completes his studies by writing an
original senior thesis requiring independent research on a philosophical topic.
The philosophy minor offers students choosing to major in another discipline the ability
to deepen their philosophical knowledge. There is no language requirement for the minor. Each
student minoring in philosophy must take 12 credit hours of upper level philosophy courses
beyond the core curriculum. A course grade of at least C-minus is necessary for a course to
fulfill the departments major or minor requirements.
Foundational Curriculum
PHIL 102 Philosophy of Human Nature A systematic investigation of the nature of man,
including a demonstration of the immateriality of the intellectual soul, the unity of the human
person, his subsistence, freedom of the will, sensory and intellectual knowledge, and his natural
end: God. The study will be based largely on texts of St. Thomas Aquinas and will include a
consideration of contrasting positions. Required of all students.
Advanced Courses
PHIL 101-202 are prerequisites for all advanced courses, unless an exemption is granted by the
Academic Dean (301 and 302) or the Department Chair (courses numbered higher than 302).
PHIL 301 History of Medieval Philosophy A survey of Medieval Philosophy from late
classical antiquity to the late Middle Ages. Original sources are referenced, and their role in the
development of thought is identified. Required of all students.
PHIL 302 History of Modern Philosophy A survey of modern Western philosophy from the
16th to the 20th century. Required of all students.
PHIL 312 Thomistic Ethics An in-depth study of the natural norms for the morality of human
behavior as elucidated by the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas.
PHIL 315 Society and the Common Good An investigation of the social nature of man and
his ultimate end as a common good. Based upon readings from the primary texts of philosophers
including Plato, Aristotle, and St. Thomas Aquinas, as well as those of twentieth century
Thomistic commentators.
PHIL 321 Philosophy of Nature An enquiry into the nature of the physical world based on
the philosophy of nature of St. Thomas Aquinas. Includes readings from St. Thomass
Principles of Nature and his Commentary on Aristotles Physics.
PHIL/CECS 322 Plato A reading of several dialogues from different periods of Platos
development, with reference to Platos influence on later philosophy.
PHIL/CECS 323 Aristotle Reading and analysis of extensive selections from the Organon,
Physics, On the Soul, Metaphysics, Ethics, and Politics. The magnitude of Aristotles
philosophical achievements, his profound influence on later ages, and the extent to which his
work was used by the medieval schoolmen also will be considered.
PHIL/CECS 324 Philosophy of St. Augustine The background, life, and writings of St.
Augustine of Hippo, with special reference to his contributions to philosophy and his influence
on Western thought.
PHIL 325 Philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas The background, life, and writings of St.
Thomas, with special reference to his contributions to the various branches of philosophy.
PHIL 326 The Passions An introduction to the thought of St. Thomas on the passions through
a close reading and discussion of selected texts from his writings.
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PHIL 327 Philosophy of Psychology An investigation of the rise of modern psychology in the
thought of Freud, the way it differs from a Thomistic philosophy of man and the way certain
modern thinkers have placed the insights of Freud on a Thomistic basis. Other prominent
modern psychologists will also be considered.
PHIL 328 Philosophy of Education An investigation of the nature of teaching and learning
with special emphasis on classical and Christian thinkers and a consideration of contemporary
problems.
PHIL/THEO 329 Applied Rational Psychology A study of the psychology of the human
person using Thomistic principles of human nature. Theory and examples are studied to develop
a proper understanding of the science of psychology as subordinated to a proper philosophic
understanding of human nature. Defects of modern psychology are examined in so far as they
arise from modern misunderstandings of human nature and of what a science is.
PHIL 401 Recent Philosophy A study of philosophy in the 19th and 20th centuries, with
selected readings in primary sources. Required of Philosophy majors. Prerequisite: PHIL
302 or permission of the Chairman.
PHIL 403 Epistemology An investigation into the nature of human knowing based on the
philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas. The course may compare and contrast material from other
thinkers.
PHIL 404 Philosophy of God An advanced metaphysical study of the existence, nature, and
attributes of God, based on the philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas with consideration of other
philosophies. Required of Philosophy majors.
PHIL 412 Modern Moral Theories An investigation of some of the major moral theories of
the modern era beginning in the 16th century. Theories are examined in themselves and
analyzed from the viewpoint of the Aristotelian/Thomistic tradition.
PHIL/SCIE 420 Philosophical Issues in Modern Science The aim of the course is to
familiarize students with the basic scientific discoveries of the 20th Century regarding the origin
of the universe, the existence of a creator, and the immaterial nature of man and how they relate
to the Thomistic understanding of the same issues. Topics include Big Bang Cosmology,
Anthropic coincidences, human mind and the computer, Quantum Mechanics and reality, and
philosophical issues in contemporary evolutionary biology.
PHIL 421 The Will and the Virtues A systematic study based on the Summa Theologiae of
St. Thomas Aquinas of the nature of the will, the relation between intellect and will, the nature of
habit and virtue, the types of virtue, and particular virtues, especially the cardinal virtues.
PHIL 422 Philosophy of Art and Beauty A Thomistic philosophical investigation of art, both
fine and useful art, the nature of beauty and its perception, the roles of the intellect and the will
in aesthetic enjoyment, and different theories of the nature of art and of the artistic act.
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PHIL/LATN/THEO 423 Latin Readings in St. Thomas Aquinas An advanced study of
scholastic Latin and an in-depth reading of selections from St. Thomass Summa Theologiae and
other treatises. The portions of the Summa studied will vary. This course may be repeated for
credit. (Cross-listed in Latin and Theology.)
PHIL 425 Contemplation and the Philosophical Life An investigation of the nature and
nobility of contemplation and the contemplative life, as well as of issues related to the pursuit of
wisdom, such as discipleship, tradition, and philosophy as a craft.
PHIL 427 Issues in Contemporary Philosophy A special study of some current theme,
movement, or style of philosophizing, such as the thought of Karol Wojtyla, philosophy of
science, philosophy of war, phenomenology, linguistic analysis, or contemporary Catholic
philosophical movements.
PHIL 428 Ethics of John Paul II An analysis of the ethical thought of John Paul II. The
objective is to understand not only how the late Holy Father brings together different traditions
in ethics, but also and primarily what he has to say about the truth about human beings and the
goodness of their behavior, especially in their relations with one another, and especially in the
relations of man and woman with each other. Readings will be taken from Love and
Responsibility and Person and Community: Selected Essays.
PHIL 490-99 Special Topics or Directed Studies in Philosophy A special study of some area
such as axiology, cosmology, epistemology, logic, metaphysics, mathematics, moral philosophy,
natural law, or philosophy of history.
PHIL 512 Senior Seminar and Thesis Direction of the student with his senior thesis, a major
scholarly paper on a philosophical topic of his interest. The student receives instruction and
individual assistance in development of a topic, research methods, outlining, organizing, and
writing a philosophical paper. The student may be required to defend his thesis in an oral
presentation.
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Political Science and Economics
The upper division political science courses give the student a more in-depth
comprehension of the great political thinkers, of the nature and actual function of the American
governmental system, of constitutional law and jurisprudence, and of international relations and
the governments and politics of other lands and regions.
The department also includes a minor and courses in various sub-fields in economics.
The purpose of the science of economics, as famous British economist Alfred Marshall said, is to
raise up the poor. This is a Christian duty, but many well meaning Christians have either no idea
or merely false ideas about how to do this. Good intentions are no substitute for sound economic
theory. The economics minor gives the student the full range of economic knowledge, from
economic philosophy, economic history, to advanced social teachings and technical courses.
Christendom College offers its Political Science and Economics majors a choice between two
B.A. sequences:
Students must take another twelve hours (12) of electives, which may include courses cross-
listed with other departments.
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B. The Political Science Practica sequence.
The PSAE Practica sequence requires thirty (30) credit hours from the upper level Political
Science and Economics curriculum. In addition to the fifteen hours required above, this
sequence requires six (6) credit hours of Practica, consisting of:
Students must take another nine (9) credit hours of electives, which may include courses cross-
listed with other departments.
The advanced curriculum thus offers the Political Science and Economics major a wide variety
of courses which provide the preparation needed for advanced study in law school or graduate
school, and for careers in government, business, and journalism.
The Department of Political Science and Economics also offers two minors open to students of
all majors:
Students must take another nine (9) credit hours in upper level Political Science and Economics
electives. This may include no more than six (6) credit hours of courses offered in other
departments and cross-listed by Political Science.
