Kathleen Riley Course Syllabus
Prepared for the Center for the Study of Religion and American
Culture by:
Kathleen Riley
Department of History
Ohio Dominican College
The Center is pleased to share with you the syllabi for
introductory courses in American religion that were developed
in seminars led by Dr. Philip Gleason of the University
of Notre Dame. In all of the seminar discussions, it was
apparent that context, or the particular teaching setting,
was an altogether critical factor in envisioning how students
should be introduced to a field of study. The justification
of approach, included with each syllabus, is thus germane
to how you use the syllabus.
For the personal use of teachers. Not
for sale or redistribution.
© Center for the Study of Religion and American Culture,
1998
I. Syllabus Justification
"History of Christianity In the United States"
Ohio Dominican College(ODC)
ODC is a small (1,700 students) Catholic liberal-arts college
located in Columbus, Ohio - and steeped in the Dominican
tradition of the order of nuns who founded the institution
as "St. Mary of the Springs" in 1911. The College's
Mission Statement is taken very seriously here, and can
be quoted chapter and verse by most of the faculty; we are
all encouraged (strongly) to incorporate it onto our syllabi,
and reflect upon the Core Humanities Program in all of our
classes. St. Thomas Aquinas is a lingering presence here
- spiritually (in the prayer I often recite before class)
and more concretely in the college's annual Academic Convocation/St/
Thomas Aquinas Day celebrated every January. It meshes well
with my traditional Catholic sensibilities.
From a more pragmatic point of view, many of our students
are "first-generation" college students, and they
come to ODC with weak educational foundations in reading
and writing. Now that I am better acclimated to the institutional
climate here, I have taken it as my personal mission to
try to raise standards, and to require our students to read
more and take more responsibility for their own education.
This syllabus reflects a somewhat idealistic notion of this
endeavor, and I hope that it will survive in its present
form when I teach the course in the future.
Since my arrival at ODC, the college has been preoccupied
with the impending NCA visit to campus in the Fall of 1997;
a mania for technology (the "Dominican Learning Network"
I referred to in the syllabus), assessment, and multiculturalism
has fueled the administrative machinery for years. Humorous
references to the "Syllabi Police" in the Dean's
Office are fact-based; all syllabi are tightly structured,
along the I.-VI. divisions/format of my syllabus. I have
resisted the pressure to conform to the "Knowledge-Skills-Attitudes"
requirements - I prefer a narrative style and quotations
to the simple lists used by most faculty members - imposed
by the Education Department. My choice of the Richard Rodriguez
memoir, Hunger of Memory, reflects the annual selection
of a college-wide "Diversity Text" (which the
President distributes as a Christmas "bonus" with
the expectation that it will show up on the syllabi) --Rodriguez
is wishful thinking on my part at this point in time. I
think it is a wonderful example of a "coming of age
in college" autobiography, and it fits in well with
the Immigration and Americanization themes I focus on, and
the Catholic emphasis of my course as well.
Finally, a word about the "Catholic emphasis".
ODC remains a Catholic institution, but the majority of
our students are now non-Catholics; hence, the focus of
the class is on "Christianity in the United States".
As such, the course is structured as a chronological overview
of the role played by Christianity in the history of the
United States.
So, at the beginning of the class I offer the students
a verbal disclaimer, explaining where I am coming from,
and how we will proceed to study many Christian denominations,
with a focus on Catholicism -both as an interesting case
study, and from the perspective of the Instructor. My own
vocation as a scholar/teacher has been based upon the belief
that History and Religion are inextricably related; just
as the study of religion cannot escape history, history
cannot escape religion. But I have perceived a certain dissonance
in many academic settings, where the life of learning and
religious sensibilities seem to have come unraveled. The
forsaking and forgetting of such a valuable tradition -
the "soul of the American university"- is a lamentable
loss, and I am dedicated to the "good fight" of
trying to restore religious sensibilities to a more prominent
position in the educational environment, and striving to
reunite intellectual, moral, and spiritual values as part
of a community of scholars swimming against the tide of
secularization.
