This course follows the extraordinary development of Western Christianity from its early persecution under the Roman Empire in the third century to its global expansion with the Jesuits of the early modern world. We explore the dynamic and diverse character of a religion with an enormous cast characters. We will meet men and women who tell stories of faith as well as of violence, suppression, and division. Along the way, we encounter Perpetua and her martyrdom in Carthage; the struggles of Augustine the bishop in North Africa; the zeal of Celtic monks and missionaries; the viciousness of the Crusades; the visions of Brigit of Sweden; and the fracturing of Christianity by Martin Luther’s protest. We hear the voices of great theologians as well as of those branded heretics by the Church, a powerful reminder that the growth of Christianity is a story with many narratives of competing visions of reform and ideals, powerful critiques of corruption and venality, and exclusion of the vanquished. The troubled history of Christian engagement with Jews and Muslims is found in pogroms and expulsions, but also in the astonishing ways in which the culture of the West was transformed by Jewish and Islamic learning.
We shall explore the stunning beauty of the Book of Kells, exquisitely prepared by monks as the Vikings terrorized the coast of England. We will experience the blue light of the windows of Chartres, and ponder the opening questions of Thomas Aquinas’ great Summa. We will read from the Gutenberg Bible of the fifteenth century, which heralded the revolution brought by the printing press. We will travel from Calvin’s Geneva to Elizabeth’s England to Trent, where a Catholic Council met to inaugurate a modern, missionary Catholic church. We will walk through the great Escorial of Philip II of Spain, hear the poetry of John of the Cross, and follow the Jesuits to Brazil and China.
Christianity in the West was forged in the fires of conflict and tumult, and it brought forth both creativity and violence. It echoed with calls for God’s world to be transformed, it inspired the most sublime art and architecture, yet it also revealed the power of the union of cross and sword to destroy. The course is a journey through the formation of the West as one strand of Christianity, as one chapter in a global story. It is a journey that has shaped our world.
Learn what this course is about, who's teaching it, and other ways you can explore this topic.
What's included
2 videos5 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
2 videos•Total 13 minutes
Course Introduction•2 minutes
The Great Church (180 - 313)•11 minutes
5 readings•Total 45 minutes
Course Description•5 minutes
Meet Your Instructional Team•5 minutes
The Creed of Nicaea•15 minutes
Bonus course resources•10 minutes
Precourse Survey•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
Untitled•10 minutes
Introduction: From Persecution to Empire
Module 2•2 hours to complete
Module details
“From Persecution to Empire,” explores the interaction between the second-century Christian Church and the Roman Empire in which it existed. After the faith’s birth in Palestine, Christianity spread throughout the Roman Empire with a rapidity that alarmed many Roman rulers. Persecution of Christians became common, and the experience of persecution shaped the Church. In 313 AD, the Roman Emperor Constantine ended persecution and Christianity transformed once more to become a pillar of Roman society.
What's included
5 videos2 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt
Show info about module content
5 videos•Total 47 minutes
Diversity in the Year 200: Dura Europos (c. 240), with Dr. Lisa Brody [Yale University Art Gallery]•11 minutes
The Conversion of Constantine•8 minutes
The Arian-Nicene Controversy•12 minutes
The Nature of Christ•8 minutes
The Rise of Rome•8 minutes
2 readings•Total 30 minutes
Conversion of Constantine•20 minutes
Yale University Art Gallery—Dura-Europos: Excavating Antiquity•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
From Persecution to Empire•30 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 10 minutes
Introduce Yourself!•10 minutes
Augustine and the North African Church
Module 3•3 hours to complete
Module details
“Augustine and the North African Church,” studies two areas of early and vibrant Christian growth: Egypt and North Africa. These areas responded to intense Roman persecution by developing a theology of martyrdom. Indeed, both areas became bastions of early Christian theological thinking, with the North African Church producing the most important Christian theologian ever: Augustine of Hippo.
What's included
6 videos4 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
6 videos•Total 69 minutes
Alexandria•12 minutes
North African Christianity•15 minutes
Martyrdom and Persecution•15 minutes
The Martyrdom of Perpetua (with Max & Nazanin)•6 minutes
Augustine•14 minutes
Islamic Invasion of North Africa•7 minutes
4 readings•Total 90 minutes
Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicitas•30 minutes
Augustine on Donatists•40 minutes
A timeline of the Great Persecution•10 minutes
See the Coptic necropolis el Bagawat (Egypt), one of the earliest Christian cemeteries•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Augustine and North African Church•30 minutes
Monastic Lives: Desert Fathers to Celtic Christianity
Module 4•5 hours to complete
Module details
“Monastic Lives: Desert Fathers to Celtic Christianity,” examines the origins of monasticism in Christianity. After the end of Roman persecution, some Christians chose to isolate themselves in the desert and deny themselves food, sleep, and material comforts. Why? And how did this movement develop into medieval monasticism? This module will explain the early roots and influence of monks and nuns in Christianity.
