SPRING 2026 COURSES
| Course Number | Name | Credits | Instructor | Schedule |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAEQ-207 |
Political Theology
This course examines religion through a liberation theology lens—Black Liberation Theology, Womanism, and Queer Theology. Liberation theologians argue that religion and politics cannot, and should not, be separated. Liberation theology holds that genuinely following God requires working for justice in the real world, especially for the poor and oppressed. It views social inequality and poverty not as unfortunate accidents but as results of human-made systems that must be confronted. | 3 | Reagans | Spring 2026 Wednesdays 3:00pm-5:00pm Online Synchronous |
| BAEQ-603 |
Spiritual and Personal Formation
By the end of this course, students will be better equipped to articulate their spiritual journeys, develop sustainable practices for personal growth, and discern how spiritual formation informs leadership, service, and life beyond the classroom. | 3 | Davidson | Spring 2026 Thursdays 3:00pm - 5:00pm Online Synchronous |
| BAEQ-607 |
In Search of Soul: Howard Thurman & Quest for Democratic Space
This course explores Howard Thurman’s lifelong “quest for democratic space,” a journey he saw as synonymous with “America in Search of a Soul.’ We will analyze Thurman not just as a theologian, but as a mystic-prophet whose unique “strange freedom’ enabled him to lead a divided nation. The course traces the arc of his vision, beginning with The Roots of a ‘Strange Freedom’ to understand how the prophet was forged. From there, we explore The ‘Creative Encounter,’ analyzing how Thurman’s deep mysticism and confrontation with sin produced a transformative gospel for the oppressed. We will then follow this inward journey into the public square, investigating his ‘Bold Adventure’ of forging interracial community at the Fellowship Church for All Peoples amidst the ‘Luminous Darkness’ of American segregation. Finally, culminate by exploring The Disciplines of the Spirit as the essential practice for healing the nation’s soul and realizing his ultimate vision for a “community of God”. The course would have four parts: | 3 | Wright-Riggins | Spring 2026 Fridays 12:40pm-3:30pm Online Synchronous |
| BS-1250 |
Using Biblical Language
Students will be introduced to the basic elements of biblical Hebrew and Greek. This course is designed for those seeking to understand the components of the biblical languages for ministerial purposes, however, any who are interested in Hebrew and Greek are encouraged to attend. The course content and curriculum will include preparation in the use of Hebrew and Greek lexical aids, as introduction to the fundamentals of linguistic theory, and exposure to exegetical and hermeneutical methods. This course is a requirement for all BST students; however, students from across the Graduate Theological Union are welcome and encouraged to take this course. This course will be a hybrid format. | 3 | Flesher | Spring 2026 Wednesdays 5:10pm - 8:00pm Hybrid |
| DM-6015 |
DMin in Thesis
Credit hours for preparation of dissertation. | 3 | BST Faculty | Spring 2026 |
| DM-6046 |
Research Methods
This core Doctor of Ministry course has been created specifically to train DMin students in creating viable research methods for their DMin projects that will generate reliable qualitative data. Evaluation based on seminar participation, research training exercises, a book review, and a first draft of the D.Min. research proposal. Course will meet throughout the semester in remote synchronous format using Zoom and include asynchronous elements on Moodle. Typically taken six months after DM-6078 Becoming Culturally Responsive: Part I. | 3 | Torgerson | Spring 2026 Wednesdays 5:10pm - 8:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| DM-6666 |
Continuing Fee
For BST DMin students only, upon completion of coursework until completion of dissertation. | 6 | BST Faculty | Spring 2026 |
| FE-2109 |
Internship II
Students must have an approved internship to engage in supervised ministry placement for MDIV and MCL degree requirements. Format | 3 | BST Faculty | Spring 2026 Mondays 4:00pm-5:30pm Online |
| HM-2508 |
Prophetic Preaching
This preaching course will be operated in a hybrid model. In addition to remote (Zoom) engagements for theoretical and practical elements of prophetic preaching, the class will have required offline onsite visits, including preaching experiences, to have firsthand experiences of prophetic ministries. For those living outside the SF Bay Area, special arrangements may be made in consultation with instructors for them to visit sites of their local cities. By doing so, this course will identify several central issues around prophetic preaching in contemporary societies. Students will preach and videotape three sermons and post them on Moodle for feedback. The students are expected to bring together class discussions and field trip experiences to their sermons and their vision for prophetic preaching in their own ministry. | 3 | Park/Thompson | Spring 2026 Tuesdays 6:10pm-9:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| HM-2600 |
