Wilson, Paul

Paul Eddy Wilson
Office: 
Phone: (336) 454-4604
Email: wilsonpe@shawu.edu

 

Degrees:

Ph. D. in Philosophy, May, 1989, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996

M. Div. in New Testament May, 1984, Emmanuel Christian Seminary (formerly Emmanuel School of Religion); 1 Walker Dr.; Johnson City, TN 37601

B. S. in Bible and Missions, May, 1977, Johnson University (formerly Johnson Bible College), Knoxville, TN 37998

Thesis and Dissertation:

Doctoral Dissertation completed under the direction of Dr. Rem B. Edwards, University of Tennessee: The Bearing of Process Thought on the Problem of Theodicy.

M. Div. Thesis completed under the direction of Dr. Beauford Bryant, Emmanuel School of Religion: A Reexamination of the Lord's Supper in I Corinthians 11: 20-33.

Student Honors:

Beard Scholarship in Philosophy, 1985-1986, University of Tennessee.

American Bible Society Award for Biblical Studies, 1984, Emmanuel School of Religion.

Academic Experience:

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Fayetteville State University, January, December 6, 2024.

Adjunct Professor of Religion and Philosophy, Shaw University, July 25, 2024.

Retired Professor of Religion and Philosophy, Shaw University, July 19, 2024.

Program Coordinator – Christian Ministry BA: August 1, 2022 – July 31, 2024

Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Shaw University: March 10, 2016

Interim Program Coordinator for Religion and Philosophy at Shaw University, August 1, 2016 – August 1, 2017.

Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Shaw University: May 15, 2012.

Shaw University Certified Moodle ONLINE Learning Management System Trainer

Site Coordinator (Previously titled Director) of Shaw University CAPE at High Point, High Point, North Carolina: December 2005 - July 2022

Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Interim Director of Shaw University CAPE: October- December 2005

Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Acting Director of Shaw University CAPE: June-October 2005

Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Shaw University: 1991-2012

Adjunct Faculty for Shaw Divinity School: Fall, 1993; Spring, 1995.

Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of the South: 1989-1991.

Graduate Teaching Assistant (Staff Instructor) at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville: 1987-1989.

Areas of Specialization:

Philosophy of Religion, Ethics, Process Philosophy, Genocide.

Areas of Competence:

Introduction to Philosophy, Introduction to Logic, Business Ethics, Professional Ethics, American Philosophy; Philosophy of Religion

Societies and Memberships:

American Academy of Religion and the Society of Biblical Literature (1982-1995)

American Association of Philosophy Teachers (1990-1991)

American Philosophical Association (APA Central Division) (1990 – 2024)

Concerned Philosophers for Peace (CCP)

International Society of Theta Phi

International Thomas Merton Society

North Carolina Philosophical Society

North Carolina Religious Studies Association

Postdoctoral Awards, Grants and Honors:

Participant in a NEH Summer Seminar, 1990: "The Spectrum of Responsibility" directed by Peter French of Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas.

Recipient of a 1992 Summer Fellowship for four weeks of study in the Howard and Edna Hong Kierkegaard Library, St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota.

Participant in a PEW Charitable Trust Fund Seminar, "The Historicity of the Incarnational Narrative," at St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota, on June 12-18, 1993. C. Stephen Evens, Director. Faculty included William Abraham, Stephen Davis, Elanore Stump, and Nicholas Wolterstorff.

Participant in a NEH Summer Seminar, 1994: "Law and Religion in Biblical Antiquity," directed by Calum Carmichael at the University of California, Berkeley, California.

1998 Vice President and Program Chair for the North Carolina Religious Studies Association.

1999 President for the North Carolina Religious Studies Association.

2002 Interim Editor for Volume II of Thinking about Religion, an on-line journal of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association.

General Editor for Thinking about Religion: An on-line journal of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association. Available at http://organizations.uncfsu.edu/ncrsa

Certified ONLINE instructor for Shaw University, Spring, 2010.

Certified Train-the-Trainer Moodle Instructor for Shaw University, Fall, 2010.

Recipient of the Shaw University Award for Excellence in Faculty Service, August 15, 2011.

Participant in the UNCF/Mellon Teaching and learning Institute: Using Social Networks to Enhance Writing Across the Curriculum, May 25 and May 26, 2012.

2014 October Cohort Advanced Online Teaching Certificate from the Online Learning Consortium (OLC), January 20, 2015.

RIMI Proposal Writing Series Certificate of Completion, Shaw University, April 2015.

Recognition of Mastery (Certificate) in Instructional Design Workshop, Online Learning Consortium (OLC), April 17, 2015.

Recognition of Mastery (Certificate) in the Quality Scorecard, Online Learning Consortium (OLC), September 4, 2015.

NIH web-based training for “Protecting Human Research Participants.” Certificate #1945321 Issued January 7, 2016.

Received March 10, 2016, letter from the President of Shaw University announcing a promotion to Full Professor of Religion and Philosophy.

Participant in the 2016 Faculty Resource Network Seminar at New York University: “How to Write Successful Grant Proposals,” June 6 to June 10.

Participant in the June 27 to July 1, 2016, Annual Seminar on Religion, Ethics, and the Holocaust, “Good, Evil, and the Grey Zone: Religions Role in Genocide from the Holocaust to ISIS,” at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, D. C.

Certificate of Completion for the workshop: “Exploring ePortfolios,” Online Learning Consortium (OLC), August 14, 2016.