II. Introductory Course syllabus
HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY IN THE UNITED STATES
History/Theology 242 Dr. Kathleen Riley
OHIO DOMINICAN COLLEGE Erskine 303 annex, X4628
I. Course Description and Goals
This course is a survey of the major thoughts, movements
and personalities of American Religious History, from the
colonial era to the present day. A special emphasis will
be placed on Catholicism, and its place in the religious
landscape of the United States.
Among the topics to be explored during the course of the
semester will be: the religious motives for settling the
New World; Awakenings, Revivals and Reform; Immigration
and Nativism (Protestant-Catholic tensions); twentieth century
"Isms" (Fundamentalism, Liberalism, Modernism
and the "heresy" of Americanism); the Post Work
War II Religious Revival; the crisis of the Sixties and
the Second Vatican Council; and "Civil Religion"
(the Religion of the American Republic) as a persistent
force in American life and politics.
From the particular perspective of Catholicism, two persistent
and pervasive themes will predominate: Immigration and Americanization.
Our focus will be on the internal evolution of American
Catholicism as it met and absorbed divergent social and
ethnic groups, and that of the external relations between
the Catholic community and the greater Protestant national
community. This focus will allow us to explore, with historical
evidence, the more theoretical issues of diversity/pluralism/multiculturalism
in American history, and the relations between elites and
subordinates - Insiders and Outsiders. Few communities in
American History have sustained in such large numbers and
over such a long period of time the varieties of peoples
as American Catholicism. The Catholic Church should prove
to be of special interest here at Ohio Dominican College,
"guided in its educational mission by the Dominican
motto: to contemplate truth and share with others the fruits
of that contemplation".
Christopher Dawson, one of the truly great historians of
Western Culture, put it quite simply when he said that "Religion
is the key to History" - this maxim will be our guiding
rationale. For in the American context, our national religious
heritage has all too often gone unappreciated and even unknown.
A major goal of this course will be to correct that oversight,
and to demonstrate that Religion is an essential to unlocking
the truth about American History - a necessary foundation
upon which the story of the United States must rest if it
is to be accurately understood and properly appreciated.
II. Instructional Objectives: Knowledge, Skills, Values
As students discover the rich heritage of the American
nation and its people, they should develop a better sense
of the central role that religion has played in the course
of American History, as a source of both unity and diversity,
consensus and conflict. Also, irrespective of our individual
beliefs/faith, we should all strive to grow toward a greater
sensitivity to the multiplicity of religious, ethnic and
theological traditions that are a part of the American experience.
A course in American Religious History might be considered
both timely and even a bit controversial, given the current
academic discussion about the "Culture Wars",
and the historical anomaly present on many college campuses
in the United States today: the separation of the very idea
of the university from its religious foundations. According
to Historian George Marsden of the University of Notre Dame,
a remarkable revolution has occurred, from an age when Christianity
was a leading force in higher education to an era when it
is either excluded from serious discussion or merely tolerated
as a peripheral enterprise. In an effort to restore the
"Soul of the American University", he has suggested
that: ... it is fanciful to think about going back to Christianity,
even of the most liberal sort, as providing the basis for
a general moral consensus. The demands of justice in a pluralistic
society preclude that...{but} religious perspectives, if
responsibly held and civilly presented, are as academically
respectable as other perspectives...One might expect that
a truly pluralistic society would encourage faith-oriented
higher learning as well as the various secular alternatives.
The Secularization of the Academy
So, we shall proceed to study Christianity as a leading
force in higher education and American History, from the
perspective of past participants, observers, and contemporary
historians. Some preliminary "words of wisdom"
for inspiration:
Thanks to the genuine spirit of christianity! The United
States have banished intolerance from their systems of Government,
and many of them have done justice to every denomination
of christians...conferring an equal right of participation
in national privileges.