Resistance, Rhetoric and Public Square
We will define rhetoric and how the art form informs homiletics and strategies in sacred, secular, and public square settings. For this course, we will limit our focus to sermons delivered by Gardner C. Taylor in various settings. We will read and view some of his sermons, respond, and react to his pulpit work and consider the rhetorical context(s). Group discussion will enhance our understanding of topic and written papers will be utilized to evaluate our academic proficiency. Class will be hybrid, Auditors welcome. | 3 | Evans | Spring 2026 Mondays 2:10pm-5:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| HM-3300 |
Evangelicalism & Preaching
This course surveys the historical roots of evangelicalism, examines preaching from historical, theological, and homiletical perspectives in both the United States and Korea, and helps students develop strategies to meet the needs of their pastoral ministry, with a focus on the prophetic role, in today’s cultural and ecclesiastical contexts. The class will be taught in Korean in a hybrid, asynchronous-synchronous model: five Zoom sessions and weekly asynchronous engagement. Note, the first meeting of this course begins on Thursday, March 5th. | 3 | Park | Spring 2026 Thursdays 2:10pm - 5:00pm Zoom |
| HM-4258 |
Prophetic Preaching
This preaching course will be operated in a hybrid model. In addition to remote (Zoom) engagements for theoretical and practical elements of prophetic preaching, the class will have required offline onsite visits, including preaching experiences, to have firsthand experiences of prophetic ministries. For those living outside the SF Bay Area, special arrangements may be made in consultation with instructors for them to visit sites of their local cities. By doing so, this course will identify several central issues around prophetic preaching in contemporary societies. Students will preach and videotape three sermons and post them on Moodle for feedback. The students are expected to bring together class discussions and field trip experiences to their sermons and their vision for prophetic preaching in their own ministry. | 3 | Park/Thompson | Spring 2026 Tuesdays 6:10pm-9:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| HM-4300 |
One of a Kind: Gardner C. Taylor and His Homiletic Method
Gardner C. Taylor was considered one of the most effective 20th century’s preachers in the English-speaking world. Taylor was a one of a kind (sui generis) preacher, who was broadly known for his Victorian eloquence, perfect diction, his volcanic sermonic eruptions and at other times, he was known for speaking just above a whisper. In this course, we will study his homiletic method. This includes his hermeneutic, narrative development, theology, rhetoric, sermon structure and delivery. In addition, we will listen to a variety of Taylor’s sermons from points in his long career and different settings, (i.e., academic and church contexts) and attempt to locate differences, similarities, and effectiveness. | 3 | Evans | Spring 2026 Tuesdays 2:10pm-5:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| HM-8135 |
Palabra Transformadora
Esta materia explora la predicación como un acto teológico, ético y político que busca la transformación personal y social. Este curso de predicación está diseñado para que los estudiantes aprendan los elementos teóricos y prácticos de la predicación contemporánea de diversas tradiciones. Se abordará la predicación como diálogo entre texto, contexto y comunidad. Habrá conferencias, escritos semanales y debates sobre temas relacionados con la comprensión actual de la predicación en contextos en constante evolución, y los estudiantes predicarán en clase. | 3 | L. DaValle | Spring 2026 Tuesdays 6:10pm-9:00pm Online Synchronous |
| HSPR-2501 |
Rethinking Mission
The term mission can sound outdated in contemporary theological discourse, often evoking notions of imposed Christian imperialism. But is that the true meaning of mission? Has the antiquated understanding truly disappeared, or do its specters still linger today? This course begins with classical conceptions of mission and traces their development into contemporary theological and ministerial contexts. Doctoral students may participate with an upgrade. | 3 | Kang | Spring 2026 Thursdays 5:10pm-8:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| IDS-2050 |
Theology and Ministry in the Age of Migration
