In this unit students will engage Christological and soteriological questions through the end of the classical period into the middle ages. Students may engage with a number of key figures in medieval theology such as Thomas Aquinas, Anselm, Julian of Norwich, Peter Abelard, and Hildegard of Bingen. Through an engagement with such figures students will explore the ways monastic christologies, scholasticism, and the emergence of vernacular theologies come to develop key concepts from the patristic period. Particular attention will be paid to the ways that aesthetic concerns bind Christology and soteriology together in this period. This will be seen in the ways that both content of Christological claims are integrated into the formal structure of theological discourses.
Unit code: CT9210T
Unit status: Approved (Major revision)
Points: 24.0
Unit level: Postgraduate Elective
Unit discipline: Systematic Theology
Proposing College: Trinity College Theological School
Show when this unit is running1. | Critically demonstrate the relationship between the person and work of Christ in key texts. |
2. | Demonstrate the difference and relationship between soteriological and Christological claims in selected texts. |
3. | Critically exegete scholastic theological text. |
4. | Demonstrate awareness of the centrality of aesthetics to the formation of soteriological claims in the middle ages. |
5. | Critically elaborate upon social determinants shaping Christological formulations. |
Prerequisite: foundational (level 8) CT unit
Face-to-face lecture with online activities. Online asynchronous lectures and activities with additional synchronous tutorials.
Type | Description | Word count | Weight (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Essay | 1500 | 20.0 | |
Essay | 1500 | 20.0 | |
Essay | 3500 | 50.0 | |
Forum | 1000 | 10.0 |
Unit approved for the University of Divinity by Prof Albert Haddad on 28 Jul, 2025
Unit record last updated: 2025-07-28 08:44:18 +1000