This unit assists students to develop discipline skills in history in order to critically understand the Lutheran tradition as a movement for evangelical reform within the church catholic. Students will engage with the late medieval period, through the various European reformations to the end of the sixteenth century. This study will include a special focus on the career of Martin Luther and the Lutheran reformation but will also include the reform movements led by Zwingli and Calvin; the radical reformers; the expansion of the reformation movement in Europe; Catholic renewal; and the legacies of reformations.
Unit code: CH9081L
Unit status: Approved (New unit)
Points: 18.0
Unit level: Postgraduate Elective
Unit discipline: Church History
Proposing College: Australian Lutheran College
Show when this unit is running1. | Evaluate the histographical approaches used in the study of the reformation era |
2. | Critically engage with the main events, movements, and theological issues encountered in the study of the 16th century reformations |
3. | Critically evaluate the cultural, literary and theological features of texts from the reformation era |
4. | Differentiate the theological insights of the great reformers, and evaluate their spiritual, pastoral and communal importance |
Course relationship: A level 9 unit in postgraduate theology and ministry courses
This unit utilises learner-centred approaches by enabling students to encounter primary texts, ask critical questions of those texts, and discuss each other’s questions in a weekly tutorial. The unit also utilises a considered approach to feedback, enabling ‘feed-forward’ feedback from both lecturer and co-students on the essay, followed by an opportunity to incorporate and react to this feedback.
Type | Description | Word count | Weight (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Forum | Demonstrate critical history discipline skills and knowledge in responding to weekly readings |
1500 | 25.0 |
Written Examination | Main events, movements and theological issues |
1000 | 25.0 |
Essay | Use primary research and peer feedback in a Reformation theology topic |
3500 | 50.0 |
Unit approved for the University of Divinity by Prof Albert Haddad on 6 May, 2024
Unit record last updated: 2024-05-06 12:45:53 +1000