This course is designed for master’s students to help them a) explore the diverse patterns of global migration in today’s context and b) discuss why migration should be brought to the center of theological reflection. Because the course integrates studies from different fields, students are expected to approach the subject in an interdisciplinary way. Doctoral students might join with an upgrade. | 3 | Kang | Spring 2026 Mondays 2:10pm-5:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| IDS-4300 |
Capstone Innovation Project
As a culmination of the course work and internship experiences in the MDiv program, this course provides students an opportunity to design, develop, and implement a ministerial project in their areas of interest based on biblical, theological, and practical foundations. With the feedback of fellow students, mentors, and professors, students write a 20-25 page-long Ministry Innovation Project to identify and address a social, ecclesial, or systemic issue of need to which this project responds theoretically and practically. Students will also present an abbreviated version of this Project in a form of video so that it may be shared with a wider audience. | 3 | Park | Spring 2026 Wednesdays 6:10pm - 9:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| IDS-8102 |
Navigating the Complexities, part 2
Creative Church & Community, Spirituality & Resilience, Justice & Reconciliation, Border-Crossing. These are all topics that will be addressed through the lenses of Bible, Theology, Ethics, History, and Praxis as a means of introducing and preparing the online student to /for the work of theological study and reflection. In part 1 of this two-part, year-long, MTS core online introduction the student will engage key terms, concepts, and methodologies; in part 2 (spring semester) the student will make application of all of the above to a topic of their own choosing. [This is the only core course for the BST MTS=Master’s in Theological Studies and a supporting course for BST DMIN students] | 3 | Flesher/Faculty | Spring 2026 Asynchronous/Online |
| LIEQ-405 |
Liderazgo y Cultura
Este curso estará enfocado en orientar a los estudiantes hacia una comprensión básica sobre las diferentes culturas como una realidad contextual, la influencia de esta realidad en nuestro que hacer como iglesia y el rol del liderazgo eclesial en medio de los desafíos de la diversidad. Se hará énfasis especial sobre el desempeño activo y el compromiso de los líderes cristianos en medio del multiculturalismo, como parte de su llamado. | 3 | Morataya | Spring 2026 Thursdays 5:00pm-8:00pm Online Synchronous |
| LIEQ-502 |
Fe en Contexto Cultural
Este curso examina la relación dinámica entre fe y cultura, mostrando cómo las tradiciones religiosas moldean a las sociedades y cómo los contextos históricos y lingüísticos transforman las expresiones de fe. Mediante diálogo ecuménico y el estudio de temas como símbolo y rito, inculturación, religiosidad popular, liderazgo y género, pluralismo y espiritualidad digital, se fomenta una comprensión crítica de la diversidad religiosa contemporánea. Con clases por Zoom, foros en línea y un proyecto final integrador, el estudiantado desarrollará herramientas para construir comunidades inclusivas, dialogantes y comprometidas con la justicia y la paz. | 3 | Silveira | Spring 2026 Mondays 5:00pm-8:00pm Online Synchronous |
| LIEQ-510 |
Donde Está Dios: Una Ética del Margen
Este curso les presenta a los estudiantes los principios fundamentales y los diversos enfoques dentro de la ética social cristiana, al mismo tiempo abordará cómo las hermenéuticas bíblicas marginadas y las teologías desde la opresión ofrecen perspectivas sobre dónde está Dios y qué puede querer Dios respecto a los problemas morales contemporáneos. El curso tiene como objetivo equipar a los estudiantes con una ética teológica para la praxis arraigada entre los sufrientes, para encarnar un liderazgo compasivo y una transformación fiel en sus contextos. | 3 | Perez | Spring 2026 Tuesdays 4:30pm-7:30pm Online Synchronous |
| NT-1080 |
New Testament Voices
In this introductory course, students will examine the origins and development of the texts, language, authors, dates, personalities, and significant themes that make up the New Testament through various interpretive approaches. Indeed, by reading and analyzing these texts from the perspective of multiple voices, students will appreciate not only the complexity of NT authorship but also the subsequent paradigms and theologies generated out of these texts, including their own. In this course, special attention will be given to the Hebrew Bible (LXX) and its role in the formation of the NT. This course is appropriate for masters-level students and satisfies part of the core requirements at Berkeley School of Theology. Students from across the GTU are welcome and encouraged to attend the course. Classes will be offered in a hybrid format. | 3 | Torgerson | Spring 2026 Mondays 5:10pm-8:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| OT-8136 |
