MB508/608: Culture, Human Sexuality, &
Ministry (4 units)
Sherwood G. Lingenfelter PhD,
Provost and Senior Vice President, and Professor of Anthropology,
Judith E. Lingenfelter PhD, Adjunct Professor of Anthropology
Spring 2008 Pasadena
DESCRIPTION:
Human
sexuality is an aspect of social interaction that is especially volatile in the
practice of cross-cultural ministry. The sexual drive and emotional needs of
persons engaged in ministry relationships and the differing cultural
expectations about the regulation and control of courtship, marriage, gender
roles and sexual behavior create a potentially explosive blend of interpersonal
and social expectations. This course will examine the ways in which people
across cultures seek to regulate sexual behavior, and provide biblical and
comparative cultural perspectives on the topic. Assignments will guide students
toward understanding themselves and understanding others on this topic. The
course will help students begin the process of reflection on sexuality, the
grace of God, and constructive social and spiritual disciplines that may lead
to effective cross-cultural ministry.
LEARNING OUTCOMES: By the end
of the course students will be able to:
1. Practice research to describe courtship,
marriage, gender roles, and the social regulation of sexual behavior in a
culture different from their own;
2. Compare biblical and contemporary
cases on courtship, marriage, gender and sexual behavior, and consider the
theological implications of this comparison;
3. Discover strategies to discern and
disarm unwanted sexual advances from someone from another cultural context;
4. Learn and practice spiritual
disciplines to break gender role and sexual habits that threaten your spiritual
life and ministry.
COURSE
FORMAT: Class will meet one evening each week for 3 hour sessions. Class sessions will include lectures,
discussions, and small group exercises.
REQUIRED
1. Klima, Ivan.
The Ultimate Intimacy.
2. Stone, Linda. Kinship and Gender: An Introduction.
3. Winner, Lauren F. Real Sex: the naked truth about chastity.
RECOMMENDED
1. Pasternak,
ASSIGNMENTS:
1.
Write a 1000-1250 word personal reflection paper on your experience and
concerns about sexuality in cross-cultural ministry context, and a 1000-1250 word
reflection on the novel by Klima.
2. Conduct either library research or four ethnographic interviews (a person
from another continent and culture) on topics of culture, gender, and sexual
behavior and write a report of your findings;
3. Reading/reflection on gender, sex, and spiritual disciplines (Winner and
Klima) that is expressed in one of the following: essay – 1500 words, poem – 2
pages/500 words, drama – class performance, painting – class exhibit.
PREREQUISITES: None.
Professors reserve the right to change this ECD in the final syllabus.
RELATION TO CURRICULUM: Elective course.
FINAL
EXAM: None.