-John Carroll, first US. Catholic Bishop, 1783
Upon my arrival in the United States, the religious
aspect of the country was the first thing that struck my
attention, and the longer I stayed there the more did I
perceive the great political consequences resulting from
this state of things.... In America, the spirit of religion
and the spirit of freedom were intimately united...they
reigned in common over the same country...Religion in America
takes no direct art in the government of society, but nevertheless,
it must be regarded as the foremost of the political institutions
of that country...I do not know whether all the Americans
have a sincere faith in their religion (for who can search
the human heart?). But I am certain that they hold it to
be indispensable to the maintenance of republican institutions...
-Alexis DeTocqueville, Democracy in America (1835)
Prophets of both despair and hope foresaw a coming secular
age, yet the majority of Americans found reasons to convince
themselves that they were a religious people in a nation
'under God"...It is more likely that the people's passion
to make sense of things and to find company with others
who share their visions will prevail into indefinite tomorrows...But
if the actors remain somehow free, their dreams will prod
them on to more restless pilgrimages.
-Martin Marty, Pilgrims In Their Own Land (1986)
III. Instructional Procedures
The basic style and substance of the course will consist
of lectures, discussion, and media/video presentations.
A six part series on "CATHOLICS/AMERICANS", covering
the History of the Catholic Church in the U.S. from 1492-1989
and produced by the Paulist Press, will be shown during
the course of the semester. We will also enjoy video clips
of two prominent figures from the 1950s Religious Revival,
the Rev. Billy Graham and Bishop Fulton Sheen, and some
good overviews on "The Soul of a Nation" (Religion
in American Life) produced by Golden Dome Productions at
the University of Notre Dame.
Reading is essential, and the key to success in this course.
In addition to the required texts, there is a collection
of books on Reserve in Spangler Library: texts on American
Catholicism by Hennesey, Dolan, Crews and Martin Marty (An
Invitation to American Catholic History); readers in American
Religious History, edited by Hackett, and Mulder and Wilson;
and collections of Documents by Edwin Gaustad and Monsignor
John Tracy Ellis. We shall make use of these items in Cooperative
Learning Group assignments after the Mid-Term Examination
period.
Grading Criteria
The following guidelines indicate how the final grade for
the course will be determined:
- Examinations (Mid-Term and Final) - 40%
- Writing Assignments/Essays -40%
- Oral Presentations - 10%
- Participation (discretion of Instructor, attendance)
-10%
IV. Student Requirements
Regular attendance and informed participation is required
of all students. It is the responsibility of the individual
student to explain all absences, and to make the necessary
arrangements to complete missed coursework.
In addition to the regularly scheduled exams, quizzes may
be administered on occasion to ascertain how well the students
are completing and understanding the reading assignments.
The articles from the "Capco" Xeroxed collection,
and the monographs, will be discussed in detail in class.
Evidence that the reading has been completed, and the class
lectures and discussions comprehended, will be expected
on the tests.
Two formal written assignments will be required (more details
and deadlines will be forthcoming):
- a book review/critical essay of The Kingdom of Matthias
- a research paper on a leading personality from American
Religious History. We will spend one class period choosing
a figure, aided by two reference works: The Dictionary
of Christianity in America (Daniel Reid, Editor), and
Dictionary of American Catholic Biography (John Delaney,
Editor). Monographs and Autobiographies are especially
recommended. Technologically resourceful students are
also encouraged to employ the Dominican Learning Network
in their quest/search for sources.
Some possible subjects: Jonathan Edwards, John Carroll,
Isaac Hecker, Orestes Brownson, Charles G. Finney, John
Hughes, John Ireland, James Cardinal Gibbons, Dwight Moody,
Dorothy Day, Reinhold Neibuhr, Thomas Merton, Daniel Berrigan.
The paper should summarize the facts of the person's life,
and place him/her in the context of American Religious History,
relating the life to issues/themes we've explored in the,
course.