2016 Vice President and Program Chair for the North Carolina Religious Studies Association.

Certificate of Completion for workshop: “Strategies for Evaluating Online Faculty” Online Learning Consortium (OLC), October 28, 2016.

Advanced Graduate Certificate in Online Learning, Lamar University, Beaumont, Texas. May 15, 2017. (12 graduate hours)

Participant in the 2018 Faculty Resource Network Seminar at New York University, “Designing Student Assessments with Technology and Media,” June 11 to June 15.

Participant in the 2019 Faculty Resource Network Seminar at New York University, “Human Rights and the Rights of Stateless People,” June 10 to June 14.

Participant in the 2020 Faculty Resource Network (FRN) Seminar from New York University, “Propaganda and Mass Persuasion, Past and Present,” Convened by Matthew Ellis. June 8 to June 12.

Completion of “High-Impact Online Teaching and Learning Practices for Faculty at Historically Black Colleges and Universities.” This certification was provided by the Garner Institute on August 7, 2020. Funding was provided by UNCF.

UNCF Strategic Education, Inc. Teaching Online for Faculty Workshop Certificate, March 25, 2021.

Shaw University Faculty Award of Excellence in Research, May 14, 2021.

Participant in the 2021 Faculty Resource Network (FRN) Seminar from New York University, “Fostering Mental Health and Wellbeing for Faculty and Staff on University Campuses.” Convened by Cirecie A. West-Olatunji – June 7 to June 11.

Arizona State University Learning Enterprise Professional Development Badge for attending or participating in 6 in-person or recorded sessions in the “Remote” conference, June 9 to 11, 2021.

Participant in the June 23 to July 2, 2021 Annual Seminar on Religion, Ethics, and the Holocaust, “The Holocaust and the Christian Tradition,” at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, D. C.

Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Scholar Remote Fellowship, Fall, 2021.

UNCF SEI Certificate for FAC 201 Advanced Online Student Engagement, November 17, 2021.

Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Scholar Remote Fellowship, Spring, 2022.

Arizona State University Learning Enterprise Professional Development Badge for attending or participating in 6 in-person or recorded sessions in the “Remote” conference, June 9 to 10, 2022.

Participant in the 2022 Faculty Resource Network (FRN) Seminar from New York University, “Nations and Nationalism” Convened by Matthew Ellis – June 6 to June 10, 2022.

Award recipient of a 2022 grant from the Center for Racial and Social Justice (CRSJ) at Shaw University. Funded project: “King Style Tactics for Activism.”

Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Scholar Remote Fellowship, Fall 2022.

Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Leadership Initiative – Fall 2022 & Spring 2023

Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Scholar Remote Fellowship, Spring 2023

Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Leadership Initiative certificate of completion.

UNCF Teaching Learning Center Cohort 2 certificate of completion for student engagement and online learning.

Participant in the 2023 Faculty Resource Network (FRN) Seminar from New York University, “Representing Race and Immigration in the Popular Imagination,” June 5 to 9, 2023.

Certified attendee at the Course Hero Education Summit on June 29 and 30, 2023.

Participant in Publishing 200 – A UNCF-Mellon Faculty Seminar at Claflin University’s Teaching and Learning Institute, July 11 – 13, 2023.

Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Scholar Remote Fellowship, Fall, 2023.

Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Scholar Remote Fellowship, Spring, 2024.

Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Winter Seminar Convener for the seminar, “Assessing the Stages of a Genocide,” January 5 – 12, 2024, San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Participant in the Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Summer Seminar from New York University, Evidence-Based Strategies to Increase Student Engagement, June 10 to 14, 2024.

Recipient of the 2023-2024 United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) Broadening Academia Initiative (BAI) Research Fellowship. This research fellowship was conducted on site at the USHMM on July 8 to July 12, 2024.

Curriculum Development

Lead developer of the Christian Ministry Bachelor of Arts Major with 48 hours of core requirements. Approved for implementation in August 2022 by SACSCOC.

Developer of the Christian Ministry Minor with 12 hours of requirements. Approved by the Academic Council, May, 2024.

Publications:

"An Apt Punishment for Tom Joad: (Re)Evaluating Tom Joad on the Basis of the PRA," Journal for Social Philosophy, Vol. 22, no. 2, pp. 81-93, Fall 1991.

"Barring Corporations from the Moral Community: the Concept and the Cost," Journal for Social Philosophy, Vol. 23, no. 1, pp. 74-89, Spring 1992.

"The Fiction of Corporate Scapegoating," The Journal of Business Ethics 12 (1993): 779-784.

"Corporations, Minors, and Other Innocents," Journal of Business Ethics 13 (1994): 761-774.

"Select Bibliography for 'An Exploration of Kierkegaard's Tragic Hero and Its Implications for Moral Theory'", Sören Kierkegaard Newsletter 27(April 1993): 13-15.

"Practical Expressions of Natural Piety: Emerson & Dewey," Topicos: revista de filosofía (Mexico) 3 (4, 1993): 85-107.

"Self-Initiated Objectives," APA Newsletter on Teaching Philosophy, Vol. 94, No. 2, Spring 1995: 116-120.

"Emerson and Dewey on Natural Piety" The Journal of Religion. (July,1995): 329-346. (This is a revised version of "Practical Expressions of Natural Piety: Emerson & Dewey") Copyright is retained by The University of Chicago in agreement with the author.

"Sanity and Irresponsibility," Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology. 3(4, 1996): 293-302.

"Deuteronomy 25:11-12 -- One for the Books," Vetus Testamentum 47(2, 1997):220-235.