Students must take another nine (9) credit hours in upper level Economics or Math electives.
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N.B.: A course grade of at least C-minus is required for a course to fulfill the department's major
or minor requirements. Course credit hours cannot be counted toward both the PSAE major and
the 18 credit hours required for either minor.
Foundational Curriculum
PSAE 201 Introduction to Political Theory An introduction to Classical and Catholic ideas on
the relationship between man and the state, the sources of power and authority, inter-relationship
between natural law and the conduct of government, the common good and its application to
social and economic problems. The course deals with these topics in light of classical, medieval,
and modern thinkers. Required of all students.
PSAE 202 Catholic Social Doctrine An introduction to the major social and political teachings
of the Catholic Church from its beginnings to the present as found in Scripture, the Fathers and
Doctors of the Church, and the authoritative documents of the Holy See. The major topics
covered include: the duties of the individual to the state and society, the duties of the government
to its citizens, wealth and poverty, property, the relationship of the state and the Church,
socialism, capitalism, and the family in the life of society. Required of all students.
Advanced Courses
PSAE 311 American Government Institutions A thorough examination of the operation of the
American Political system. Topics include the presidency, Congress, the Supreme Court, the
media, political parties, interest groups, federal-state relations, the original intent of the
Constitution, and the role of the Church in political affairs. Required of all majors.
PSAE 321 Political Thought in the American Republic This course will present the
development of American political thought in the Early American Republic. The periods
covered include the colonial period, the War for Independence, the Constitutional Convention,
Hamiltons Federalist versus Jeffersons Republicans, Jacksonian Democracy, the Era of
Romanticism, Sectional politics, Western Expansion, Southern secession, Lincoln and the GOP,
and Reconstruction.
PSAE 322 Modern American Political Thought This course will present the development of
Modern American Political Thought. Beginning with Abraham Lincoln and the Republicans, the
course will present American politics to the twenty-first century. We will cover the Gilded Age,
Labor Union politics, Populism and Progressivism, F.D.R. and the New Deal, Cold War political
thinking, the New Left Cultural Marxism of the 1960s-70s, the Welfare state, Ronald Reagan
and the Conservatives, concluding with Neo-Conservative thinking of the Republican Party, the
Cultural Marxist ides of the New Left as exhibited in the Democrat party, and the challenge of
populist movements like the Tea Party to the status quo.
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PSAE 333-334 Constitutional Law I and II (2 semesters, 3 credits each semester) A
systematic study of the Constitution and the doctrine of judicial review with special emphasis
upon First Amendment rights, state-federal relationships, interstate commerce, criminal law, and
civil rights decisions. The courses treat topics of interest to Catholics, such as abortion, state aid
to private schools, and freedom of religion. Prerequisite for PSAE 334: PSAE 333.
PSAE 336 Principles of Economics II: Microeconomics A continuation of the study of the
science of economics with emphasis on Microeconomics: how the economy functions in terms of
individual areas of activity. Studies free market concepts in contrast to other economic systems,
supply and demand, profit, and production and distribution. The course will also explore specific
problems concerning labor unions, agriculture, foreign trade, urban economic problems, and
anti-trust regulations.
PSAE 342 Political Conflict in the Middle East A study of the historical development of the
Middle East in politics, economics, and religious and political thought; political institutions in
the Maghreb; Zionism; the Palestinian question; and the politics of oil.
PSAE 343 Government and Politics of Europe A study of the major countries of Europe,
including their political traditions, histories, constitutional principles, political parties, and
contemporary political changes and problems, and the European Union. Focus will also be on the
basic features of the Communist system of the former Soviet Union, and changes in Russia and
East Central Europe since the collapse of the former Soviet empire. Also studied will be the
cantonal system of the Swiss Confederation.
PSAE 362 Rhetoric and Public Speaking Students in this course will learn the principles of
rhetoric and public speaking, with a particular focus on political speech and debate. This will
include writing assignments but will especially emphasize oral presentations before peers.
Required of all majors.
PSAE 379 On Justice In this course, we will examine how various classical, medieval, and
modern thinkers have defined justice. Their answers pertain not just to matters of positive law,
but the way we conceive of natural, divine, and eternal law. Their understanding of justice is
also bound up with their understanding of practical reason. Contemporary political problems
stem in some way from rival conceptions of justice, so the resolution of those problems at the
philosophical and practical level requires the correct conception of justice.
PSAE 382 Politics Practica A series of lectures by guest practitioners of politics, in which
students learn such practical political mechanisms as campaign management, political use of the
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communications media, legislative research, political lobbying, and public, economic and foreign
policy formation. Pre- or co-requisites: PSAE 201-202, or permission of the Director of the
Politics Practica Program. Practica may not be repeated for credit.
PSAE 401 Natural Law: Theory and Practice This course examines the principles of natural
law and how they can be applied to contemporary public policy issues. The survey of principles
of the natural law will be Thomistic in its approach, but will also review alternative accounts of
natural law. It will consider the relationship between human nature and natural law, positive law
and natural law, and whether the natural law can change. It will then examine how the principles
of natural law to deliberate about contemporary controversies such as abortion, marriage, and
religious liberty. Students should gain an ability to use natural law to deliberate about these
issues with Catholics and non-Catholics alike. Required of all majors.
PSAE/CECS 421 Classical Political Theory The purpose of this course is to more deeply
study the fundamental principles of political theory through a historical survey of classical
political thought, focusing on Plato, Aristotle, and Cicero. We will examine how each of the
thinkers studied addressed enduring problems of political theory and contributed to the Western
tradition.
PSAE 422 Medieval Political Theory The purpose of this course is to more deeply study the
fundamental principles of political theory through a historical survey of medieval political
thought. We will examine how each of the thinkers studied addressed enduring problems of
political theory in his given historical context. In particular, we will explore the relationship
between revelation and political philosophy.
PSAE 427 Modern Political Theory The purpose of this course is to more deeply study the
fundamental principles of political theory through a historical survey of modern political
thought. We will examine how each of the thinkers studied addressed enduring problems of
political theory in his given historical context. In particular, we will examine how modern
political philosophers broke with the classical and Christian traditions of political philosophy.
PSAE 428 Contemporary Political Theory The purpose of this course is to more deeply study
the fundamental principles of political theory through a historical survey of contemporary
political thought. We will examine how each of the thinkers studied addressed enduring
problems of political theory in his given historical context. In particular, we will focus on the
themes of freedom, equality, the state, and the implications of religious pluralism.
PSAE 431 International Relations The major issues concerning international relations are
presented in the context of realist theory and are contrasted against the backdrop of emerging
globalist theory. Special attention is devoted to the development of the modern nation-state, war
in the modern world, nationalism and internationalism, international economic development in
the framework of the social teachings of the Church, balance of power politics in the 19th and
20th centuries, arms control and disarmament, and international organizations and law.
PSAE 432 Military Strategy and International Diplomacy In the international system,
force, or the threat of force, plays an important role in crafting a nation states political strategy
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and military doctrine. This course examines the question of how the need to use force to
accomplish a states political objectives guides the development of diplomatic and military
strategy. The impact of geopolitics on diplomacy and warfare and the consequences of both on a
Great Power is primary in our study this course. A secondary concern will be the historical
evolution of warfare from a strategic, logistical, and technological standpoint and the developing
diplomatic strategies employed by the Great Powers from the late eighteenth century to the
present day.
PSAE 433 Revolutionary Conflict The reasons for revolution are presented in the context of
Western history. The greater part of the course is devoted to the study of the breakdown of the
political order and the rise of radical ideologies which led to wholesale bloodshed in society.
Particular attention will be focused on the English Civil War, American War for Independence,
the French Revolution, the Revolutions of 1830 and 1848, the Russian Revolution, and the
Leninist model for revolution in the Third World.
PSAE 441 Political and Military Developments of the American Revolution This seminar
class is a designed reading and class discussion course for students majoring in Politics and
History. We will discuss the political causes for the outbreak of the American War for
Independence as well as key military battles in the course of the war that resulted in the victory
of the colonials against the British Crown. The political focus will be on how both the Crown
and the colonists viewed the crisis and war. Militarily, the discussion will be about the battles
around Boston in 1775, the 1776 New York campaign, the 1777 Saratoga campaign, the battle of
Monmouth Courthouse in 1778, and the military strategy on both sides during the war in the
South, ending with the Continental Armys victory at Yorktown in 1781.