El Antiguo Testamento Habla Hoy
Este curso ofrece una introducción básica al estudio y el mensaje de la Biblia Hebrea. Al finalizar, el estudiantado habrá adquirido una visión sociocultural y teológica de su contenido, de los debates críticos y de las metodologías exegéticas y hermenéuticas, al tiempo que desarrollará conciencia de su propia ubicación social y de cómo esta influye en la lectura, el pensamiento y la práctica bíblica, histórica y teológica. Además, aplicará enfoques, teologías e interpretaciones a preocupaciones contemporáneas de justicia social. | 3 | Melgar | Spring 2026 Thursdays/Martes 5:00pm-8:00pm |
| PR-3100 |
Servant Leadership and Organizational Stewardship
This course delves into the principles and practices of servant leadership and organizational stewardship within the context of both religious and secular communities. Students will explore the foundational philosophies and ethical frameworks that underpin servant leadership, examining how these principles can be applied to foster sustainable and impactful leadership within diverse organizational settings. Drawing from both classical and contemporary perspectives, the course will engage students in critical discussions on the role of leaders as stewards of resources, relationships, and the common good. Through case studies, readings, and reflective exercises, students will develop a nuanced understanding of servant leadership as a transformative approach to leadership that prioritizes humility, empathy, and service to others. | 3 | Leander | Spring 2026 Thursdays 2:10pm - 5:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| PS-1062 |
Congregational Care
This course is an introduction to the practice of pastoral, congregational, and spiritual care based upon spiritual, theological, psychological, social, and ethical perspectives. Basic methods and skills of pastoral, congregational, and spiritual care will be introduced, along with an intercultural contextual approach to care that draws upon postmodern approaches to religious knowledge. This course endeavors to guide students to be compassionate pastoral and spiritual caregivers within a spiritually and socially complex world in ways that engage deeply religious and cultural traditions alongside social expectations. | 3 | Mixon | Spring 2026 Tuesdays 3:40pm - 6:30pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| SPRS-8208 |
In Search of a Soul: Howard Thurman & Quest for Democratic Space
This course explores Howard Thurman’s lifelong “quest for democratic space,” a journey he saw as synonymous with “America in Search of a Soul.’ We will analyze Thurman not just as a theologian, but as a mystic-prophet whose unique “strange freedom’ enabled him to lead a divided nation. The course traces the arc of his vision, beginning with The Roots of a ‘Strange Freedom’ to understand how the prophet was forged. From there, we explore The ‘Creative Encounter,’ analyzing how Thurman’s deep mysticism and confrontation with sin produced a transformative gospel for the oppressed. We will then follow this inward journey into the public square, investigating his ‘Bold Adventure’ of forging interracial community at the Fellowship Church for All Peoples amidst the ‘Luminous Darkness’ of American segregation. Finally, culminate by exploring The Disciplines of the Spirit as the essential practice for healing the nation’s soul and realizing his ultimate vision for a “community of God”. The course would have four parts: | 3 | Wright-Riggins | Spring 2026 Fridays 12:40pm-3:30pm Online Synchronous |
| STSP |
Global Theological Perspectives
Together in this course we will engage theologies coming from Asian American, Black liberation, Dalit, feminist, indigenous/Naga, Korean communities. | 3 | Davidson | Spring 2026 Thursdays 5:30pm - 8:30pm Concurrent Hybrid |
SUMMER 2026 COURSES
| Course Number | Name | Credits | Instructor | Schedule |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BSRS-2600 |
Messiah in Modern Politics: Biblical Hope and Political Power
This course explores how biblical messianic traditions shape modern political imagination. Through biblical texts, political theology, heroic myth, and contemporary case studies, students will examine how leaders, movements, and nations come to be cast as redeemers in times of crisis, grievance, and public longing. This class will be hybrid, meeting Wednesdays from 5-7 pm PST from 7/8–8/12. | 3 | Sias | Summer 2026 Wednesdays 5:00pm -7:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| FTCE-3040 |
Show Me The Money!