"Y2K as a Clergy Testing Ground," available in the online journal, Thinking about Religion, Vol. 1, 2000. [Archive Journal]

"Personal Encounters in Near-Death Experiences," Thinking about Religion, Vol. 2. , 2002 [Archive Journal]

“Does Post-Mortem Existence Require Seamless Survival?” Thinking about Religion, Vol. 4, 2004. [Archive Journal]

“Appraising the Risks of Simple Foreknowledge,” Thinking about Religion, Vol. 5, 2005 [Archive Journal]

“Regulative Control and the Subjectivist’s View of Moral Responsibility,” Journal for Philosophy in the Contemporary World Spring, 2006: 28-33.

“The Life Review in Death and Dying,” Thinking about Religion, Vol. 6, 2006. [Archive Journal]

“The Hiddenness of God as a Cluster Problem,” Thinking about Religion, Vol. 7, 2008. [Archive Journal]

“Past Lives and Post-mortem Survival,” Thinking about Religion, Vol. 8, 2009. [Archive Journal]

“The Fear of Post-mortem Annihilation,” Thinking about Religion, Vol. 9, 2011. [Archive Journal]

“The Lure of Corporate Virtue” in Corporate Social Responsibility and Governance, edited by Samuel Idowu. Springer Publishing, 2015. ISBN 978-3-319-10908-4

“Between Berlin and Birmingham: A comparison of resistance in the lives of Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Martin Luther King, Jr.” Appraisal Vol. 10 No. 4 (October 2015):20-26. For a table of contents see: http://www.britishpersonalistforum.org.uk/vol10.htm

“Finding Moral Casualties in Wartime Fatalities” Journal for Philosophy in the Contemporary World, Volume 25 (Issue 1): 2019.

“The Case of the Aryan Jesus Dogma: Enlarging Entitlement Through Propaganda.” Philosophy Study, March 2019, Vol. 9, No. 3, 134-143 doi: 10.17265/2159-5313/2019.03.002

“Cry ‘Genocide!’ for all the good it will do.” Appears in the volume: “Civility, Nonviolent Resistance, and the New Struggle for Social Justice.” Brill, 2019 ISBN: 978-90-04-41757-1

Publication Date: 21 Nov 2019

“Moral Pathways forward for Resisters in a Genocide” This essay appears as chapter seven in the volume, Peace and Hope in Dark Times edited by Andrew Fiala and Sahar Heydarifard. ISBN: 978-90-04-54114-6 https://brill.com/display/title/64268

The Degradation of Ethics through the Holocaust. Palgrave MacMillan, 2023 https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-30919-9

"Avoiding the ‘Backfire Problem’: How Martin Luther King Jr. came to Ground his Nonviolent Activism in Personalism." Journal of Pacifism and Nonviolence 3 (2025) 122–142 brill.com/jpn

Lectures and Essays Presented at Professional Meetings:

"Teaching Philosophy in an Isolated Ecclesiastical School" was read at the 8th International Workshop Conference on Teaching Philosophy at Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, on August 9, 1990.

"Omissions at Work and At Play," was read at the Intermountain Philosophy Conference at Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina, on November 3-4, 1990.

"Refusals: Are They Doubly Heinous Omissions?" was read at the Tennessee Philosophical Association at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, on November 9-10, 1990.

"Supererogation: Hero's Acts or Heroics?" was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at Queens College, Charlotte, North Carolina, on February 23, 1991.

"The Failures of Negative Theology According to Process Theists," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society for Christian Philosophers at Rhodes College, Memphis, Tennessee, on April 5-7, 1991.

"Egoism & Self-Interest," was read at the Tennessee Philosophical Association at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, on November 15-16, 1991.

"The Feasibility of an After Life View in Process Philosophy," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society for Christian Philosophers at Wofford College, Spartanburg, South Carolina, on April 3-5, 1992.

"Corporate Displays of Virtue and Vice," was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at Elon College, Elon College, North Carolina, on February 29, 1992.

"Practical Expressions of Natural Piety: Emerson and Dewey," was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Barton College, Wilson, North Carolina, on October 2, 1992.

"Abraham's Silence: An Intersubjective Study," was read at the annual meeting of the Society for Philosophy of Religion at Hilton Head, North Carolina, on March 5-7, 1993.

"Rule Followers and Moral Reasoning," was read at the Tennessee Philosophical Association at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, on November 13-14, 1992.

"Trying and 'The Point of No Return'", was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, North Carolina, on February 26-27, 1993.

"Ontological Commitments of Anselm's Fool" was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at Berry College, Rome, Georgia, on April 2-4, 1993.

"Kierkegaard's Judge William on Mysticism," was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte, North Carolina, on October 1, 1993.

"Post-Modern Animism's Case for an Astral Body," was read at the Society for Philosophy of Religion at Savannah, Georgia, on February 26-28, 1994.

"Sanity and Nonresponsibility," was read at the annual meeting of the Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology at Atlanta, Georgia, on March 31-April 2, 1994.

"Divine Commands and Process Philosophy: Four Objections," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at Canasius College, Buffalo, New York, on April 8-9, 1994.

"Evil Within: Kierkegaard and Whitehead on Subjective Experiences of Evil," was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina, on October 7, 1994.

"Taking on More Responsibility," was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at St. Andrews College, Laurinberg, North Carolina, on March 3-4, 1995.

"Divine Commands: Easier Done than Said," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at Rhodes College, Memphis, Tennessee, on April 21-23, 1995.

