session4instructions
.docx
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School
Colorado Christian University *
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Course
INT-212A
Subject
Religion
Date
Feb 20, 2024
Type
docx
Pages
4
Uploaded by DeanEnergyDove41
Session 4 Discussion
Subscribe
Click on the Session 4 Discussion link and then scroll down to start a new thread to respond to the discussion prompt. After posting your initial response, please comment on your classmates' responses. Respond by making constructive responses or by raising other questions that will promote further discussion and learning by all of us.
Participation Requirements
You will be graded not only for the quality of your posting but also for the level of your participation in this discussion. Your initial post is due by Wednesday at
11:59 P.M. (MT) of the week in which the discussion is assigned. A minimum of
two (2) additional response posts are due by Sunday at 11:59 P.M. (MT). Participation is required on at least three days throughout the session. Participation includes your initial post and two additional response posts. These are minimum requirements. Be sure to follow any additional guidelines posted by the instructor.
Review the rubric available for specific grading criteria.
Discussion Prompt: Living a Transformed Life
In chapter 1, Smith (2011) presents the three callings: the call to be a Christian, the vocational calling, and the immediate call. Though the book focuses specifically on vocational calling, our biblical perspective this week lends an interesting view of calling in general. Consider how the call to be a Christian leads to a transformed life and informs your perception of the other two callings (vocational and immediate). Continuing our discussion in this class
regarding the relevance of Scripture, contemplate how being able to use and understand Scripture can add depth to your understanding of the three callings,
applying the concepts from this week's assigned reading and Biblical Perspective.
Rubrics
OND1 Discussion Rubric - Biblical Integration & References 20 pts.
Start a New Thread
Reading
Please complete the following before this session:
A calling is always a demonstration of the love and initiative of God, but
through vocation we also come to an appreciation that God takes us
seriously.
(Smith, 2011, p. 9)
Smith, G.T. (2011).
Courage and calling: Embracing your God-given potential
(opens in a new tab)
.
Chapters 1, 6, 8
Note: This book is provided to you through the CCU Library. You will be prompted to sign-in to your CCU account to access this book.
Biblical Perspective
A critical aspect of evangelicals’ understanding of conversion is that
it is a faith transaction.
In session one we discovered that Christians were first called such back in first-century (AD) Antioch. However, evangelicals first received their handle much, much later in Christian history.
“Evangelical” first became a group moniker back in the sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation. Martin Luther used the term to distinguish a biblical understanding of the gospel from what he considered to be the corrupted teachings about salvation within Roman Catholicism. Not surprisingly then, Lutherans were first called “evangelicals” (Elwell, 2001, p. 407).
The word is actually derived from the Greek
euangelion
(which shows up over 100 times in the New Testament) and its Latin version
evangelium
. Both
words refer to the “good news” of the gospel – “glad tidings…of Jesus who appeared on earth as the Son of God to accomplish God’s plan of salvation for needy humans” (Noll, 2003, p. 16).
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