The Theology Department at Archmere strives to further students’ intellectual and spiritual development. While embracing all students in a learning and faith-filled community, the department is grounded in the love of Christ, his Church, and the Catholic theological tradition. By fostering an intellectual and reflective encounter with the sacred mystery of God, the Theology Department intends to inspire students to grow in faith, hope, and charitable love. Finally, through their scholarship, students will be prepared by the department’s curricular program for future theological study.
The curriculum of the Theology Department is designed to reflect Archmere’s focus on the “education of the whole student.” The department’s program offers students opportunities to pursue academic excellence, develop a more holistic ethical awareness, serve others, and engage in the practice of faith reflection. This curriculum consists of required courses in Sacred Scripture, the Sacraments, Ethics, and Christian Spirituality.
The department’s elective offerings allow students to explore more fully the Catholic faith in itself and as it relates to the world around them. Integral to the department’s ethos is its focus on the “mind and heart.” While considering doctrines and ideas, students are encouraged to see how these pieces fit in their lived experience and how Catholic belief might bear deep meaning for students’ lives. Following the example of Saint Norbert, our faculty members are dedicated to the spiritual formation of the Archmere student body so that they will be prepared “for every good work.”
Exploring Sacred Scripture presents the Bible to students as a living source of God's Revelation. This course provides a foundation for approaching any biblical text, but it especially focuses on the Hebrew Bible (the Old Testament). Students will be provided the opportunity for prayerful study and a survey of the context, message, and authorship of each book. The course also affords students with a plan for reading and studying the Old Testament in communion with the Holy Spirit and Church teaching.
Encountering Jesus the Christ attempts to answer the essential questions "who is Jesus of Nazareth?" and "what can we know about Jesus through the study of the New Testament?" This course is a combination of Christology - a complete study of the person and divinity of Jesus Christ - with an overview of the books of the New Testament. Through their study of the Gospels and other New Testament writing students will reflect on the person of Jesus and what it means to call oneself a follower of Christ.
Catholic Creed and Culture provides an academic encounter with the life, beliefs, and practices of the Church. Drawing extensively on the Catechism of the Catholic Church, this course explores the Church’s teachings and their lived importance. Students will explore Catholic theology, sacraments, liturgy, and prayer, developing a deeper understanding of Catholic doctrine and its relevance for contemporary life.
"How should I act?" "What should I do?" "Who am I to become?" "What is my place in the community?" These questions and more will be addressed in this required sophomore course, Christian Ethics. The class will survey a number of non- and pre-Christian approaches to ethics before moving on to the question of how Christianity in general, and Catholicism in particular, makes a difference to the moral life. In addition to theoretical and conceptual frameworks, the lives of admirable moral witnesses will be considered as formative influences. The course will also utilize real-world examples and situations to think through proper and fitting courses of action for the present-day young adult.
This course will focus on the contributions Christian men and women of faith and zeal have made to the development of Christian spirituality throughout the centuries. It will begin by examining various understandings of spirituality. Then, utilizing James Fowler's Theory of Faith Development, it will provide a foundation for evaluating personal faith development. Following this foundational work, the contributions of various "God-Seekers" including Augustine, Francis of Assisi, Ignatius of Loyola, Martin Luther, John Calvin, as well as Julian of Norwich, Teresa of Avila, Therese of Lisieux and Dorothy Day will be examined to gain an appreciation of their understanding of the Divine. One of the main objectives of the course is for students to reflect on how they resonate or resist the images and understandings of God offered by the life and writings of these noted "God-Seekers" and how their personal faith has developed in recent years.
This course will address the fundamental question: How have various religions developed throughout the world and taken root in America? While the course will not be able to investigate all religions of the world, it will sample religious traditions that originated both outside America, such as Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, along with Hinduism and Buddhism, as well as a few that were established in America, such as the Jehovah Witnesses, The Church of Scientology, and The Latter-day Saints (Mormons). Incorporated in this overview will be an investigation what these traditions offer in the way of moral teachings and practices.
This course will explore various aspects of Christian Spirituality with the intention of introducing students to its beauty and impact while hoping they will develop an understanding and reverence for its offerings. Included will be an investigation of the historical and spiritual contributions of St. Norbert of Xanten and the Norbertine tradition including an exploration of conversion, prayer, devotion and discipleship.
Faith in History provides students with an opportunity to explore instances when religion and philosophy became intertwined with world politics, economics, and societal movements throughout history by evaluating primary and secondary sources and engaging in debate and group discussion.
Studying the complex, reciprocal relationship between these two disciplines will allow students to gain a better understanding of how their faith affects the world around them, as well as the lens through which they see it.
"Awareness of one discipline enables a more informed, nuanced understanding of the other." - U. of Birmingham, UK
Students will discover and understand the seven themes of Catholic Social Teaching (CST) and evaluate these themes through Scripture, the Catechism of the Catholic Church, and other Church documents. Students will apply these principles to contemporary social, economic, political, cultural, and religious issues such as poverty, hunger, human rights, violence, and racism.
This course will provide students with an introduction to the great pursuit and love of wisdom known as philosophy. It especially focuses on the drama of Socrates’ life and death as told by Plato. This narrative demonstrates for students a way of living marked by serious and sustained inquiry into life’s most pressing and perennial questions. As a result of the course, students will gain a greater ability to reason clearly, especially as regards ethical reflection, through which, it is hoped, they will lead more complete and fulfilled lives.
Honors Theology Seminar offers students the opportunity to explore theological and philosophical questions in an academically rigorous environment at the Honors level. Topics read about and discussed will fall under the categories of the True, the Good, and the Beautiful. Students will make a broad consideration of the Catholic theological tradition as it engages the modern world. The small class size and seminar format will prize student-directed discussion and an atmosphere of collaboration.
Prerequisites: Students need to have earned 1) an A in both Christian Spirituality and in one additional core Theology course and 2) department approval.
This course is an elective opportunity for juniors and seniors to apply the Christian call to serve others and help create a community inside and outside the school. This is accomplished by actually working at various service sites during the semester. Thirty-five hours of service are required. Group sharing and individual mentoring to process the student's experience are important aspects of the student's growth as a person and a Christian.
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Faculty
Mr.MattChominski
Theology Department Chair; Theology Teacher
302-798-6632 Ext 775
Holy Apostles College & Seminary - M.A. Harvard Extension School - Graduate Certificate University of Pittsburgh - B.A.
Head of School, Dr. Marinelli is a 1976 graduate of Archmere Academy. From 1984 to 1996, Dr. Marinelli worked at Archmere as the Academy's Director of Development and Public Relations. He also taught Junior and Senior electives in economics and business management. He returned to Archmere at the Head of School in 2010.
Mr.TomMengers
Campus Minister; Theology Teacher
302-798-6632 Ext 788
St. Joseph's College of Maine - M.A. Saint Vincent College - B.A.