A short commentary, "Is the Explanatory Principle Theory Just Enlightened Egoism?" was read in response to a lecture, "Agent-Neutral Reasons and The Objective Standpoint", by Professor Betsy Postow at the Southern Society of Philosophy and Psychiatry, Virginia Beach, Virginia, on April 14, 1995.

"Postmortem Deserts and Near Death Experiences," was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, on October 6, 1995.

"Excuse Making" was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at University of North Carolina, Charlotte, North Carolina, on February 24, 1996

"Irenaean Theodicy and Near-Death Experiences" was read at the Society for Philosophy of Religion at Atlanta, Georgia, on February 29, 1996.

"Theonomy -- One Way to Keep God's Commands," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at Salem College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, on April 12-14, 1996.

"Miracles for Better or Worse -- A Reply to Professor Keller's Moral Argument," was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Gardner-Webb University, Boiling Springs, North Carolina, on October 5, 1996.

"The Value of Maintaining Agent Integrity for Corporate Persons," was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at Elon College, Elon, North Carolina, on February 21-22, 1997.

"In Praise of 'Thin' Theism -- Beyond the Pale of Noetic Corruption," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at the University of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio, on April 4, 1997.

"Philosophical Reflection for Today's Gospel Storytellers," was presented as an invited lecture at Emmanuel School of Religion, Johnson City, Tennessee, on September 19, 1997.

"Appraising God's Miraculous Power in Process Theism: A Reply to Professor Keller," was read at the Society for Philosophy of Religion, at San Antonio, Texas, March 7, 1998. A short version of this project was presented at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, North Carolina, on October 3, 1997.

"Creativity as an Intellectual Virtue," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at the University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware, on April 3, 1998.

"God's Self-Transcendence in Process Philosophy," was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Fayetteville State University, Fayetteville, North Carolina, on October 2, 1998.

"Children and Moral Agency: The Case for the Non-Responsibility of Children," was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at Wake Forest University, Winston Salem, North Carolina, on February 12, 1999.

"Concessions In Route to the Conclusion that God is Good," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama, on April 24, 1999.

"Y2K as a Clergy Testing Ground," was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, on October 1, 1999.

"The Moral Argument and Survival," was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, on February 26, 2000.

"Love and Law in God's Will," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at the University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, on May 12, 2000,

"Sullen Concerns of the Theistic Objectivist," was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, on October 27, 2000.

"Do Us All a Favor and Die," was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at Guilford College, Greensboro, North Carolina, on February 24, 2001.

"Converting Christians to Pluralism," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at St. John Fisher College, Rochester, New York, on March 1-3, 2001.

"Personal Encounters in Near-Death Experiences," was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Barton College, Wilson, North Carolina, on October 26, 2001.

"Moral Guidance through the Charity Gauntlet," was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at Charleston College, Charleston, South Carolina, on February 8-9, 2002.

"God's Infinite Personality" was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at the University of North Carolina, Wilmington on October 25, 2002.

"Sophisticated Universalism and the After Life," was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at Messiah College, Grantham, Pennsylvania, on November 15, 2002.

"Cultivating Empathy for the Sake of Morality" was submitted for the North Carolina Philosophical Society at Davidson College, Davidson, North Carolina on February 22, 2003.

“Does Post-Mortem Existence Require Seamless Survival?” was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, North Carolina, on October 24, 2003.

“Regulative Control and the Subjectivist’s View of Moral Responsibility” was read at the Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World at Eastern Carolina University, Cullowee, North Carolina, on July 19, 2004. An earlier version of this essay was read at the joint meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society and the South Carolina Society for Philosophy at North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, on February21, 2004.

“Appraising the Risks of Simple Foreknowledge” was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Eastern Carolina University, Cullowee, North Carolina, on October 29, 2004.

“Foreknowledge and the Dilemma of Incapacitation” was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at Cumberland College, Williamsburg, Kentucky, on December 2, 2004.

“The Morality of Character Flaws” was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, on February 19, 2005.

“The Making of Moral Monsters” was read at the Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World at Eastern Carolina University, Cullowee, North Carolina, on July 14-16, 2005.

“The Life Review in Death and Dying” was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Wingate University, Wingate, North Carolina on October 22, 2005.

“Unpacking the Corporate Mission Statement for Good” was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society meeting with the South Carolina Society for Philosophy at University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina on February 17, 2006.

“Ethical Experts and Socratic Irony,” was presented at the Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World, at Western Carolina University, Cullowee, North Carolina, on July 25, 2006.

“The Hiddenness of God as a Cluster Problem” was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, North Carolina on October 6, 2006.

“Premeditation on Suicide” was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at High Point University, High Point, North Carolina, on February 24, 2007.

“The Hiddenness of God and Morality” was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at Columbia International University, Columbia, South Carolina, on April 21, 2007.

“Past Lives and Post-mortem Survival” was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Fayetteville State University, Fayetteville, North Carolina, on October 26, 2007.

“Taking Responsibility for Character” was read at the joint meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society and the South Carolina Society for Philosophy at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, on February 22, 2008.

“Emerson’s Oversoul and Open Theism” was read at the 7th Biennial Personalist Seminar at Western Carolina University, Cullowee, North Carolina, July 14-18, 2008.

“Universalism and Moral Psychology” was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at Western Carolina University, Cullowee, North Carolina, on October 24, 2008.

“How Lucky can a Libertarian Be?” was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Association at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, on February 28, 2009.

“The Luck of the Draw” was read at the 16th annual meeting of the Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World, Pine Lake, New York, on July 21, 2009.

“The Fear of Postmortem Annihilation” was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, on October 17, 2009.