What's included
7 videos5 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 80 minutes
Desert Monasticism•12 minutes
Saint Catherine’s (with Max)•5 minutes
Saint Benedict•11 minutes
Irish Monasticism•16 minutes
The Viking Age (with Nazanin)•6 minutes
Venerable Bede, Saint Cuthbert, and Northumbria•15 minutes
Alcuin and the Carolingian Renaissance•16 minutes
5 readings•Total 170 minutes
Life of St. Anthony•70 minutes
Benedict Rule•70 minutes
Explore the Gutenberg Bible and its history•10 minutes
Browse the Book of Kells medieval manuscript•10 minutes
View the Lindisfarne Gospels' early medieval illuminations•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Monastic Lives, Desert Fathers to Celtic Christianity•30 minutes
Reformers and Crusaders
Module 5•4 hours to complete
Module details
“Reformers and Crusaders,” focuses on Christianity during the dawn of the medieval period. Here we ask: How did Christianity respond to the new feudal world of medieval Europe? Popes, monks, and knights became essential features of the Christian faith during this period, roughly 950 – 1350 AD.
What's included
8 videos5 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 68 minutes
The Medieval World (Yale University Art Gallery)•3 minutes
Feudalism•8 minutes
Christian Reform•12 minutes
Bernard of Clairvaux (with Max)•6 minutes
Divided Christianity•6 minutes
Crusades•15 minutes
Innocent III•11 minutes
Cathar Heresy (with Nazanin)•6 minutes
5 readings•Total 130 minutes
Fulcher of Chartres, Speech of Urban II•70 minutes
The Capture of Jerusalem (1244)•10 minutes
Christian Attacks on Jews•30 minutes
Henry IV's letter to Gregory VII•10 minutes
The Romance of the Rose•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Reformers and Crusaders•30 minutes
Learning and Light
Module 6•5 hours to complete
Module details
“Learning and Light,” examines two medieval Christian ideas that emerged at the same time and from the same impulse. The first is the scholastic educational initiative that dominated Christian theology and resulted in the founding of universities. The second is the beautiful, light-focused Gothic architectural style embodied in Europe’s great cathedrals. These two movements remain the quintessential features of medieval Christianity. Scholasticism and cathedrals emerged not only at the same time but also from the same source: a Christian conception of the unity of all things.
What's included
7 videos7 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 82 minutes
Mendicant Orders•16 minutes
Saint Clare of Assisi (with Nazanin)•5 minutes
Rise of Universities•12 minutes
Abelard & Heloise (with Max)•6 minutes
Thomas Aquinas•14 minutes
Cathedrals and Theology of Light•12 minutes
Mysticism•17 minutes
7 readings•Total 180 minutes
Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologicae•40 minutes
Meister Eckhart, “The Attractive Power of God”•90 minutes
Julian of Norwich•10 minutes
The stained glass windows of Chartres•10 minutes
The Flowers of Saint Francis•10 minutes
Peter Lombard’s The Sentences•10 minutes
Aquinas’s hymn, Pange Lingua•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Learning and Light•30 minutes
Three Religions: Christians, Jews & Muslims in Medieval Spain
Module 7•4 hours to complete
Module details
“Three Religions: Christians, Jews & Muslims in Medieval Spain,” explores medieval Spain, a place in time with enormous importance for the history of Christianity. From the eighth through the fifteenth century, Spanish society included Christians, Jews, and Muslims, and Spain became the cultural capital of all three religions. Exploring medieval Spain, we will see how Christianity competed and cooperated with the non-Christian world. The central question explored in this module is: How should we remember the cultural interactions among Christians, Jews, and Muslims in medieval Spain
What's included
6 videos10 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
6 videos•Total 54 minutes
Jews and Muslims in Iberia•8 minutes
Convivencia•9 minutes
The Alhambra of Granada (with Nazanin)•4 minutes
Maimonides and Averroes•11 minutes
Inquisition and Expulsion•16 minutes
Christians, Jews, and Muslims: Discussion•5 minutes
10 readings•Total 175 minutes
Moses Maimonides, Guide to the Perplexed, Introductory Letter•15 minutes
A Christian/Muslim Debate (12th century)•40 minutes
Muslim and Christian Piety in the 13th Century•40 minutes
Gregory X: Letter on Jews, (1271-76) - Against the Blood Libel•20 minutes
The Murdered Chorister•10 minutes
Chant from the Mozarabic tradition•10 minutes
David Nirenberg’s Communities of Violence•10 minutes
The works of Averroes•10 minutes
Images of the Alhambra•10 minutes
Documents related to the Spanish Inquisition•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Three Religions: Christians, Jews & Muslims in Medieval Spain•30 minutes
Medieval Devotion
Module 8•5 hours to complete
Module details
“Medieval Devotion,” moves away from the universities and cathedrals of Europe and investigates the lives of ordinary Christians trying to maintain their spiritual lives in an era almost 1000 years ago. The Church developed and popularized many devotional practices in this era, a number of which remain a part of Christianity today. Sacraments, saints, relics, pilgrimages, and the papacy are examined in this module, as all experienced an enormous growth in importance during the medieval era. Many of these features of Christianity became controversial, with Protestant reformers of the sixteenth century rejecting some of these devotional and ecclesiological features.