“Show me the money!” is an elective course in functional theology and Christian ethics (FTCE). Class participants will establish a biblical, theological, and ethical perspective on money and giving, as well as examine the centrality of giving and stewardship for the sustainability of churches and other nonprofit organizations. The course will explore fundraising basics, plus varied perspectives, strategies, and tools for effective fund development and donor care. | 3 | Barker Jackson | Summer 2026 Each Monday in the month of June - 6/1, 8, 15, 22, 29 2:00pm -5:00pm |
FALL 2026 COURSES
| Course Number | Name | Credits | Instructor | Schedule |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BSCE-xxxx |
LaPolitica de la Pureza y el Evangelio de la Pertenencia
Este curso examina las dinámicas de identidad social, pureza y pertenencia en textos bíblicos clave, particularmente del período postexílico. El estudiante explorará cómo los procesos de etnicización, la delimitación de fronteras comunitarias y la continua construcción de la comunidad moldearon la imaginación social y teológica del período bíblico postexílico, dando lugar tanto a visiones excluyentes de pureza comunitaria como a voces proféticas que insisten en una inclusión radical y una pertenencia basada en el pacto. | 3 | Wiser | Fall 2026 Wednesdays 5:10pm -8:00pm Online Synchronous |
| BSPR-4xxx |
Bible and Theology at the Border: Migration, Hermeneutics, and Christian Response
This course investigates how the Bible and Christian theology shape, and are reshaped by, contemporary U.S. debates over immigration enforcement, border policy, and the church’s public witness. In the first half of the semester, students will engage with various views of migration theology and the emerging theological motifs that will help students create their own theological voice within the immigration debate. In the second half, students examine the full biblical canon as a contested moral library: Torah teachings on the sojourner and land, prophetic critiques of exploitation, gospel portrayals of displacement and belonging, Acts and the formation of multiethnic communities, and Pauline ethical formation for life together amid political power. The course highlights how Christians appeal to Scripture in sharply different ways, and asks what responsible interpretation requires when the stakes include fear, detention, deportation, family separation, and the vulnerability of mixed-status congregations. | 3 | Sias/Kang | Fall 2026 Wednesdays 5:10pm - 8:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| BSRS-4650 |
Bible, Culture, Power and Justice
This advanced seminar will explore how culture, power, and justice affect the ways we read the Bible will draw on global readings of the Bible as well as intentionally contextual readings from the United States, including womanist, feminist, Asian-American, Latina, Black and other hermeneutical approaches. To deepen our understanding of how all interpretation is contextual, we will also consider readings from the dominant androcentric, North Atlantic strands of history of interpretation and engage ethnography of reading. We will consider and perform biblical interpretation as ethical activity. Evaluation will be based on seminar participation and leadership, two critical interpretive papers and a final essay constructing a personal hermeneutic. This class is open to M.Div. and other masters degree students, can be leveled up for D.Min. and Ph.D. students. | 3 | Torgerson | Fall 2026 Thursdays, 2:10pm - 5:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| DM-6078 |
Becoming Culturally Responsive, part 1
To be(come) Culturally Responsive requires mentors and partners. Each student in the newly revised Competency Based Doctor of Ministry program will journey alongside a thematic cohort with several DMin students and three mentors. A student’s mentor team of 3 can be geographically centered or spread across the globe. The remote realities that have become the new normal in our world create possibilities for communication and gatherings from anyplace at any time. Year 1 of Berkeley School of Theology’s Culturally Responsive Competency Based DMin will address several themes. Each student will select one of the seven themes to emphasize and build his/her mentor team accordingly. | 3 | Flesher/Sias | Fall 2026 Mondays 5:10pm - 8:00pm Current Hybrid |
| FE-2116 |
BST Internship 1 (Pre-set Moodle Scheduling)
BST Students must have an approved internship site and mentor/supervisor to engage in supervised ministry praxis experience. This is a core two-part core course requirement for MDIV and MCL degree requirements. Pre-set sessions will meet on Mondays 4:00-6:00pm, subject to change with student group input. | 3 | Miles-Tribble | Fall 2026 Mondays 4:00pm -5:30pm |
| FT-1750 |
Ministry in the Digital World
This course will help students maximize the use of technology in their ministry. Students will critically assess where their ministry is in the digital world, strengthen the technological tools they are using already, and then discover new tools for ministry. This course examines the place of technology in ministry. Students will have hands-on learning experience on various methods to use technology and how it can contribute to the effectiveness for ministry. | 3 | M. Valui | Fall 2026 Tuesdays 5:10pm - 8:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| FT-2524 |