“Executing the Right to Die” was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society meeting with the South Carolina Philosophy Society at Queens University, Charlotte, North Carolina, on February 27, 2010.

A revised version of “Universalism and Moral Psychology” was read at the Eastern Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers at Wake Forest University, Winston Salem, North Carolina, on March 12, 2010.

“Hartshorne’s Objective Immortality” was read at the 8th Biennial Personalist Seminar at Western Carolina University, Cullowee, North Carolina, June 22-25 , 2010.

““Post-Mortem Survival and the Perceived Harm of Death” was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at the University of North Carolina at Asheville, on October 15, 2010.

“The Harm of Post-Mortem Harm” was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society at Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina, on February 25-26, 2011.

“Training in Moodle: Groups and Forums” a Faculty Development Workshop presented at Shaw University, Raleigh, North Carolina, on March 22, 2011.

“The Value and Practice of Asynchronous Collaboration for Deep Learning” was read at the Fall meeting of the North Carolina Association of College and Teacher Educators (NC-ACTE) at Raleigh, North Carolina on September 23, 2011.

“Rob Bell’s Universalism” was read at the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, on November 5, 2011.

Faculty Development Workshop, “Adobe Connect for Classroom Instruction,” presented on January 3, 2012 at Shaw University.

Faculty Development Workshop, “Advanced Training in Moodle,” was presented on January 3, 2012 at Shaw University

“A Future Like Ours and Sanctity of Death” was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society meeting with the South Carolina Society for Philosophy at Elon University on February 24, 2012.

Faculty Development Workshop, “Advanced Training in Moodle: Grade book and Quiz Development” on April 5, 2012.

“Meliorism in Dewey’s Reconstruction of Morality” was read at the 9th Biennial Personalist Seminar at Western Carolina University, Cullowee, North Carolina meeting on July 29 to August 2, 2012.

Faculty Development Workshop, “Quiz Development in Moodle,” was presented on August 10, 2012, at Shaw University.

“Connecting Asynchronous Collaborative Writing Outside the Class with Twitter” was read at the 30th Fall Forum of the North Carolina Association of Colleges and Teacher Educators meeting in Raleigh, North Carolina, on September 20, 2012.

“How Boring Can Heaven Be?” was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association meeting at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina, on November 3, 2012.

Editorial work was completed for Volume 10 of Thinking About Religion: the online journal of the NCRSA.

“Valuing the Violence of Non-Violence” was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society at the University of North Carolina at Greenville, February 16, 2013.

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“How Asynchronous Should Your ONLINE Class Be?” was presented at the Fall Forum of the North Carolina Association of Teacher Educators (NCACTE) in Raleigh, North Carolina on September 19, 2013.

“Giving Purgatory the Last Laugh” was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association meeting at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on November 2, 2013.

Faculty Development Workshops, “Advanced Moodle Training: Grade book” and “Turnitin” were presented on November 5, 2013, at Shaw University.

“Combating Suicide Bombers with Non-violent Activism” was read at the North Carolina Philosophical Society meeting at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on February 22, 2014.

“Between Berlin and Birmingham: A comparison of resistance in the lives of Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Martin Luther King, Jr.” was read at the 10th Biennial Personalist Seminar at Western Carolina University, on August 12, 2014.

“Disrupting Class for Metacognition” was presented at the Fall Forum of the North Carolina Association of Teacher Educators (NCACTE) in Raleigh, North Carolina on September 26, 2014.

“For Heaven’s Sake Why Procreate if there is a Hell?” was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association meeting at Duke University on November 1, 2014

“Finding Moral Casualties in Wartime Fatalities,” was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society meeting at Duke University on February 27 & 28, 2015.

An expanded version of “Finding Moral Causalities in Wartime Fatalities,” was read at the annual meeting of the International Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World meeting at Western Carolina University, Cullowee, North Carolina, on July 28, 2015.

“A SMART Checkpoint and Flowchart System for Online Course Design” was read at the Fall Forum of the North Carolina Association of College and Teacher Educators meeting in Raleigh, North Carolina on September 18, 2015.

“Finding Individuals’ Justice in Hell and Heaven” was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association meeting at Fayetteville State University on November 7, 2015.

“Genocide, Mortal Harm, and the Ideal of Purification,” was read for the annual meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society, meeting at Appalachian State University, February 27, 2016.

“A SMART Checkpoint and Flowchart System for Instructional Design” was presented for the North Dakota Distance Education Summit on July 7, 2016.

Schopenhauer’s Avoidance of Methodological Solipsism” was read at the Eleventh Biennial Personalist Seminar meeting at Western Carolina University on August 2, 2016.

“Students’ ePortfolio Development and Privacy’ was read at the 2016 Fall Forum of the North Carolina Association of College and Teacher Educators” in Raleigh, North Carolina on September 23, 2016.

“A Job Objection and a Leviathan Reply to Escapism from Hell” was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association meeting at the University of Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, on October 22, 2016.

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“Cry ‘Genocide!’ for all the Good it will Do” was read at the annual meeting ot the North Carolina Philosophical Society, meeting at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, February 24, 2017.

“Cultivating a Fail Forward Learning Environment for better SlOs with Formative Assessment” was presented at the NC-ACTE Fall Forum meeting at North Raleigh Hilton, Raleigh, NC on September 22, 2017.

“Meaningful Returns from Near Death Experiences” was read at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association held at Western Carolina University, Cullowee, North Carolina, on November 4, 2017.