PSAE 479 Jurisprudence and the Catholic Lawyer Such key areas as individual rights and
constitutional interpretation regarding religion are examined through lecture and discussion of
key contemporary legal issues. The course outlines the utilitarian character of modern
jurisprudence and equips students with the understanding they need to adopt a genuinely
Catholic legal perspective. Prerequisite: PSAE 311.
PSAE/THEO 482 Theology and the Public Order The issues of Church and State,
secularization, and the temporal common good are analyzed in light of the Kingship of Christ,
the divine prerogatives of the Catholic Church, and a sound theological anthropology. Special
attention will be given to the Declaration Dignitatis Humanae of Vatican II. (Cross-listed in
Theology.)
PSAE 483 Russias Diplomacy in Europe A course which examines the historical
development of Russias diplomacy in Europe from the perspectives of geopolitics and ideology.
By means of a historical survey of Russias history in Europe, this course presents Russian
diplomatic and military activities in Europe from the period of Czar Peter the Great to the
contemporary state of the Russian Republic.
PSAE 489 Honors Seminar A seminar on a special topic in political science to be determined
by the department chairman in consultation with interested and qualified students. Prerequisites:
Minimum 3.25 GPA and permission of the Department Chairman. (4 credit hours).
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PSAE 490-99 Special Topics or Directed Studies in Political Science & Economics Specially
designed courses of readings in areas not sufficiently covered by another course already in the
curriculum.
PSAE 491 Political Thought of St. Thomas Aquinas St. Thomas Aquinas was primarily a
theologian, but he was also one of the most important political thinkers of the middle ages. His
political thought influenced early modern scholastics like Vitoria, but fell into neglect in the
eighteenth century. Since the mid-nineteenth century, the thought of St. Thomas has influenced
Catholic social doctrine, natural law theory, and increasingly, contemporary political philosophy.
This course seeks to examine the theological and philosophical sources of Aquinass political
thought and suggest ways in which it is relevant today. It is hoped that students will gain a
deeper knowledge of the St. Thomass influence on the tradition of Catholic social and political
thought and its relevance for the modern world.
PSAE 493 Democracy in America Alexis de Tocquevilles Democracy in America has aptly
been called the best book ever written about democracy and the best book ever written about
America. We will therefore use it to consider the nature of democracy and the culture and
politics of America. Tocqueville believed that the rise democracy was inevitable in modern
times but was ambivalent about its consequences. We will see how he thought that dangerous
tendencies inherent in democracy were counteracted by specific elements of American culture.
Finally, we will consider how Tocquevilles work speaks to the condition of democracy in
America today.
PSAE 512 Senior Seminar and Thesis Direction of the student with his senior thesis, a major
paper on a topic of his interest. The student receives instruction and individual assistance in the
development of the topic, research methods, outlining, organizing, and writing a paper. Students
are required to defend their theses in an oral presentation. Required of all majors.
PSAE 521 Practica Internship Students enrolled will participate in an internship (minimum of
eight weeks, 30-40 hours a week) on congressional staffs, in political action committees (PACs),
pro-life and pro-family organizations, or selected political campaigns during the summer
between their junior and senior years. Fall internship requests during a student's senior year
require the permission of the Director of the Politics Program. Prerequisites: PSAE 311 or 312;
382; a minimum 2.5 GPA; and sixty percent of the general core requirements of the curriculum
completed by the time the internship begins. Application deadline is February 1st. Applications
are available from the Director of the Politics Program after November 1st. Internship may
not be repeated for credit. (3 credit hours).
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Theology
This department seeks to restore and advance the scholastic discipline of Theology, the
Queen of the Sciences. The Instruction on the Ecclesial Vocation of the Theologian reminds us
that the object of theology is the Truth which is the living God and His plan for our salvation
revealed in Jesus Christ. (8). Every course is designed both to cover the perennial truth taught
by the Church and developed by the Catholic theological tradition, and to expose the false steps
which have led to widespread loss of orthodoxy in recent years. As the late Pope John Paul II
stressed in his address to the Pontifical Academy of Theology, the vitality of theological study
does not lie in a relativism or historicism. Rather, the theological vocation requires
From the Aeterni Patris of Leo XIII, through the Doctoris Angelici of Pius X and the
Studiorum ducem of Pius XI, down to the Second Vatican Council, the Church has taught that
the spirit, methods, and principles of the Angelic Doctor, St. Thomas Aquinas, yield the optimal
results in speculative theology. Therefore THEO 301, 305, and all the upper division courses in
speculative theology include the reading of St. Thomas and are all taught according to his
approach. Thus the Theology Department at Christendom College takes special care to insure
that the students achieve a solid grasp of the Thomistic synthesis. As was stated in Fides et
Ratio,
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If it has been necessary from time to time to intervene on this question, to reiterate
the value of the Angelic Doctors insights and insist on the study of his thought,
this has been because the Magisteriums directives have not always been followed
with the readiness one would wish. In the years after the Second Vatican Council,
many Catholic faculties were in some ways impoverished by a diminished sense
of the importance of the study . . . of Scholastic philosophy. . . . I cannot fail to
note with surprise and displeasure that this lack of interest in the study of
philosophy is shared by not a few theologians. . . .
It should be clear in the light of these reflections why the Magisterium has
repeatedly acclaimed the merits of Saint Thomas thought and made him the
guide and model for theological studies. . . . In his thinking, the demands of
reason and the power of faith found the most elevated synthesis ever attained by
human thought, for he could defend the radical newness introduced by Revelation
without ever demeaning the venture proper to reason.
John Paul II, Fides et Ratio, Paragraphs 61, 78
As a strict academic discipline, the theology major is an ideal preparation for careers in
teaching, in Catholic broadcasting or in religious journalism, for seminary study, and for other
graduate work in academic theology. It can lead to positions as directors of religious education
in schools, parishes, and dioceses growing field.
Theology majors must be able to read ecclesiastical Latin. Proficiency in Latin can be
acquired through fulfillment of the Colleges language requirement (LATN 202 or higher). The
major consists of at least thirty hours, which must include the following THEO courses:
301 Moral Theology and 302 Apologetics, required of all Christendom students
Two courses that focus specifically on the central mysteries of the Faith, the Trinitarian
God and the mystery of the Word made flesh, Jesus Christ, namely 308 De Deo Trino
and 312 De Verbo Incarnato
The minor requires 18 hours of theology from THEO courses numbered 300 or higher. THEO
301 and 302 may be counted toward the THEO minor. A course grade of at least C-minus is
necessary for a course to fulfill the departments major or minor requirements.
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of Christian life, the liturgy and the sacraments, as revealed in Scripture and Apostolic Tradition
and as defined by the magisterial documents of the Church. Required of all students.
THEO 201 Introduction to the Old Testament Major selections from the books of the Old
Testament are read within the norms of Catholic exegesis. Special emphasis is placed upon the
Pentateuch, the Prophets, and the Wisdom literature. One major purpose is to inspire a love of
Gods Word, which is fully revealed in Jesus Christ. Required of all students. Prerequisite:
THEO 101-102 or permission of the Academic Dean.
THEO 202 Introduction to the New Testament The Gospels and other books of the New
Testament are read in the light of Catholic norms of exegesis. The course will show how the
Gospel texts reveal the real historical Jesus, true God and true Man, and will address
contemporary critics who seek to distance the texts from Him. The course will also introduce the
main themes of the Pauline corpus, the Johannine literature, and the Catholic Epistles. The
primary goal is to make manifest through an in depth study of the Sacred texts that Jesus Christ
is the fullness of Gods revelation. Required of all students. Prerequisite: THEO 201.
Advanced Courses
152B
THEO 301 Moral Theology A study of the data revealed in Scripture and Tradition
concerning what men must do to please God. Elaboration of the data, together with sound
analysis of human action and a grounding of natural-law ethics, will equip the student to
understand the current crisis in moral theology. Required of all students.
THEO 302 Catholic Apologetics A presentation of the basic arguments for the credibility of
the Catholic faith. Students learn how to develop both cogent arguments for its defense and
effective means of persuasion. Individual topics range from Gods existence to Papal Primacy.