Intercultural Leadership
This course will address theories and practices for effective leadership in an intercultural context. We will consider biblical examples of leadership, the Five Practices of Exemplary Leadership by Kouzes and Posner, and cultural intelligence as building blocks for developing intercultural leadership. Special attention will be paid to biblical and contemporary examples of leadership practices aimed at reconciling cultural dilemmas. Students will be encouraged to reflect on how they have been influenced by significant leaders while creating a plan for their own intercultural leadership development. | 3 | Ngunjiri | Fall 2026 Thursdays 2:10pm-5:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| FT-xxxx |
Liderazgo Intercultural
Este curso introduce los fundamentos del liderazgo intercultural orientado a formar líderes capaces de servir en comunidades culturalmente diversas, integrando perspectivas bíblicas y contemporáneas, inteligencia cultural y prácticas de reconciliación. Al finalizar el curso, los estudiantes serán capaces de aplicar principios de liderazgo intercultural y promover la inclusión y la reconciliación en sus contextos comunitarios. | 3 | Silveira | Fall 2026 Mondays 5:10pm -8:00pm Online Synchronous |
| HM-1500 |
Transformative Word
This introductory preaching course is designed to enable the students to learn the theoretical and practical elements of contemporary preaching from diverse traditions. There will be lectures, weekly writings, and discussions around topics related to today’s understanding of preaching in ever-changing contexts, and students will preach three sermons for the class. | 3 | Park | Fall 2026 Thursdays 6:10pm - 9:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| HMPR-4xxx |
Evangelicalism & Preaching (Korean)
This course surveys the historical roots of evangelicalism, examines preaching from historical, theological, and homiletical perspectives in both the United States and Korea, and helps students develop strategies to meet the needs of their pastoral ministry, with a focus on the prophetic role, in today’s cultural and ecclesiastical contexts. The class will be taught in Korean in a hybrid, asynchronous-synchronous model: five Zoom sessions and weekly asynchronous engagement. This course will be taught in Korean. | 3 | Park | Fall 2026 Tuesdays 6:10pm - 9:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| IDS-8101 |
Navigating the Complexities (Part 1)
Creative Church & Community, Spirituality & Resilience, Justice & Reconciliation, Border-Crossing. These are all topics that will be addressed through the lenses of Bible, Theology, Ethics, History, and Praxis as a means of introducing and preparing the online student to /for the work of theological study and reflection. In part 1 of this two-part, year-long, MTS core online introduction the student will engage key terms, concepts, and methodologies; in part 2 (spring semester) the student will make application of all of the above to a topic of their own choosing. [This is the only core course for the BST MTS=Master’s in Theological Studies]. NOTE: Students should be prepared to participate in weekly synchronous Zoom sessions to highlight key points from the recorded lectures and facilitate discussions about assignments. | 3 | Sias | Fall 2026 Online Asynchronous |
| LIEQ-107 |
El libro del Apocalipsis: resistencia y victoria
El libro del Apocalipsis ha generado fascinación entre quienes lo leen, con sus imágenes fantásticas de eventos sobrenaturales. Pero más allá de las imágenes, el mensaje es claro: hay que resistir con fe en un mundo injusto. En este ciclo analizaremos el libro del Apocalipsis desde dos lentes: el lente histórico-crítico, con el cual descubriremos la historia detrás del lenguaje apocalíptico, y el lente parenético, con el cual descubriremos el mensaje del libro para nuestro tiempo. | 3 | Colorado | Fall 2026 Mondays 5:0pm - 8:00pm Online Synchronous |
| LIEQ-210 |
Teologia y Ética Global
Este curso examina críticamente los desafíos éticos y teológicos que surgen en un mundo marcado por la globalización neoliberal, el racismo estructural, las crisis migratorias y de refugiados, la desigualdad económica y la pobreza, entre otros. Dado que estas realidades afectan de manera desproporcionada a comunidades históricamente marginadas, se busca reflexionar sobre respuestas teológicas comprometidas con la justicia social, la dignidad humana y el cuidado de la creación, orientadas hacia una praxis eclesial liberadora. | 3 | H. DaValle | Fall 2026 Wednesdays 6:00pm- 9:00pm Online Synchronous |
| LIEQ-701 |
Familia Denominacional
Este curso introduce la historia, la gobernanza (política) y las tradiciones de las principales denominaciones cristianas. Los estudiantes explorarán cómo diferentes iglesias organizan la autoridad y el liderazgo, así como los desarrollos históricos y las prácticas espirituales que moldean sus identidades. El curso tiene como objetivo fomentar una comprensión más profunda de la diversidad y la herencia compartida dentro de la fe cristiana. | 3 | L. Da Valle | Fall 2026 Tuesdays 6:00pm - 9:00pm Online Synchronous |
| LSCE-xxxx |
Liberating Worship