“Cry ’Genocide! for all the Good it will Do” (revised) was read at the annual meeting of Concerned Philosophers for Peace meeting in Raleigh, North Carolina, on November 17, 18, 2017.

“Appropriating the Unmarked Mass Graves of Genocide as Memorial Sites,” was read at the joint meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society and the South Carolina Society for Philosophy to be held at Winthrop University, Rock Hill, South Carolina, on March 24, 2018.

“How Deep Pantheism gives us Nothing” has been accepted for reading at the 12th Biennial Personalist Seminar meeting at Western Carolina University on July 24 to 28, 2018.

“Developing Depth in Discussions Online and Off” was presented at the Fall Forum of the North Carolina Association of College and Teacher Educator in Raleigh, North Carolina, on October 4, 2018.

“To Die or Not Die for an Ethnocentric Theology: The Case of the Aryan Jesus Doctrine in Nazi Germany” has been proposed for reading at the 2018 annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association held at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte on October 6, 2018.

“Ethical Gray Zones in Genocidal Killing Camps” was read at the 2019 Annual Meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society held at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro on March 9, 2019.

“Christian Ethics and the Rights of Stateless People” was presented on June 11, 2019, during the Faculty Resource Network Seminar at New York University: “Human Rights and the Rights of Stateless People” convened by Dr. Ali Bannuziz.

“Effective Critical Thinking Course Design Online and Off in Four Steps” was presented at the Fall Forum of the North Carolina Association of College and Teacher Educators in Raleigh, North Carolina, on October 1, 2019.

“What can Abrahamic Religions tell us about the Rights of Stateless Peoples?” was presented at the 2019 annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association on October 5, meeting at the University of Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

"Closing the Genocide Impunity Gap with Katherina von Kellenbach's Mark of Cain." This essay was peer reviewed and accepted for reading at the 2020 North Carolina Philosophical Society on March 28. Due to the COVID-19 virus the conference will not meet this year at UNC-Asheville.

"The case of the Muselmänner: A Study in the Loss and Reclamation of Dignity,"was accepted for reading at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World scheduled for July 18 to July 23, 2020 to be held at Guilford College, Greensboro, North Carolina.

“Seeing the Covid-19 Pandemic as an Invitation to Metacognition for K-12 and College Learners” was presented for the virtual Fall Forum of the North Carolina Association of College and Teacher Educators on September 24, 2020.

“Moral Pathway forward for Resistors to the Holocaust” was presented at the Concerned Philosophers for Peace Conference held virtually on January 29, 2021.

"A Kierkegaardian Solution to the Phenomenon of Transgenerational Trauma” was presented at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association on March 5, 2021. The meeting was held virtually under the sponsorship of Appalachian State University.

“Closing the Genocidal Impunity Gap with Kellenbech's Mark of Cain” was presented on April 10 at the 2021 Benjamin V. Cohen Peace Conference: Building a Beloved Community

Hosted by Ball State University Center for Peace & Conflict Studies.

“When Solitude becomes Overcrowded” was presented on June 25, 2021, at the International Thomas Merton Society (ITMS). The meeting was held virtually.

“Leveraging Insights from the Pandemic on Education Disparities” was presented at the Fall Forum of the North Carolina Association of College and Teacher Educators (NC-ACTE) held virtually September 22 to 24, 2021.

“Creating the Will to Resolve Statelessness,” was presented at the Concerned Philosophers for Peace (CPP) Conference held virtually on October 29, 2021.

“Dismantling Racist Institutions for Transitional Justice,” was presented at the joint meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society and the South Carolina Society for Philosophy held at Converse University on March 25, 2022.

“Tens Steps for Educators to Combat Post-Covid Trauma” was presented at the Fall Forum of the North Carolina Association of College and Teacher Educators (NC-ACTE) on September 23, 2022.

“The Religious Danger in Ethno-nationalism” was presented at a virtual session of the 35th Annual meeting of Concerned Philosophers for Peace October 22, 2022.

“King Style Tactics for Nonviolent Activism” was presented on October 29, 2022, at the University of North Carolina at Pembroke for the North Carolina Religious Studies Association (NCRSA).

“Wellness and Go-To Resources to Combat Burnout” presented January 4, 2023, at the Shaw University Faculty Research Symposium.

“Developing a Phenomenological Psychology for Holocaust Survivors’ Testimonies” was presented on March 4, 2023, at Duke University for the 2023 meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society.

“How King’s Nonviolent Tactics Avoided the Backfire Objection” was presented as a Lightening Talk at the 5th Benjamin v. Cohen Conference from Ball State University on April 8, 2023.

“How King came to Ground his Nonviolent Activism in Personalism” was presented at Pacifism & Nonviolence Workshop, hosted on Zoom by Lougborough University's Institute of Advanced Studies, 19-21 April 2023.

“Tragedy within a Tragic Process View of God” was presented at the 13th Biennial Personalist Seminar on August 1, 2023. The Seminar met remotely and face-to-face at the American Institute for Philosophical and Cultural Thought in Illinois.

“Reassessing the Theological Value of Supersessionism” was presented at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, October 28, 2023.

“The Positive Ethical Use of Generative AI for Non-fiction Writing” was presented at the 1

Twenty-Second Claflin University Conference on Contemporary English and Language Arts Pedagogy in Secondary and Postsecondary Institutions. Claflin University, Orangeburg, South Carolina. November 2, 2023.

Faculty Resource Network (FRN) NYU Teach Share Presenter: REL 295: A Case Study for the Positive Ethical use of AI in Student Work Products” January 17, 2024. Online with NYU.