What's included
9 videos8 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
9 videos•Total 87 minutes
The Isenheim Altar•10 minutes
Introduction•20 minutes
Sacraments•9 minutes
Saints & Relics•11 minutes
Joan of Arc (with Nazanin)•5 minutes
Pilgrimages•10 minutes
Rome and the Papacy•8 minutes
Avignon Papacy (with Max)•6 minutes
Heresy and Dissent•10 minutes
8 readings•Total 180 minutes
Seven Sacraments•40 minutes
Tales of Relics•45 minutes
Tales of the Devil•45 minutes
Art of Dying, (Ars Moriendi)•10 minutes
Requiem Mass for the Dead•10 minutes
Relics, and what they meant for medieval Christians•10 minutes
Chaucer's Canterbury Tales•10 minutes
Book of Hours•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Medieval Devotion•30 minutes
Luther's Reformation
Module 9•5 hours to complete
Module details
“Luther’s Reformation,” is the first of several modules to discuss the Reformation, and it does so by examining the life of the Reformation’s most iconic figure, Martin Luther. More than any other person, Luther was responsible for the seismic shifts in sixteenth-century Christianity that left the Western Church permanently fractured. Why did Luther launch his Reformation? What were his initial aspirations, and how did these change? Through the biography of Luther we will learn about the controversies that led to the Reformation and the early impact of this religious movement.
What's included
9 videos5 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
9 videos•Total 86 minutes
The Early Modern World (Yale University Art Gallery)•2 minutes
Young Luther•12 minutes
Break with Rome•16 minutes
Katharina von Bora (Nazanin)•3 minutes
Opponents & Opposition•15 minutes
Theology•11 minutes
Luther and the Jews (Max)•3 minutes
Reformation Church•17 minutes
Discussion•6 minutes
5 readings•Total 160 minutes
Martin Luther, “Freedom of a Christian”•120 minutes
Luther’s 95 Theses•10 minutes
A Mighty Fortress•10 minutes
Protestant print propaganda•10 minutes
Luther’s original German Mass•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Luther's Reformation•30 minutes
Fragmenting Reformation
Module 10•4 hours to complete
Module details
“Fragmenting Reformation,” we will explore the Reformation further. After Luther set Europe ablaze, other reformers and rulers sought to impose their views onto Christianity. Soon—and as Catholics had feared—multiple forms of Protestantism emerged. Sixteenth-century Christians disagreed over what constituted proper ecclesiology, theology, and ritual practices, and soon the European religious landscape divided into different camps all insisting on different visions of Christianity. John Calvin became one of the most influential thinkers and organizers in this period, but even lesser known figures exerted enormous influence as Western Christendom experienced its most serious crisis.
What's included
8 videos7 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 93 minutes
Radical Visions•13 minutes
Anabaptist Kingdom of Münster (Max)•4 minutes
Zwingli•18 minutes
John Calvin: Life•20 minutes
Calvinism•14 minutes
English Reformation•16 minutes
Foxe's Book of Martyrs (with Nazanin)•4 minutes
Fragmenting Reformation: Discussion•4 minutes
7 readings•Total 110 minutes
Hans Schlaffer, A Brief Introduction for the Leading of Truly Christian Life•45 minutes
Professor Gordon’s books on Calvin and Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Fragmenting Reformation•30 minutes
Catholic Reform
Module 11•4 hours to complete
Module details
In “Catholic Reform,” we will see how Catholicism transformed itself during the sixteenth century, an era usually characterized by the Protestant Reformation. In response to the Protestant challenge, Catholicism began to reform key aspects of its practices, yet Catholic leaders resolutely defended their theology against Luther’s and Calvin’s attacks. And Catholicism also experienced transformations that had begun long before Luther launched his reforming campaign in 1517. A debate still exists amongst historians regarding the origins of Catholicism’s sixteenth-century reforms. Were these changes purely a response to the Protestant challenge? Or did Catholicism begin its early modern reforms long before Luther was ever born. This module explores these questions, along with the vibrant Catholic culture that emerged during the era of the Reformation.