Required of all students. Prerequisite: THEO 301.
THEO 303 Theology of Worship and of its Music This course provides an introduction to
the subject by analyzing and expounding the apposite documents of the ecclesiastical
Magisterium, from the Motu Proprio of St. Pius X (1903) to the Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy (Sacrosanctum Concilium) of Vatican II and the instruction Musicam Sacram of 1967.
THEO 304 Practicum: Theology of Worship and of its Music This course offers practical
experience in applying sound theological principles to weekly sung worship, including the music
proper to the Roman liturgy, Gregorian chant, according to the Ward Method. Pre- or co-
requisite: THEO 303; no musical prerequisites. (1 credit hour: Practicum may not be repeated
for credit.)
THEO 305 De Revelatione The existence and nature of divine revelation is studied, together
with the means of its transmission, the structure of dogmatic formulae, the relation of revelation
to the human disciplines and cultures, and the methods of theology. Fundamental texts include
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Dei Filius of Vatican I and St. Thomas Summa Theologiae, I, q. 1. Special emphasis is placed
on the origins of modernist theories of revelation in the philosophy of Immanuel Kant.
THEO 307 De Deo Uno An intensive study of God in His existence and attributes, with
special attention to the five ways and the problem of analogy. The basic text is the Summa
Theologiae, I, qq. 2-26.
THEO 308 De Deo Trino The Divine Trinity is studied both as immanent in God from all
eternity and as sent to indwell in the souls of the just. A Biblical, patristic, and scholastic
presentation of the processions, relations and Persons culminates in the study of St. Thomas
exposition in the Summa Theologiae, I, qq. 27-43. Required of Theology majors.
THEO 312 De Verbo Incarnato A Biblical, patristic, and scholastic presentation is provided of
the fundamental mystery of the Hypostatic union: how Jesus Christ is fully God and fully man in
One Divine Person. Texts include St. Athanasius De Incarnatione Verbi and St. Thomas
Summa Theologiae, III, qq. 1-20. Required of Theology majors.
THEO 322 Mariology The historicity of the Lords virgin birth and Marys perpetual virginity
are defended with the tools of critical exegesis and positive theology. The course also gives a
detailed overview of the development of Marian doctrine and liturgical and devotional piety
from the Apostolic period to the present. Finally, the course offers a synthesis of major themes
in speculative theology pertaining to the Blessed Virgin.
THEO/PHIL 329 Applied Rational Psychology A study of the psychology of the human
person using Thomistic principles of human nature. Theory and examples are studied to develop
a proper understanding of the science of psychology as subordinated to a proper philosophic
understanding of human nature. Defects of modern psychology are examined in so far as they
arise from modern misunderstandings of human nature and of what a science is.
THEO 331 Old Testament Exegesis Particular books or genres within the canonical Old
Testament will be studied intensively, with reference to the tradition of Patristic exegesis as well
as to what is acceptable in modern methods of hermeneutics. Knowledge of Greek or Hebrew is
recommended but not required.
THEO 332 New Testament Exegesis A portion of the New Testament corpus is studied
according to Patristic and subsequent hermeneutical traditions of the Church; special reference is
made to the problems raised by modern exegesis. Knowledge of Greek is recommended.
THEO/CECS 341 The Ante-Nicene Fathers By reading from the Apostolic Fathers, the
Apologists, Irenaeus, Tertullian, and others, the course traces how Christian thought, life, and
worship developed during the period from the late First Century to the conversion of Constantine
and the first ecumenical council (Nicaea).
THEO/CECS 342 The Post-Nicene Fathers By readings from the Cappadocians, John
Chrysostom, Cyril of Jerusalem, Ambrose, Augustine, Gregory the Great, and others, the course
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traces how Christian thought, life and worship developed from the Council of Nicaea to the end
of the Patristic Age in the West.
THEO 345 Ascetical and Mystical Theology A systematic introduction to the principles of
spiritual theology in the Thomistic tradition. Select classics on the spiritual life, discipline, and
perfection from the Patristic Age through the Catholic Reformation up to the twentieth century
will be studied in the light of these general theological principles. Authors include Saints
Augustine, Basil the Great, Benedict, Francis of Assisi, Dominic, Bonaventure, Thomas
Kempis, Ignatius de Loyola, Teresa of Avila, John of the Cross, Francis de Sales, and Thrse of
Lisieux.
THEO 360 Theology of the Body Pope St. John Paul IIs catechesis on the theology of
the body is studied, along with the writings of St. Edith Stein and some Patristic and Medieval
authors, in an effort to understand the nature of man, his supernatural vocation, and the mystery
of his dual incarnations as male and female. The student will observe the Churchs consistency
in her affirmation of the central role of the body in Christian anthropology and discover how the
Incarnation and the Resurrection pose challenges to dualistic views of the human person found
from ancient times until the present day.
THEO/HIST 401 The Papacy A survey of the development of the Papacy and its impact on
history from St. Peter to the present. Emphasis is placed on institutional growth, the
advancement of papal ecclesiology, major challenges to the papacy, and both the elements and
the effects of papal leadership in the Church as a whole. (Cross-listed in History.)
THEO 402 Ecclesiology The divine origin, structure, mission, and jurisdiction of the One,
Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church are studied from the sources of revelation, the definitions
of the Magisterium, and the speculative syntheses of Aquinas, Bellarmine, Journet, and others.
THEO 404 The Sacraments After a careful examination of the major points which constitute
the traditional tract On the Sacraments in General, following the Summa Theologiae, III, qq.
60-65, the principal sacraments are studied individually from a dogmatic point of view.
Liturgical forms may also be considered insofar as they enrich the theological understanding of
the sacrament.
THEO 411 De Gratia Metaphysical and theological issues are combined for the study of such
classic questions as: the essentials of human nature, the states of that nature, the gratuity of the
supernatural, created and uncreated grace, and the mystery of predestination.
THEO 412 De Novissimis Eschatology concerns the four last things of the individual and of the
world. The general and particular judgment, Purgatory and other Christian mysteries are
considered in relation to the end of man. The course also examines Catholic eschatologys
relationship to modern ideologies which deny, replace or mutate traditional Christian
eschatology.
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THEO/LATN 421 Patristic Latin Several Patristic authors will be examined in this course,
though the focus will be on one major author to be studied in depth. The focal author and work
will vary each time the course is offered. (Cross-listed in Latin)
THEO/GREK 425 Patristic Greek This course includes further New Testament readings, the
Didache, and selections from the Greek Fathers of the first nine centuries of the Christian era.
This course may be repeated for credit. (Cross-listed in Greek)
THEO/HIST 451 The General Councils The course outlines the chief dogmatic
developments from A.D. 325 to 1870 within the changing historical context of the ecumenical
councils. (Cross-listed in History.)
THEO 452 The Second Vatican Council The authentic sense and context of the documents
of Vatican II are explained. Widespread distortions of the Councils doctrines are exposed and
refuted in a close analysis of key texts.
THEO/HIST 481 The History and Nature of Modernism The background of Modernism is
researched in the movements of the 19th century. The organization and program of Modernism is
reconstructed from the private correspondence and memoirs of such key figures as von Hgel,
Blondel, Loisy, Tyrrell, Teilhard de Chardin, Edouard Le Roy, and others. (Cross-listed in
History.)
THEO/PSAE 482 Theology and the Public Order The issues of Church and State,
secularization, and the temporal common good are analyzed in light of the Kingship of Christ,
the divine prerogatives of the Catholic Church, and a sound theological anthropology. Special
attention will be given to the Declaration Dignitatis Humanae of Vatican II. (Cross-listed in
Political Science and Economics.)
THEO 489 Honors Seminar A seminar on a special topic in theology to be determined by the
department chairman in consultation with interested and qualified students. Prerequisites:
Minimum 3.25 GPA and permission of the Department Chairman. (4 credits)
THEO 490-99 Special Topics or Directed Studies in Theology Specially designed courses of
readings in areas not sufficiently covered by another course already in the curriculum.
THEO 512 Senior Seminar and Thesis Guidance is given to the advanced student in
preparing a substantive thesis on a theological topic of his choice, subject to the approval of the
Department Chairman.
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Education for a Lifetime Program
2. Students will demonstrate knowledge of leadership and service and how those virtues can
be applied in their future lives as faithful, informed, and articulate members of Christ's
Church and Society after graduation.