UNCF TLC Talks, “Incorporating Technology in Pedagogy,” January 24, 2024.

“Moral Responsibility for Choiceless Choices in the Holocaust” was present at the North Carolina Philosophical Society along with the South Carolina Philosophy Association at Davidson College, Davidson, North Carolina, March 16, 2024.

“Pitching Hospitality to Migrants to Public Policy Makers” was presented at the Twenty-third Claflin University Conference on English and Language Arts Pedagogy in Secondary and Postsecondary Institutions, on October 22, 2024, at Claflin University, Orangeburg, South Carolina.

“Speaking for Religious Persons on Forgiveness for the Holocaust,” was presented on November 2 at the 2024 Annual Meeting of the North Carolina Religious Studies Association meeting at Fayetteville State University, Fayetteville, North Carolina.

Course Offerings:

University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee:

Fall Quarter 1987 - Fall Quarter 1988:

Introduction to Philosophy 110: Human Condition: Values and Reality

Spring Semester 1989:

Introduction to Philosophy 111: Human Condition: Consciousness and Reality

University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee:

Fall Semester 1989:

Introduction to Philosophy (2 Sections)

Introduction to Logic

Cosmology

Spring Semester 1990:

Introduction to Philosophy (2 Sections)

Introduction to Logic

Philosophy 426: Topics - Religious Attitudes Toward the Universe in 20th Century Philosophy

Fall Semester 1990:

Introduction to Philosophy (2 Sections)

Introduction to Logic

American Philosophy

Spring Semester 1991:

Introduction to Philosophy (2 Sections)

Introduction to Logic

Whitehead

Shaw University, Raleigh, North Carolina:

(Note: Course offerings for Shaw University were taught at Shaw University CAPE at High Point)

Fall Semester 1991 - Fall Semester 2001:

Philosophy 240: Introduction to Philosophy

Philosophy 241: Ancient Philosophy

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy

Philosophy 255: Logic & Thinking

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, and Person

Fall Semester 2001 Overload Courses

Philosophy 385: African American Philosophy

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics

Summer Session, 2000, 2001

Religion 234 -- World Religions

Ethics 200 -- Concepts and Issues

Adjunct Faculty for Shaw Divinity School, Raleigh, North Carolina

Fall Semester 1993, Spring Semester 1995

CH 632: Women in Western Religion

Spring Semester 2001

Ethics 100: Foundations of Ethics

Ethics 200: Issues and Concepts

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy

Philosophy 385: African American Philosophy

Summer Session, 2002

Introduction to Philosophy

Fall Semester 2002

Ethics 100: Foundations of Ethics

Ethics 200: Issues and Concepts

Philosophy 240: Introduction to Philosophy

Philosophy 255: Logic and Thinking

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, and Person

Spring Semester 2003:

Ethics 200: Issues and Concepts

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy

Philosophy 385: African American Philosophy

(Administrative Assistant Duties)

Summer Session 2003

Philosophy 241: Ancient Philosophy

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, Person

Religion 325: Introduction to Theology

Appointed as On-Site Advisor for Religion and Philosophy Majors

Fall 2003

Ethics 100: Foundation of Knowledge

Philosophy 240: Introduction to Philosophy

Philosophy 255: Logic and Thinking

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, Person

Philosophy 385: African American Philosophy

Spring 2004

Ethics 100: Foundation of Knowledge

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy

Philosophy 355: African Religion and Philosophy

Philosophy 385: Religion and Philosophy

Summer 2004

Philosophy 385: African American Philosophy

Religion 325: Introduction to Theology

Fall 2004

Ethics 100: Foundation of Knowledge

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics

Philosophy 240: Introduction to Philosophy

Philosophy 255: Logic and Thinking

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, Person

Spring 2005

Ethics 100: Foundation of Knowledge

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics

Philosophy 242: Modern Philosophy

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, Person

Religion 325: Introduction to Theology

Summer I 2005:

Religion 235: Bible

Summer II, 2005

Religion 499: Senior Project

Fall 2005

Ethics 100: Foundation of Knowledge

Philosophy 240: Introduction to Philosophy

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, Person

Spring 2006

Ethics 100: Foundation of Knowledge

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics

Philosophy 242: Modern Philosophy

Philosophy 304: African Religion and Philosophy

Summer 2006

Religion 235: Bible

Philosophy 241: Ancient Philosophy

Fall 2006

Ethics 100: Foundation of Knowledge

Philosophy 240: Introduction to Philosophy

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, Person

Spring 2007

Ethics 100: Foundation of Ethics

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics

Philosophy 255: Logic and Thinking

Philosophy 355: Philosophy of Religion

Summer 2007

Religion 235: Bible

Fall 2007

Ethics 100: Foundation of Ethics

Philosophy 240: Introduction to Philosophy

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, Person

Spring 2008

Ethics 100: Foundation of Ethics & Ethics 100-60: Foundations of Ethics (ONLINE)

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics & Ethics 300-60: Professional Ethics (ONLINE)

Philosophy 255: Logic and Thinking

Philosophy 355: Religion and Philosophy

Summer 2008

Religion 235: Bible

Fall 2008

Ethics 100: Foundation of Ethics

Philosophy 240: Introduction to Philosophy

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, Person

Spring 2009

Ethics 100: Foundation of Ethics

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy (Independent Study)

Philosophy 255: Logic and Thinking

Philosophy 355: Religion and Philosophy

Fall 2009

Ethics 100: Foundations of Ethics (ONLINE)

