Seminar: History of the Christian Laity
Course Description
This seminar explores the initiatives of ordinary Christians throughout the history of the global church who organized themselves to practice and spread their faith independently of clerical leadership and formal ecclesiastical structures. Some of the greatest achievements of the church (such as monastic, missionary, social reform, and artistic movements) originated from the devotional and missional commitment of lay people and were sustained by their voluntary labour and resources. Empowered by the Reformation’s recovery of the priesthood of all believers, the embrace of lay spirituality and activism in the Evangelical Awakenings, and more recent Catholic teachings on the lay apostolate, the twentieth century has witnessed a flourishing of lay Christian engagement that have antecedents worth exploring.This course has a maximum enrollment of 12 students.
To get into a priority enrollment course, you must register by the early registration deadline (see Important Dates ); during the registration process, REGIS will prompt you to fill out a Priority Enrollment Course Request form online. Class lists will be determined within a week after the early registration deadline, and you will be notified by email shortly thereafter. First priority will be given to students who need a course for the program to which they have been admitted, and who have registered by the early registration deadline.
Offered | 2025 Fall |
Dates | Sep 8 - Dec 19 |
Days | Fri |
Format | Onsite and Online |
Credit Hours | 3 |
Room Number | Rm 230 / Online |
Teaching Faculty

Prabo Mihindukulasuriya
Assistant Professor of the History of Christianity
Dr. Prabo Mihindukulasuriya joined Regent’s faculty in 2022 after two decades of service at Colombo Theological Seminary in Sri Lanka, where he held a variety of faculty and staff roles. From 2014 to 2021, he served as Deputy Principal and Head of Publishing, a role that also included extensive teaching responsibilities.

Paul Stevens
Professor Emeritus of Marketplace Theology and Leadership
Paul Stevens joined the Regent faculty in 1987 as Associate Professor of Applied Theology and was named the David J. Brown Professor of Marketplace Theology and Leadership in 1999. During his tenure at Regent, Dr. Stevens taught courses on Marketplace Theology, equipping and empowering the people of God, and ministry and spirituality.