These learning outcomes respect Christendom's mission and strong liberal arts tradition and
establish a commitment to instill in our students greater confidence in their ability to take their
next steps following graduation.
CCOL 101 Education for a Lifetime I. A course designed to orientate students to their life
after graduation. It will give students: the understanding of the purpose of a Liberal Arts
education and how it bears on their future role as men and women who contribute to the
Christian renovation of the temporal order; a knowledge of leadership and service and will show
how these virtues can be fostered in their lives here at Christendom College; and an awareness of
their strengths and weaknesses. This course consists of in-class sessions and workshops in the
Freshman-Sophomore period. (1 credit hour).
CCOL 301 Education for a Lifetime II. A course designed to more practically orient students
to their life after graduation. It will give students an understanding of how the intellectual habit
of mind which is the fruit of Christendoms Liberal Arts education prepares men and women to
contribute to the Christian renovation of the temporal order; knowledge of leadership and service
and how these virtues can be applied in their future lives as faithful, informed, and articulate
members of Christs Church and society after graduation; and understanding of several career
fields suited to their gifts, abilities, and interests and practical. This course consists of in-class
sessions and workshops in the Junior-Senior period. Prerequisite: CCOL 101 or permission of
the ELP director. (1 credit hour).
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Junior Semester in Rome Courses
The Christendom Junior Semester in Rome Program is described above. The following
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HIST 301 Art and Architecture of Rome and Florence This course studies the development
of architecture and the related arts from Classical Antiquity through the Age of the Baroque as
exhibited in the monuments and masterpieces of Rome and Florence. Required for all
Semester-in-Rome-Program students.
ROMA 300 Language, Culture and History of Rome This course is an introduction to the
Language, Culture and History of Rome. It includes an introduction to Modern Italian as a
written and spoken language as well as on-site lectures on matters of cultural and historical
significance. Masterworks from the Classical, Early Christian, and Renaissance periods of
literary history relating to Rome will be read in the very surroundings from which they arose.
Required for all Semester-in-Rome-Program students.
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Teacher Formation Practicum
No more than seven (7) semester hours of Education (EDUC) course credits may be used
to fulfill the B.A . requirements for graduation.
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EDUC 520 Education Seminar Offered in the spring semester. Students attend biweekly
seminars, lectures or workshops given by educational professionals and experienced teachers on
teaching methods and educational theory: e.g., course design and lesson planning, classroom
management, test design, developmental psychology, etc. (1 credit hour) Open to Juniors and
Seniors.
EDUC 521 Teaching Apprentice Practicum The course is taken during the fall or spring
semester of the students senior year. The Practicum lasts for at least twelve (12) weeks, with no
less than six (6) hours per week under the direction of a master teacher and the Director of the
Teacher Formation Program. The Director will conduct at least two workshops each semester
and be available for individual conferences. The teaching apprentice will receive instruction in
lesson planning, classroom management, effective teaching strategies, and evaluation and
testing. The teaching apprentice will first observe and then assist in the daily routines of the
classroom, analyze with the master teacher and/or Director of Teacher Formation lessons
presented by the master teacher, and finally have the opportunity to develop lesson plans and
teach small groups and then the whole class. The apprentice teacher will be observed by the
master teacher and/or the Director of Teacher Formation who will encourage and guide the
apprentice teacher in evaluating the effectiveness of the lessons. (6 credit hours) Prerequisite:
Senior standing. Practicum may not be repeated for credit.
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Advance
Incoming students with an SAT or equivalent higher than 2000 (on the three part
sectioned test) may apply to the Advanced Studies Certificate Program Director for entry into the
Advanced Studies Certificate Program; as may any student with a 3.50 GPA or higher. A
student is required to maintain a GPA of 3.5 or higher to remain in the program.
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14B Undergraduate Admissions
Christendom College is committed to academic and moral excellence. Successful
applicants for admission to Christendom College must show promise of being able to do serious
intellectual work at the college level. There will be no discrimination among applicants on the
basis of sex, race, color, or national origin. While there is a strong Catholic emphasis in all
aspects of the curriculum and life at Christendom College, non-Catholics are encouraged to
apply.
Although the deadline for applications is March 1, students are urged to submit their
applications to the Admissions Committee by January 15. Applications received after March 1
will be considered as space permits. Students will be notified of a decision by April 1. Early
notification may be offered to students who possess strong academic records. These students are
chosen on the basis of their SAT/ACT/CLT scores, class rank, grades, and course of study.
Students selected for early notification will be notified immediately following the Admissions
Committees decision. Students seeking entrance for the Spring semester should submit their
application by January 2.
We strongly recommend that prospective students visit the College. Visiting students are
able to talk with a member of the admissions staff, tour the campus with a student ambassador,
attend classes, meet professors, go to Mass, and dine in the Commons as guests of the College.
The Admissions Office is open on weekdays from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. A student who plans to
visit the College should write or call in advance for an appointment (see address and telephone
numbers above).
An interview at the College is not normally required, but the Admissions Committee may
request one in special cases. Applicants living close enough to the College to be able to come
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conveniently for an interview are strongly encouraged to do so, not only so they may be
evaluated, but so they may have a personal contact and experience with the College.
The Early Action Option allows the candidate to apply for admission based on six
semesters of high school work; however, seventh semester grades should be submitted if
available. Early Action applications must be received by December 1. Notification of academic
scholarship is sent by December 15. Notification of financial aid is sent after the financial aid
application and PPY tax returns have been submitted.
(for the CLT exam). The examination code numbers for Christendom College are 5691
for the SAT, 4339 for the ACT (there is no code for the CLT).
7. Applicants should feel free to present additional materials, or to explain indicators which they
believe do not adequately reflect their abilities.
Students who have attended other colleges and universities must submit those credentials
that are required of all applicants. In addition, they must have official transcripts sent from each
college and university attended. Upon request, a prospective students college transcript will be
evaluated for credits transferable to Christendom College. The College will inform all transfer
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students upon acceptance, or no later than Registration Day, of the amount of credit that will
transfer.
Application for acceptance of credits earned from other institutions prior to matriculation
at Christendom College should be made at the time of application for admission. The Colleges
transfer credit policy follows:
non-liberal arts courses are hereby excluded, e.g., mechanical arts, fine arts, vocational
training and specifically pre-professional programs in such fields as business, agriculture,
health services, etc.
4. The College will count against its core requirements only those credits in the above categories
which match the said requirements in content and, at the discretion of the Academic
Dean, for compatibility with the Colleges mission. Students must be prepared to give
clear accounts of the content of any courses they wish to present in transfer to the
College. Students should be aware that courses they have taken which match
Christendom courses in terms of subjects covered may in some cases be disallowed in
transfer because the point of view was so different as to fail to accomplish some of the
important purposes, relative to the Colleges Mission, of the corresponding Christendom
course.
5. Transfer of credits toward a major at the College is determined by the appropriate department
chairman on the recommendation of the Academic Dean, who may routinely act within
limits which the respective chairmen have set for their departments. No more than nine
(9) credits will be accepted in transfer toward a major at the College.
6. A maximum of ninety (90) semester hours may be accepted in transfer towards fulfillment of
degree requirements at Christendom College.
7. Credits earned more than ten (10) years before matriculation at Christendom College will not
be accepted. Academic credit is not granted for life experience.
8. In all questions about the acceptance of transfer credit, the decision of the Academic Dean is
final.
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The College may grant both placement and credit toward the undergraduate degree
through the Advanced Placement Examinations of the College Entrance Examination Board.
Advanced placement credit may be given for American History, Art History, Biology,
Chemistry, Computer Science, English Literature and Composition, European History, French
Language, American Government and Politics, Latin, Mathematics, and Physics.
Christendom does not award credit based on College Level Entrance Placement (CLEP)
tests; however, in special cases CLEP test results may be considered by the Academic Dean in
granting an exemption from a required course.
International students follow all of the same application procedures except that they do
not need to take or submit standardized test scores in order to be admitted. Please note, though,
that the College only gives academic scholarship to students with certain standardized test
scores. If an international student wishes to receive an academic scholarship, he would be
advised to submit standardized test scores. Applicants whose native language is not English
should arrange to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) from the Educational
Testing Service and have the results sent to the Admissions Office of Christendom College.