V. Textbooks
- Marty, Martin, Pilgrims in Their Own Land (Penguin)
- Carey, Patrick, American Catholic Religious Thought
(Paulist)
- Johnson, Paul & Wilenz, Sean, The Kingdom of Matthias:
A Story of Sex and Salvation in Nineteenth Century America
(Oxford)
- Orsi, Robert, The Madonna of 115th Street: Faith and
Community In Italian Harlem, 1880-1950 (Yale)
- Rodriguez, Richard Hunger of Memory (Bantam)
- Capco Reader - collection of xeroxed articles
VI. TOPICS/ Weekly Assignments & Class Schedule
Introduction Reconsidering the American Past
Week # 1
*Butler: "Historiographical Heresy: Catholicism as
a Model for American Religious History"
*Dolan: "Immigrants and Their Gods: A New Perspective
in American Religious History"
"In the Beginning ... European Context & Evangelization
of America
Week #2
Marty: 1. The First Migrants 2. A Crowned Cross 3. The
Conqueror vs. The Missionary" 4. Holy Wars and Sacred
Piracies"
*Rodriguez: "The Missions"
"Colonial Background, Awakening, and Revolution"
Week #3
Marty: 5. Establishing Colonies 6. Pilgrimages of Dissent
7. The End of the Catholic Missionary Road
Week #4
Marty 8. A Matter of Choice 9. Three Revolutions
Carey: Introduction, pp. 3-15 Part 1: The Enlightenment
JOHN ENGLAND
"New Nation: Revivalism and the Immigrant Church"
Week #5
Marty: 10. Into the West and the World 11. Beyond Existing
Bonds 12. A Century of Exclusion
*Hatch: "The Democratization of Christianity"
*Raboteau: "African Americans, Exodus and American
Israel"
Johnson & Wilenz: THE KINGDOM OF MATTHIAS
Week #6
Marty: 13. Adapting to America
Carey: Introduction, pp. 15-30 Part II: Romantic Catholicism
ORESTES BROWNSON
ISAAC THOMAS HECKER
*Welter: "From Maria Monk to Paul Blanshard: A Century
of Protestant Anti-Catholicism"
Week #7
Carey: Introduction, pp.30-46 Part IV. "Americanism
and Modernism" JOHN IRELAND
*Gleason: "Immigrant Past, Ethnic Present"
Mid-Term Examination
"Transitional Years: Social Gospel & Rise of Fundamentalism"
Week #8
Marty: 14. Crises in the Protestant Empire" 15. Healing
the Restless
Carey: Part V. "Social Justice"
JOHN HUGHES
EDWARD MCGLYNN
Twentieth Century Challenges: War, Depression, Adaptation
Week #9
Orsi: The Madonna of 115th Street
Focus on The Immigrant Experience
Class Presentations
Week #10
Marty: 16. The Dream of One Kingdom
Carey: JOHN RYAN
Week #11
Carey: Introduction: pp. 46-63
Part VI: "Neo-Thomism and Catholic Culture"
DOROTHY DAY
*Gleason: "The Search for Unity and Its Sequel"
*Orsi: "He Keeps Me Going: Women's Devotion to St.
Jude"
""The Post World War II Era: Religious Revival??"
Week # 12
Marty: 17. A Season of Conflicts" 18. The American
Way of Life"
Carey: JOHN COURTNEY MURRAY
*Wuthnow: "Old Fissures and New Fractures in American
Religious Life"
Week # 13
Research Papers Due
Marty: 19. Always a Horizon"
*Bellah: "Civil Religion in America"
Week # 14
Marty: 20. New Paths for Old Pilgrimages"
Rodriguez: Hunger of Memory
Wrap-Up and Further Reconsiderations
Week # 15
*Bellah: "Competing Visions of the Role of Religion
in American Society"
*O'Brien: "American Catholicism and American Religion"
|