Ethics 100: Foundations of Ethics

Philosophy 240: Introduction to Philosophy (Independent Study)

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy

Philosophy 370: Body, Mind, Person

Religion 234: World Religion

Religion 235: Bible (Independent Study)

Spring 2010

Ethics 100-07: Foundations of Ethics (ONLINE)

Ethics 100-09: Foundations of Ethics (ONLINE)

Ethics 300: Professional Ethics

Philosophy 240: Introduction to Philosophy (Independent Study)

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy (Independent Study)

Philosophy 255: Logic and Thinking

Philosophy 355: Philosophy and Religion

Summer 2010

Religion 235: Bible

Religion 306: Religion in America

Fall 2010

Ethics 300 005: Professional Ethics (ONLINE)

Ethics 300 006: Professional Ethics (ONLINE)

Philosophy 240 002: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

Philosophy 243: Contemporary Philosophy (Independent Study)

Spring 2011

Ethics 100 001: Foundations of Ethics (ONLINE)

Ethics 300 001: Professional Ethics (ONLINE)

Philosophy 255 001: Logic and Thinking (ONLINE)

Philosophy 243 35: Contemporary Philosophy (Independent Study)

Summer 2011

Religion 235 30: Bible

Religion 306 30: Religion in America

Fall 2011

Ethics 200 001: Ethical Concepts and Issues (ONLINE)

Ethics 300 001: Professional Ethics (ONLINE)

Philosophy 240 001: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

Spring 2012

Ethics 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Ethics 215 802: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Philosophy 255 801: Logic and Thinking (ONLINE)

REL 300 30: History of Christianity

Summer 2012

Religion 235 801: Bible ONLINE

Fall 2012

Ethics 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Ethics 215 802: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Philosophy 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

Philosophy 243 35: Contemporary Philosophy (Independent Study)

Spring 2013

Ethics 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Ethics 215 802: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Philosophy 255 801: Logic and Thinking (ONLINE)

Philosophy 385 35: African American Philosophy (Independent Study)

Summer 2013

ETH 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2013

ETH 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

PHI 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

PHI 355 801: Philosophy and Religion (ONLINE)

Winter I 2013-2014

ETH 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Winter II 2013-2014

ETH 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Spring 2014

ETH 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

PHI 255 801: Logic and Thinking (ONLINE)

Summer 2014

ETH 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2014

PHI 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

REL 498 801: Research Methods (ONLINE)

Winter I 2014-2015

ETH 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Spring 2015

PHI 255 801: Logic and Thinking (ONLINE)

REL 499 801: Senior Project (ONLINE)

Summer 2015

ETH 215 801: Cross-cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2015

PHI 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

REL 234 30: World Religions

REL 498 801: Research Methods (ONLINE)

Spring 2016

PHI 255 801: Logic and Thinking (ONLINE)

REL 499 801: Senior Project (ONLINE)

Summer 2016

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2016

PHI 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

REL 498 801: Research Methods (ONLINE)

Spring 2017

PHI 255 801: Logic and Thinking (ONLINE)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

REL 499 801: Senior Project (ONLINE)

RSO 510 35: Church and Society (Independent Study)

Summer 2017

ETH 215 801; Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2017

PHI 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

Spring 2018

PHI 241 801: Ancient Philosophy (ONLINE)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

Summer 2018

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Summer 2018

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2018

PHI 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

REL 498 801: Research (for RPI Majors) (ONLINE)

Spring 2019

PHI 255 801: Logic and Thinking (ONLINE)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

REL 499 801: Senior Project (ONLINE)

Summer 2019

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2019

PHI 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

REL 498 801: Research (for RPI Majors) (ONLINE)

Spring 2020

PHI 255 801: Logic and Thinking (ONLINE)

PHI 355 35: Philosophy of Religion (Independent Study)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

REL 499 801: Senior Project (ONLINE)

Summer 2020

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2020

PHI 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

PHI 285 801: African American Philosophy (ONLINE)

PHI 355 35: Philosophy of Religion (Independent Study)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

Spring 2021

PHI 255 801: Logic and Thinking (ONLINE)

PHI 355 801: Philosophy of Religion (ONLINE)

REL 499: 801: Senior Project (ONLINE)

Summer 2021

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2021

PHI 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

REL 498 801: Research (ONLINE)

Spring 2022

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

REL 499 801: Senior Project (ONLINE)

Summer I 2022

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2022

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

PHI 240 801: Introduction to Philosophy (ONLINE)

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

Spring 2023

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

REL 239 801: Introduction to New Testament (ONLINE)

REL 295 801: African American Religion (ONLINE)

Summer 2023

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2023

REL 295 801: African American Religion (ONLINE)

REL 304 801: African Religion and Philosophy (ONLINE)

REL 318 801: Life and Writings of Paul (ONLINE)

REL 420 801: General Epistles (ONLINE)

Spring 2024:

REL 235 801: Bible (ONLINE)

REL 291 801: Study and Teaching of the Bible (ONLINE)

REL 295 801: African American Church History (ONLINE)

REL 325 801: Introduction to Theology

Summer 2024:

ETH 215 801: Cross Cultural Ethics (ONLINE)

Fall 2024:

REL 420: General Epistles (ONLINE)

REL 438: Church & State (ONLINE) Includes supervised experiential learning.

Spring 2025

Shaw University

REL 440: Black, Womanist, and Liberation Theology (ONLINE)

REL 490: Pastoral Care (ONLINE)

Fayetteville State University

PHIL 110 D5: Critical Thinking (ONLINE)