Tests of Written English (TWE) and of Spoken English (TSE) are also recommended, though not
required. Further information about TOEFL, TWE, and TSE may be obtained from the
Educational Testing Service. At the Colleges discretion, a test of its own composition may be
substituted for the above named tests. The College may require its own English competency test
of any applicant.
International students must be prepared to accept full financial responsibility for their
studies and residence while at the College. An official bank statement indicating the availability
of funds to support the student for one academic year must be sent with the completed
application.
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Part-time Students
Students are normally not admitted as part-time students and are never admitted on an
audit-only basis. Part-time and audit status are reserved for continuing students who need to
complete their degree requirements. Students enrolled full time are not permitted to drop to part-
time status (fewer than 12 semester hours) without the permission of the Academic Dean and the
Dean of Student Life. Continued enrollment as a part-time student must be approved each
semester by the Academic Dean and the Dean of Student Life.
Part-time students may not receive scholarships or other financial aid from the College.
Students are not normally admitted on non-degree status. This status is normally
reserved for those students who have already completed a bachelors degree and who have
specific and limited academic objectives. Continued enrollment as a non-degree student must be
approved each semester by the Academic Dean and the Dean of Student Life.
Readmission
Students seeking readmission after academic dismissal must submit a written request to
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the Admissions Committee stating their reasons for wishing readmission and provide sufficient
evidence of improved academic ability. Such evidence normally includes two semesters of
college-level work in a sciences and humanities curriculum with a minimum GPA of 3.0.
Students readmitted after academic dismissal are admitted on academic probation , and must
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achieve a minimum 2.0 semester GPA to continue their studies at Christendom College.
Students seeking readmission after dismissal for student-life issues must submit a written
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request to the Admissions Committee stating their reasons for wishing readmission and provide
sufficient evidence of improvement. The Admissions Committee, together with the Dean of
Student Life, will consider the request and set conditions for re-admission.
Students in good standing who interrupt their matriculation at Christendom College for
whatever reason must submit a written request to the Admissions Committee stating their
reasons for requesting readmission. In evaluating the request, the Admissions Committee will
take note of the students past college performance and may request additional information and
set conditions for re-admission.
Students are bound by the academic requirements of the Christendom College Bulletin in
force at the time of their latest matriculation.
Deposit
Admitted students are requested to confirm their intention to enroll by submitting a $500
deposit. This deposit will be refunded in full for written cancellations received by May 1. This
deposit holds any financial or scholarship assistance awarded by the College.
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The Financial Aid Overview
Over 70% of the Students at Christendom College receive some form of financial
assistance every year. The College has a strong commitment to providing a comprehensive
financial assistance program to its students. Students may be eligible for one or more of the
following forms of financial assistance:
Need Assistance-loans and scholarships based on students establishing calculated need
with the College.
Merit Assistance-scholarships based on students college test scores and academic
performance
Family Plan Discounts-based on simultaneous enrollment of siblings.
All students have the opportunity to earn extra money from student jobs at the College. Students
can apply for student jobs on a competitive basis through the Colleges Student Employment
Website (SEW).
Students are awarded financial assistance after acceptance as full time students by the
College and upon the submission of a completed Financial Aid Application given below with
required documents.
April 1 is the priority application deadline for the fall semester.
December 15 is the priority application deadline for the spring semester.
The Financial Aid Office stands ready to work with students and parents on paying and
financing a college education.
The College does accept Federal Social Security and Veterans Benefits which are not
Title IV funds. These are considered direct awards to the student. The College is also an active
participant in the Yellow Ribbon Program for Veterans.
Students who establish calculated financial need with the College will qualify for
assistance through the Colleges loan and scholarship program to meet their tuition costs.
Loan Program: The amount of a loan offered to a student is based on the students
calculated need established with the College. Loan payments of interest and principal are
deferred until one year (the grace year) after the student leaves the College. Students who
pay their loan off during the grace year (which for most students is the year after the
student graduates) effectively can get an interest free loan. Deferments are also available
for graduate school, medical and law school, as well as for those students who begin
formation for the priesthood or religious life. Students entering religious orders and who
take final vows of poverty, chastity and obedience are eligible for loan forgiveness from
the College. Students who pursue missionary or other lay apostolic work also qualify for
some deferments.
Need based Scholarship Program: Students with calculated need are offered, in addition
to loans above, monies from the Colleges scholarship fund to meet tuition costs. This
assists students in keeping the burden of loans accumulating over four years to a
manageable size. Students who remain enrolled in the College over four years will see
their loan to scholarship ratio decrease in favor of a greater portion of scholarship monies
as they progress toward graduation.
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Family Plan Discounts
The College maintains a Student Employment Website (SEW) which lists jobs available
each semester at the College. All students may apply for these jobs. Students are hired on a
competitive basis. These jobs help students earn money to meet College expenses. The College
cannot guarantee any student a job, but most students wanting a job do eventually get hired
within their first two semesters at the College. Job applicants typically outnumber student jobs
available in any given semester, but persistence and good performance do pay off. Students can
gain valuable work experience through the Colleges student employment program.
Financial Policy
Full tuition rate is for the standard course load of 12 to 19 credit hours per semester.
Under 12 credit hours is part time; over 19 hours is overload. Part-time students (taking fewer
than 12 credit hours per semester) are charged tuition by the credit hour. Students taking over 19
credit hours per semester are charged full tuition plus overload tuition by the credit hour. Part-
time students are normally charged the full student activity fee.
Students who believe that they have a medical dietary need must contact the Vice
President for Operations to request that a Student Medical Dietary Requirement Form be mailed
to them. This form must be signed by a parent or guardian and a medical doctor. A registered
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dietician will evaluate the students dietary need and determine whether that students needs can
or cannot be met by the Colleges menu or variation thereof. The College will in turn notify the
student of the decision prior to the commencement of the Fall Semester. For students to be
considered for this service, the Student Medical Dietary Requirement Form must be received by
the College no later than August 1st.
Outstanding Accounts
On payment plan accounts, a late fee on past due amounts will be assessed on any
payment not received by the fifteenth of each month.
No report cards, transcripts, or diplomas are issued for students who are not in good
standing with the Student Billing Office; similarly, students are not permitted to register unless
they are in good standing with the Student Billing Office from previous semesters. This means
that all money owed to the college or any of its subdivisions, however small the amount, must
have been paid. It is the responsibility of withdrawing and graduating students to clear
themselves with the Student Billing Office before they leave so that they are in good standing to
receive grades or degrees, and to have transcripts and other records sent whenever they desire.
Refund Policy
For new students, the tuition and housing deposits made in advance of the Fall Semester
will be refunded in full for written cancellations received by May 1. For returning students, the
tuition and housing deposits made in advance of the Fall Semester will be refunded in full for
written cancellations received by June 1. For Spring Semester students, the tuition and housing
deposits will be refunded in full for written cancellations received by December 1.
Application fees, registration fees, recreation fees, technology fees, and student activities
fees are not refundable.
Students who leave or withdraw from the College before the end of the semester and who
file a Withdrawal Notice outlined in the next section are eligible for refund of semester tuition
and room and board payments due on Registration Day according to the following schedule:
Withdrawal Refund
A student who is physically or psychologically disabled for the remainder of the semester
as certified by a legally qualified physician, psychiatrist, or surgeon (M.D.) may qualify for
additional refund over the schedule stated above. The student or parent must request a Medical
Withdrawal Certification Form for the physician, surgeon, or psychiatrist to complete and return
to the College to qualify for any additional refund.
Refunds will be processed 30 days after the date of withdrawal given on the Withdrawal
Notice, and in the case of medical withdrawal, after 30 days of receipt of the signed and
completed Medical Withdrawal Certification Form.
Withdrawal Procedure
Students who withdraw from the College before the end of the semester must have an
exit interview and file a Withdrawal Notice with the Dean of Student Life before leaving
campus. It is strongly recommended that the student also see the Student Billing Office to
determine the financial consequences of withdrawal. The date of withdrawal used to compute a
refund is the date that a completed Withdrawal Notice is filed with and dated by the Dean of
Student Life.
In the case of a medical withdrawal, the student or parent should, within a reasonable
time, submit a written letter requesting withdrawal to the Dean of Student Life and complete and
return a Medical Withdrawal Certification Form. In this case, the date of withdrawal will be
determined from the day of departure from campus because of the medical condition or
emergency. This assumes the student has not returned to campus for any overnight stay or class
attendance during this period.