What's included
7 videos7 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 86 minutes
Erasmus and his Legacy•16 minutes
Pre-Trent Catholic Reform•14 minutes
The Council of Trent•19 minutes
Catholic vs. Counter Reformation (Max and Nazanin)•3 minutes
Catholic Bibles•16 minutes
Teresa of Avila & Spanish Mysticism•14 minutes
El Escorial (Nazanin)•4 minutes
7 readings•Total 130 minutes
The Council of Trent’s Decree on Justification (1547)•60 minutes
Teresa of Avila, The Interior Castle: Preface•20 minutes
Erasmus’s Novum Instrumentum•10 minutes
The Complutensian Polyglot Bible•10 minutes
El Greco and other works from leading Catholic Baroque artists•10 minutes
Peruse the poetry of Saint John of the Cross•10 minutes
Carlos Eire’s Reformations•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Catholic Reform•30 minutes
Jesuits and Missions
Module 12•4 hours to complete
Module details
Our final module, “Jesuits and Mission,” we will see how, at the same time that Western Christianity fractured and reinvented itself due to the Reformation, the faith also followed Europe’s colonial paths and spread across the world. Catholic religious orders (including the newly founded Jesuit order) led the expansion of Christianity into non-European lands. Jesuits and other missionaries sought to inject Christianity into the societies they encountered, and to do so the Jesuits adapted to local cultural practices and added subtle features to Catholicism. For the first time, Christianity became a global religion.
What's included
6 videos9 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
6 videos•Total 47 minutes
The Founding of the Jesuits•11 minutes
Ignatius of Loyola (Nazanin)•4 minutes
Francis Xavier•11 minutes
Mateo Ricci & China•12 minutes
Brazil•9 minutes
Closing words from Bruce, Nazanin, and Max•1 minute
9 readings•Total 160 minutes
Francis Xavier to Ignatius Loyola on Missions•20 minutes
Francis Xavier, Letter from Japan, 1552•20 minutes
Memorial for Matteo Ricci•60 minutes
Japanese depiction of the arrival of the Portuguese•10 minutes
A timeline of the colonization of Brazil•10 minutes
Moxos Ensemble•10 minutes
An early modern Jesuit’s account of the martyrdom of his fellow missionaries•10 minutes
The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci,•10 minutes
Post Course Survey•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Jesuits and Missions•30 minutes
Instructor
Instructor ratings
Instructor ratings
We asked all learners to give feedback on our instructors based on the quality of their teaching style.
For more than 300 years, Yale University has inspired the minds that inspire the world. Based in New Haven, Connecticut, Yale brings people and ideas together for positive impact around the globe. A research university that focuses on students and encourages learning as an essential way of life, Yale is a place for connection, creativity, and innovation among cultures and across disciplines.
OK
Why people choose Coursera for their career
Felipe M.
Learner since 2018
"To be able to take courses at my own pace and rhythm has been an amazing experience. I can learn whenever it fits my schedule and mood."
Jennifer J.
Learner since 2020
"I directly applied the concepts and skills I learned from my courses to an exciting new project at work."
Larry W.
Learner since 2021
"When I need courses on topics that my university doesn't offer, Coursera is one of the best places to go."
Chaitanya A.
"Learning isn't just about being better at your job: it's so much more than that. Coursera allows me to learn without limits."
Learner reviews
4.8
696 reviews
5 stars
83.33%
4 stars
12.78%
3 stars
2.29%
2 stars
0.86%
1 star
0.71%
Showing 3 of 696
A
AB
5·
Reviewed on Jan 2, 2021
Thank you so much for offering this course for free. It was a great way to learn and understand the complicated history of my faith as it maneuvered the world around it that I was never aware of.
E
ES
5·
Reviewed on Mar 22, 2018
A great journey! Lots of information and bonus material! I'm very thankful for the course. It might be that the professor's speech is sometimes a bit difficult to follow, but it's a minor drawback
M
ME
5·
Reviewed on Dec 11, 2020
Course presentation by Dr. Gordon was above-average. Highly recommend for those who seek to improve knowledge of how Christianity developed over centuries.
When will I have access to the lectures and assignments?
To access the course materials, assignments and to earn a Certificate, you will need to purchase the Certificate experience when you enroll in a course. You can try a Free Trial instead, or apply for Financial Aid. The course may offer 'Full Course, No Certificate' instead. This option lets you see all course materials, submit required assessments, and get a final grade. This also means that you will not be able to purchase a Certificate experience.
What will I get if I purchase the Certificate?
When you purchase a Certificate you get access to all course materials, including graded assignments. Upon completing the course, your electronic Certificate will be added to your Accomplishments page - from there, you can print your Certificate or add it to your LinkedIn profile.
Is financial aid available?
Yes. In select learning programs, you can apply for financial aid or a scholarship if you can’t afford the enrollment fee. If fin aid or scholarship is available for your learning program selection, you’ll find a link to apply on the description page.