This introductory class will consider how worship can contribute to liberation by enacting and embodying feminist, womanist, and other liberative theologies. We will also ask if worship might need to be liberated from practices and paradigms that are too limiting in today’s world. This exploration will be rooted in history and theology of Christian worship as well as site visits that include some of the diversity of Christian worship styles. There will be short reflection papers and site visits, but the primary method for demonstrating learning will be design and implementation of hybrid Monday afternoon worship services at Berkeley School of Theology. | 1.5 | Torgerson/Kang | Fall 2026 Mondays 1:10pm - 2:40pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| OT-1107 |
Old Testament Speaks Today
This course will provide a basic introduction to the study and message of the Old Testament. The successful student will have 1) acquired a socio-cultural and theological overview of the Hebrew Bible with foci on basic content, critical issues, and exegetical and hermeneutical methodologies; as well as 2) developed a self-awareness concerning their/her/his own social location and its relationship to the reading, thinking, and doing of biblical, historical, and theological work; as well as 3) applied methods, theologies, and interpretations to contemporary social justice concerns. This course is for masters-level students. This course will be hybrid format. | 3 | Sias | Fall 2026 Thursdays 5:10pm - 8:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| PR-1111 |
Critical Thinking and Academic Writing
This course is dedicated to improving your confidence and skill in critical thinking and academic writing through presentations, discussions, practice, and critique. You’ll learn the difference between uncritical and critical thinking, how to distinguish between info, data, and assertion, how to identify bias, and how to test an argument and evaluate evidence. You’ll learn how to create, support, and conclude an effective argument (thesis), cite sources, and have a chance to practice the many kinds of academic writing which will be required of you in seminary: exegesis, theological essay, exploratory research, personal reflection, and reviews. | 3 | Kunkel | Fall 2026 Wednesdays 3:40pm - 6:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| RS-4257 |
Why Cornel West Matters: Protecting Democracy, and Political Theology
Over the course of the next several weeks, together we will grapple with the intellectual qualities, moral convictions, and ethical boundaries that represent Cornel West and his Theo ethical theology which we assert is political theology. Said another way, too often, West is described as a public intellectual. However, we will characterize West as a prophetic intellectual who is informed by his Christian worldview. This helps us explore the intersections between the moral, ethical, and theological discussions, dialogues and debates in the public square. | 3 | Evans | Fall 2026 Tuesdays 2:10pm - 5:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| RSCE - xxxx |
Jazzin’ Womanist Expression & the Dancing Mind
Jazzin Womanist Expression and The Dancing Mind is a reflective project with resource toolkit for practitioners–educators and learners–to approach the artistry of relational engagement. This course interweaves threads of memoir, jazz improv sounds, artistic briefs to share insights and lessons about thriving amid unpredictable movements in group settings, classes, or public spheres. Can organic learning be facilitated like musical rifts of jazz improv to create justice environments that conjure new ways to teach, learn, and live a jazz life? Students examine a theology of being by crafting creatively subversive models using womanist expression and lived experiences to inspire positive instruments of change. | 3 | Miles-Tribble | Fall 2026 Thursdays 6:10pm -9:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| RSCE-2261 |
Morality in Social and Religious Spheres
This course examines issues of morality in society with ethical questions as well as biblical/theological frames that provide a moral basis for public policy. Interactive dialogue and use of audio-visual materials to look at past and present moral challenges will facilitate studentsˇ skill development to assess the ramifications on those least able to protect and defend their own interests. Part of ethical probing is to critically analyze how does the issue of faith and belief in God’s sovereignty get used and abused in the public and ecclesial spheres for ideological agendas when expedient? Students will explore social advocacy groups and ˘watch dogˇ agencies, secular and faith-based. From class dialogue, reading, presentation, and critical analysis paper, students can develop rhetorical arguments and a sustainable plan for praxis in ever-changing religio-political landscapes. Master and Doctoral students welcome . | 3 | Miles-Tribble | Fall 2026 Tuesdays 6:10pm -9:00pm Concurrent Hybrid |
| RSCE-3xxxx |
Racism in America
Using the latest scholarship in the field, this course will do an in-depth study on Racism in America that will include the role that the theology of white supremacy has played in the mistreatment of African Americans, and other minority groups in America. | 3 | Wright-Riggins | Fall 2026 Fridays 12:40pm - 3:30pm Concurrent Hybrid |