This process of withdrawal is distinct from the determination of the final course grades at
the time of withdrawal. Normally the grades earned at the end of the semester are assigned to
students who withdraw from the College, except in cases of withdrawal for a grave reason of
health or other serious incapacity: see above, Withdrawal from Courses After the Drop Period .
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Required Deposits
All currently enrolled students who plan to return to Christendom the following semester
must register for that upcoming semester approximately two-thirds of the way through the
current semester on a date posted by the Registrar. On that day, students are required to place a
$200.00 tuition deposit to hold classroom space and financial aid and scholarship awards, and a
$200.00 room and board deposit to hold dormitory space and board privilege.
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A $100.00 room cleaning and damage deposit is required of each student. At the end of
the academic year, upon inspection by College officials, if the room is judged to be adequately
cleaned and free from damage, the deposit will be carried into the next academic year. Any
student charged for cleaning or room damage which is deducted from the deposit is expected to
bring the deposit amount back up to $100.00. Should a student leave the college, the deposit will
be refunded after the room has been inspected and deductions, if any, are made.
During the school year, it is the responsibility of each student to report any damage to his
or her room to the Dean of Student Life. The Dean of Student Life will then write up a damage
report to notify the Vice President of Operations. Unless the College is notified in advance by
the damage report, the responsibility for damage, the cost of repair, replacement, and cleaning,
will be divided equally among the students occupying a dormitory room or suite.
There is limited parking on campus. Students are required to park only in designated
areas. Students, resident or non-resident, are required to pay a parking fee and register their
vehicles with the Student Life Office on registration day. A Christendom College parking
sticker will be issued to students to display on their vehicles. Students will be fined for parking
in any but their designated area or for not registering their vehicles. Repeated traffic or parking
violations may result in forfeiture of the on-campus parking privilege.
Textbook Costs
The average cost of textbooks for a full-time college student in the United States is well
in excess of $1000 per year. Christendom College, without compromising the quality of required
texts, actively seeks to minimize textbook costs whenever possible. The cost of required books
at Christendom, however, normally runs between $250 and $400 per semester, or approximately
$50-$70 per course. Textbooks for certain mathematics and science courses, however, may
exceed $70 per course, though they, like some relatively expensive foreign language texts, may
be good for two or more semester courses.
Students should budget a minimum of $400 per semester for required books and an
additional $50 per semester for writing supplies; freshmen should budget a bit more. Students
must be prepared to purchase all required texts. Failure to have at hand a text required for a
course will result in serious academic difficulties in that course.
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Summer Programs
Experience Christendom Summer Program
for High School Seniors
Every summer, Christendom offers summer programs for rising high school seniors so
they can get a taste of Christendoms liberal arts program and campus life. The students take
courses in Theology, Philosophy, Literature, and History which lead them to explore and strive
to answer such questions as, What is the relationship between faith and reason? What is the
good and why must we choose it? In what ways do noble characters in literature convey
transcendent truths by their actions? How can we work to restore all things in Christ?
Not only will students enjoy the pastoral tranquility of the Christendom campus, they will
also paddle down the glorious Shenandoah River and explore picturesque Blue Ridge Mountain
trails. There also will be time for pick-up volleyball and basketball games and much more. Mass
and Confession are available daily. For further information visit www.christendom.edu or
contact the Admissions Office, 800-877-5456 or [email protected].
Summer Institutes
G. K. Chesterton once said that the problem with modern man was not that he believed in
nothing, but that he would believe in anything. Today a widespread hunger for vital religious
experience whether through cults, New Age movements, or more traditional religious forms
bears witness to the exhaustion of modern secular humanism. The ever-present danger, as
Chesterton suggests, is that men will subscribe to the easy answers of the cults or a liberalized
Christianity that merely baptizes current cultural suppositions, rather than accept the challenge
of Christ and His Church. In Christefideles Laici, the late Pope John Paul II wrote:
The Summer Institutes have included the following topics: Natural Theology:
Metaphysics and Philosophy of God (1987), The Catholic Artist in the Modern World & The
Classic Tradition of Catholic Spirituality (1988), The Incarnation and the Dynamics of Western
Culture (1989), Apologetics for the 90s: Defending the Faith in the Post-Modern Age (1990-
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1992), Evangelization Within the Church (1993), Defending the Faith: The Catechism of the
Catholic Church (1994), Holy Scripture: Restoring the Catholic Tradition (1995), The Wisdom
of St. Thomas: The Perennial Philosophy for the Third Millennium (1996), Patristics and the
Catholic Tradition (1997), The Gospel of Jesus Christ (2000), A Spiritual Odyssey (2001),
Building the Civilization of Love (2002), and John Paul IIs Prophetic Vision for the Renewal of
Christian Culture (2004), The Eucharist: Source and Summit of the Life and Mission of the
Church (2005), Pope Benedict XVI: A New Pontificate (2006), Marriage and the Family (2007),
The Role of the Laity in the Catholic Church (2008), St. Paul: His Spiritual and Scriptural
Contributions to the Church (2009), Encountering Christ: Apologetics and the New
Evangelization (2015), and Restoring the Divine Plan for Marriage & The Family (2017).
The vision of the Study Abroad Programs is inspired by the seminal work of the Catholic
historian, Christopher Dawson, who wrote this in The Historic Reality of Christian Culture:
The tradition [of Christian culture] exists today, for though the Church no longer
inspires and dominates the external culture of the modern world, it still remains
the guardian of all the riches of its own inner life. . . . If society were once again
Christian . . . this sacred tradition would once more flow out into the world and
fertilize the culture of societies yet unborn. Thus the movement toward Christian
culture is at one and the same time a voyage into the unknown, in the course of
which new worlds of human experience will be discovered, and a return to our
own fatherlandto the sacred tradition of the Christian past which flows
underneath the streets and cinemas and skyscrapers of the new Babylon as the
tradition of patriarchs and prophets flowed beneath the palaces and amphitheaters
of Imperial Rome.
Inaugurated in 1992, the Christendom College Summer Study Abroad Programs offer
three weeks of intensive study during which students achieve an integrated understanding of
Catholic culture in the Catholic regions of Europe. As part of the programs, three courses
totaling six semester hours of college credit are offered.
St. Columcille Institute is a Summer Study Abroad program held for three weeks in the north of
Irelend. It offers an intensive study of the Catholic culture and history of Ireland. Travels
include visits to early monastic sites highlighting Irelands contribution to Western Civilization.
Emphasis is placed upon how the living Catholic Faith can deeply form a peoples identity. Six
hours of college credit are offered in Irish history and literature and Catholic theology through
three two-credit hour courses which may be counted as elective credits toward the fulfillment of
the one hundred twenty-eight semester hours required for the Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) degree, but
not toward a major.
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Christendom Press
Because Christendom College is committed to the defense of the Catholic Faith, to the
renewal of Catholic intellectual life, and also to the development of the lay apostolate, the
College established a publications program as part of its mission. By means of over fifty books
now in print, Christendom Press provides a forum for those sympathetic to the Colleges vision
of the orthodox Catholic liberal arts tradition and the relationship between faith and culture.
Besides Dr. Carrolls titles, Christendom Press publishes a variety of quality Catholic
books in spirituality, theology, history, philosophy, political theory, literature and apologetics.
The Press also makes available Summer Institute and other Christendom conferences on audio
and video, as well as selected videotapes of EWTN programs featuring Christendom president
Dr. Timothy T. ODonnell, thereby making the colleges apostolic endeavors available to the
widest possible audience.
Besides Dr. Carroll, the Press features such noted Catholic authors as L.Brent Bozell, Fr.
Robert J. Fox, Etienne Gilson, Fr. Stanley L. Jaki, Peter Kreeft, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn,
William E. May, Fr. William G. Most, Fr. George William Rutler, Mark Shea, Fr. Claude
Tresmontant, and many others.
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Notre Dame Graduate School
Of Christendom College
The Notre Dame Graduate School (NDGS) is Christendom Colleges graduate
school of theology. Its Master-level programs offer a comprehensive grasp of the
Catholic Faith, preparing students for advanced graduate studies and for various
ministries in the Catholic Church. Its flexible and accommodating program allows
students of all ages and from all over the world to attend either art-time or full-time, year-
round, summers-only, or even at a distance via the online program.
