Theology of the Body
Course Introduction | Learning Objectives | Course Hours
Course Content & Outline | Creative Uses | IPF Faculty
Course Introduction
If God tells us to be fruitful, why does the church call priests to be celibate?
Why does the Catholic Church teach that contraception is always wrong?
What do marital sex, Holy Eucharist and Heaven all have in common?
In the early years of his pontificate, Pope John Paul II devoted nearly all of his Wednesday general audiences to expounding a scriptural vision of human sexuality known as the theology of the body. Starting with a penetrating analysis of the creation accounts in the book of Genesis, John Paul II illuminated the meaning of human love in the divine plan.
The theology of the body is John Paul II’s timely response to the sexual confusion troubling our culture and our Church. Papal biographer George Weigel calls the theology of the body “one of the boldest reconfigurations of Catholic theology in centuries...a kind of theological time bomb set to go off with dramatic consequences, sometime in the third millennium of the church.”
Learning Objectives
The course is designed to:
- Familiarize students with Karol Wojtyla’s/John Paul II’s philosophical project of linking the subjective and objective world views.
- Introduce students to the main themes of the 129 addresses that constitute John Paul II’s “theology of the body.”
- Encourage students to integrate the principles of John Paul II’s theology of the body in their own personal lives and relationships.
- Equip students to apply John Paul II’s “adequate anthropology” to a range of questions such as sexual morality, bio-ethics, gender issues, vocation, the sacramental life, and the new evangelization.
Course Hours
This five day course intensive contains 30 - fifty-minute classroom sessions for two Creighton University-IPF graduate credits.
Course Content & Outline
This course will examine the 129 Wednesday audience addresses that comprise John Paul II’s “Theology of the Body” with an emphasis on the importance of the Pope’s project for the new evangelization. Particular attention will be paid to themes such as creation in the imago Dei, fall and redemption, Christian ethics and ethos, freedom and person, gender and vocation.
Introduction
The Human Body, Catholicism, and the Philosophical Project of John Paul II
Part I
Establishing an “Adequate Anthropology”
- Cycle 1: Original Man (reflections on Genesis)
- Cycle 2: Historical Man (reflections on the Sermon on the Mount and St. Paul)
- Cycle 3: Eschatological Man (reflections on the resurrection of the body)
Part II
Applying an “Adequate Anthropology”
- Cycle 4: Celibacy for the Kingdom (reflections on Matthew 19 and St. Paul)
- Cycle 5: The Sacramentality of Marriage (reflections on Ephesians 5)
- Cycle 6: Love & Fruitfulness (reflections on Humanae Vitae)
Conclusion
The Theology of the Body and the New Evangelization
Creative Uses
This exciting course offered through IPF at Creighton University is taught by the internationally recognized speaker and author Christopher West. It adapts easily to individual and local diocesan needs. Creighton University-IPF credits may be transferred to supplement graduate theology programs.
IPF Faculty
Christopher West
Christopher West is recognized around the glboe for his work teaching and promoting John Paul II's theology of the body. He serves officially as a research fellow and faculty member of the Theology of the Body Institute near Philadelphia. West has also taught graduate and undergraduate courses on a number of other faculties, including st. John Vianney Seminary in Denver, the John Paul II Institute in Melbourne, Australia, and serves as faculty for sexual ethics at the Institute for Priestly Formation in Omaha. He is the best-selling author of four books, and his popular column "Body Language" is syndicated to newspapers throughout the United States. Christopher West lives with his wife Wendy and their five children near Lancaster, PA.
For Further Information
For more information regarding Christopher West and his schedule, please contact:
Theology of the Body Institute
Telephone: (610) 696-7795, ext. 206
Fax: (610) 696-7796
Email: mstumpf@tobinstitute.org
URL: www.tobinstitute.org.
Course Introduction | Learning Objectives | Course Hours
Course Content & Outline | Creative Uses | IPF Faculty
