Courses
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If you have any questions, contact our enrolment team at enrolment@ambrose.edu or 403-410-2900 or 1-800-461-1222.
Featured Course: Effective Online Ministry
Seminary Course ID Legend
-OL courses are offered online.
-CL courses are Chinese Language courses.
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Seminary
Alliance History and Thought
A survey of the origins of The Alliance Canada movement in its social/cultural context. The continuities and changes are then traced historically as The Alliance Canada developed to the present. In this, an evaluation of Alliance “distinctives” will form a central theme.
Prerequisite: CH 501, TH 501 or TH 610. Prerequisite will be waived for students who are in a denominational credentialing process.
Notes: This course is cross-listed as TH 640 and is cross-leveled at the undergraduate level as HI 362/REL 362.
BL 512-1 Introduction to Hebrew Exegesis
BL 512-CL-1 Introduction to Hebrew Exegesis (Chinese)
BL 521 - 1 The Language of the New Testament
This first course in New Testament Greek is designed to give students the knowledge of NT Greek that will enable them to proceed directly to courses in NT exegesis or to courses in NT Greek in which the aim is intensive and extensive reading of texts. The emphasis falls on differences between Greek and English grammar - the system of formal structural devices or "rules" which a language uses to indicate the relationships between words and arrangements of words. The student will study the grammar usually covered in a traditional first two semesters of Greek but without the memorization of vocabulary and forms. The grammatical structures are taught from "real" NT Greek as much as possible.
BL 521 - 1 The Language of the New Testament
This first course in New Testament Greek is designed to give students the knowledge of NT Greek that will enable them to proceed directly to courses in NT exegesis or to courses in NT Greek in which the aim is intensive and extensive reading of texts. The emphasis falls on differences between Greek and English grammar – the system of formal structural devices or “rules” which a language uses to indicate the relationships between words and arrangements of words. The student will study the grammar usually covered in a traditional first two semesters of Greek but without the memorization of vocabulary and forms. The grammatical structures are taught from “real” NT Greek as much as possible.