ThM Seminar: Modern Protestant Thought
Course Description
Modernity has posed and continues to pose a number of profound challenges to Christian faith, challenges with which Protestant thinkers in the West have been wrestling for several centuries. By reading and discussing a number of important works in modern Protestant thought we want to look closely at this challenge and at the ways it has been met. Our aim, of course, is to sharpen our perspective on the intellectual and theological task in today's purportedly "postmodern" world.“Out of the mists of the nineteenth century, there arise again and again spectral figures that refuse to be exorcised. This is particularly true of Protestant theology. Schleiermacher, Strauss, Feuerbach, Kierkegaard, Ritschl, etc. all continue to stalk the present because they have identified and analyzed so profoundly issues that still bedevil us.” A.Van Harvey (1966)
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.
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 | Wed |
Format | Onsite Only |
Credit Hours | 3 |
Room Number | Rm 002 |
Teaching Faculty

Brittany N. Melton
Associate Professor of Old Testament
Brittany N. Melton received her PhD in Old Testament from the University of Cambridge in 2017, an MA in theology from Fuller Theological Seminary, and a BA in biblical languages from Oklahoma Baptist University. She has known a calling to ministry since her teenage years, working in various church and parachurch contexts. Her love of the Old Testament is rooted in a passion for the church to rediscover the riches of Old Testament theology for the life of faith. Before coming to Regent in 2023, she taught in Cambridge, for Ridley College (Melbourne), and at Palm Beach Atlantic University in South Florida.