An Apostolic Institution
In 1969, the Sisters of Notre Dame in Chardon, Ohio, and Msgr. Eugene Kevane,
then Dean of the School of Education at the Catholic University of America, founded the
Notre Dame Institute in Middleburg, Virginia. Originally, its purpose was to train
religious sisters from various communities to teach Catholic doctrine to other teachers,
religious and lay.
In 1971, John Cardinal Wright, Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy,
established the Notre Dame Pontifical Catechetical Institute as an official catechetical
institute recognized and authorized by the Holy See.
In order to expand its mission, the Notre Dame Institute began to accept priests
and lay men and women into the program. Additionally, the Bishop of Arlington
entrusted the Institute with the educational training and pastoral formation of candidates
for the permanent diaconate.
Upon the recommendation of the Boards of both the Notre Dame Institute and
Christendom College, the two institutions merged on February 1, 1997. The Notre Dame
Institute became the Notre Dame Graduate School of Christendom College.
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In 2006, the Christendom Graduate School combined with the Institute on
Religious Life to begin offering the Vita Consecrata Institute, an annual summer program
of study and renewal for religious, as part of the NDGS summer program. Further,
following an hiatus in the Arlington Diocese deaconate recruitment program, the
Christendom Graduate School is once again educating the diaconal candidates for the
Diocese of Arlington. In 2009, the Graduate School began offering its courses in online
format for distance students, and in 2010 received approval to offer an all-online masters
degree.
Location
The Summer Program of the Graduate School is located at the main campus of
Christendom College where residence and dining halls make it possible for students from
all over the world to attend.
Graduate Programs
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The Apostolic Catechetical Diploma Program
Christendom College offers a Graduate Summer Program for those students who
wish to pursue graduate theological studies during the summer. Both the Master of Arts
in Theological Studies degree and the Apostolic Catechetical Diploma may be earned at
the Summer Program, over the course of at least four summers. It is a residential
program, held at the main Christendom College campus just outside of Front Royal,
Virginia, enabling people from all over the United States and abroad to attend the
Christendom Graduate School. This program is popular with students who are not able to
move to the Northern Virginia area for the regular (fall/spring) graduate program, and
with teachers and others who have summers off. Of course many of the fall/spring
graduate students also attend the summer program, accelerating their studies by going
year-round.
The NDGS Summer Program runs for six weeks, ending the last week of July. A
full cycle of courses is offered each summer, along with several elective courses. Special
guest professors often supplement the Christendom faculty for the Summer Program.
The beautiful riverside campus with its full range of recreational possibilities provides a
perfect milieu for the study, prayer, and good times that make up Christian academic
community life.
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The Vita Consecrata Institute
For those students who are not interested in a masters degree, the Christendom
Graduate School offers several certificate programs. Students may earn certificates in
dogmatic theology, moral theology, catechetics, consecrated life, and scriptural studies.
Certificate students take the same challenging and informative courses as degree-seeking
students. Even students without a bachelors degree can earn a certificate, although
graduate credit for the courses can only be granted to those who submit proof of a
bachelors degree. Usually, five, 3-credit courses are required for a certificate. Several
of the Christendom certificates may be earned online.
Online MA Program
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Admissions requirements and procedures are the same for online/distance and on-
campus students. Online students have the same easy access to academic advisement, to
the graduate school administrative staff, and to the grad school professors as on-campus
students have. The Christendom Libraries are committed to accommodating distance
students and providing them full use of the library resources and services for their studies
and research.
Students may also enroll in online courses as casual students without working
towards a degree, or may audit online courses without earning graduate credit. Students
may also earn a certificate online, or the Apostolic Catechetical Diploma. Christendom
online courses qualify for catechist certification in many dioceses, and for teaching
licensure and re-certification in most states. Many students take them for adult Faith
formation or for personal enrichment. Casual students seeking graduate credit for transfer
to another graduate school must provide proof of a bachelors degree.
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Board of Directors
Manassas, Virginia
Mrs. Mary Beth Riordan
178B
McLean, Virginia
Mr. Robert K. Scrivener , Secretary of the Board
Davidsonville, Maryland
Mr. Mark Swartzberg
Franklin Lakes, NJ
Mr. Thomas C. West, Jr.
Purcellville, VA
Miss Luanne Zurlo
New York, New York
Christendom College is the d.b.a. name for the Christendom Educational Corporation, a
non-profit corporation of the Commonwealth of Virginia. The Board of Directors of the
Christendom Educational Corporation is a group of interested persons who meet
regularly by law to oversee the operation of Christendom College, its promotion and
finances.
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Advisors to the Board
Mrs. Mary Ellen Bork
McLean, Virginia
Mrs. Bernadette Casey-Smith
Roslyn Harbor, New York
Mr. Robert Crnkovich
McLean, Virginia
Dr. Philip T. Crotty
Brighton, Massachusetts
Mr. John De Matteo
Wellesley, Massachusetts
Mr. Daniel Gorman
Winter Park, Florida
Mrs. Joan M. Janaro
Arlington, Virginia
Mrs. Katherine McAvoy
Arlington, Massachusetts
Rev. C. John McCloskey, III
Menlo Park, California
Mr. John McNeice
Canton, Massachusetts
Mr. Joseph Melancon
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Rev. Robert Morey
Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
The Honorable James Nicholson
McLean, Virginia
Rev. George W. Rutler
New York, New York
Mr. Mark Ryland
Great Falls, Virginia
Rev. William P. Saunders
Potomac Falls, Virginia
The Honorable Rick Santorum
Great Falls, Virginia
Mr. Owen T. Smith
Roslyn Harbor, New York
Mrs. Marjorie P. Teetor
Great Falls, Virginia
Mr. David A. Vicinanzo, Esq.
Concord, New Hampshire
Mr. George S. Weigel
Rockville, Maryland
Mr. Thomas L. Young
Toledo, Ohio
Dr. Robert P. George
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Princeton, New Jersey
Mr. Robert Mylod
Ponte Verde, Florida
Mr. Eugene Zurlo
Kiawah Island, South Carolina
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Administration
President of the College
Timothy T. ODonnell, S.T.D., KGCHS
Executive Vice President
Ken Ferguson, C.P.A.
Vice President for Academic Affairs
Gregory Townsend, Ph.D.
Vice President of Operations and Facility Planning
Michael S. Foeckler, B.A.
Vice President for Enrollment and Marketing
Thomas L. McFadden, Jr., M.A.
Academic Dean of the College of Liberal Arts
Mark Wunsch, Ph.D.
Academic Dean of the Notre Dame Graduate School
Robert J. Matava, Ph.D.
Dean of Student Life
Christopher A. Vander Woude, B.A.
Director of Residence Life
Amanda Graf, M.A.
Chaplain
Reverend Marcus Pollard, B.A., M.A.
Director of Admissions
Samuel J. Phillips, B.A.
Director of Christendom Libraries
Andrew V. Armstrong, M.S.L.S.
Director of Computer Services
Douglas S. Briggs, B.A.
Director of Christendom Press
Andrew G. Beer, Ph.D.
Financial Aid Officer
Alisa L. Polk
Registrar
Walter A. Janaro, B.A.
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Undergraduate Full-Time Faculty
Andrew V. Armstrong, Director of the Library
B.A., George Washington University
M.S.L.S., The Catholic University of America
Andrew G. Beer, Assistant Professor, Chair Department of Classical and Early Christian
Studies
B.A., Hillsdale College
M.A., Bryn Mawr College
Ph.D., University of Virginia
Patrick Bracy Bersnak, Associate Professor, Chair Department of Political Science and
Economics, Director Politics Practica Program
B.A., Miami University
MA., Ph.D., The Catholic University of America
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Douglas Flippen, Professor, Department of Philosophy
B.A., University of St. Thomas, Houston
M.S.L., Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies
M.A., Ph.D., University of Toronto
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B.A., Ph.D., University of Dallas
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M.A., Ph.D., Yale University
Gregory Townsend, Associate Professor, Mathematics and Natural Science and Vice
President for Academic Affairs
S.T.B., Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum), Rome
M.A., Notre Dame Apostolic Catechetical Institute
B.Sc., M.Sc., Ph.D., Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Kevin Tracy, Assistant Professor, Department of Classical and Early Christian Studies
B.A (Hons)., Swarthmore College
Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania
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