Divinity and Religious Studies

Divinity and Religious Studies
DR5044 - Leadership Skills for Christian Ministry
Credit Points
30
Course Coordinator
NYK

Pre-requisites

To be inserted

Co-requisites

To be inserted

Notes

To be inserted

Overview

To be inserted

Structure

To be inserted

Assessment

To be inserted

DR5050/DR5550 - Fieldwork Methodologies in the Study of Religion
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Martin Mills

Pre-requisites

Admission to a level 5 programme

Co-requisites

None

Notes

Available in first half-session in 2007-8, from Monday 8th October

Overview

Introduction to key fieldwork methods and basic research design: participant observation, interview skills, fieldnotes and basic research design.

Structure

One meeting per week (2 hours).

Assessment

Coursework 100% (course workbook and in-course exercises).

DR5051/DR5551 - Anthropological Theories of Religion
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Prof. Robert Segal

Pre-requisites

Available to level 5 students only

Co-requisites

None

Notes

This course will run in the first half-session in 2007-8.

Overview

An introduction to advanced level theory on the anthropology and sociology of religion.

Structure

To be announced.

Assessment

Assessment will be by 100% coursework

DR5053/DR5553 - New Testament Theology
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr T Bokedal

Pre-requisites

2 years Greek

Co-requisites

none

Notes

Available in the first half-session 2007-8

Overview

This course gives an overview of attempts, from the nineteenth century to the present, to synthesize the theology of the New Testament. Theologians such as Wrede, Schlatter and Bultmann will be investigated, in addition to issues such as the canon and theological consistency of the New Testament.

Structure

2 hrs per week

Assessment

Exam 40% and continuous assessment 60%

DR5054/DR5554 - Old Testament as Christian Scripture
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
NYK

Pre-requisites

2 years Greek, 1 year Hebrew

Notes

Available in first half-session 2007-8

Overview

This course addresses the modes of scriptural interpretation deployed by NT authors in their use of the texts as witness to Christ. The course will also offer some comparative examples of how Jewish authors contemporaneous with the NT also interpreted Scripture.

Structure

2 hrs per week

Assessment

Exam 40% Continuous assessment course work 60%

DR5055/DR5555 - The Use of the Bible in Theology
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Donald Wood

Pre-requisites

None

Co-requisites

None

Notes

Will run in 2nd half-session in 2007-8

Overview

This course examines historically, from the Patristic period to the present, the ways in which the Bible has been employed in theological discourse.

Structure

2 hrs per week

Assessment

Exam 40% ; Course work 60%

DR5056/DR5556 - Catholicism and Politics in the 20th Century
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Francesca Aran Murphy

Pre-requisites

None

Co-requisites

None

Notes

None

Overview

This course considers Catholic social and political thought in relation to the history of the Church in the modern world. We begin with the French revolution, and Catholic reactions to it. We consider the 19th Century Church's hostility to social modernism. We look at the debates occasioned by papal power and the Italian risorgiomento. We discuss the attitude to church and state, and to 'liberty and liberalism' in the 19th century papal encyclicals such as Mirari Vos, Rerum Novarum, Immortale Dei and Libertas. We consider war-time Thomist defences of democracy and liberalism, such as those of Jacques Maratain and Yves Simon. We discuss the involvement of Catholics in religious and racial anti-Semitism, and debate Catholic responsibility for the holocaust. We study the social and political documents of the second Vatican Council (1962-1965). We look at socialist and conservative 'liberation theology', comparing Gutierrez and Michael Novak.

Structure

Assessment

One essay - 40%
One exam - 60%

DR5057 - Contemporary Catholic Thought
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Francesca Aran Murphy

Pre-requisites

None

Co-requisites

None

Notes

None

Overview

The aim of the course is to provide an overview of Catholic theological, philosophical and cultural thought in the era between Vatican I and Vatican II. The four main threads of the course are 'Faith and Reason', 'The Nature of the Church', 'Aesthetics', and 'Christian Humanism.' The course considers the flowering of lay Thomism under the influence of Aeterni Patris. We will study the idea of the Church in Vatican I, Hans Urs von Balthasar and in the ecumenical theology of Yves Congar. We consider the 'Catholic Imagination' in such writers as Chesterton, Maritain and Flannery O'Connor. The course concludes by considering the interaction of faith and reason in the Christocentric anthropology of Henri de Lubac and John Paul II.

Structure

Assessment

One Essay - 40%
One Exam - 60%

DR5058 - Early Modern Catholicism
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Nick Thompson

Pre-requisites

None

Co-requisites

None

Notes

None

Overview

This course examines both the diversity of Catholic theology and practice and the attempts to introduce a measure of centralisation and uniformity to Catholicism between the mid-15th and late 17th Centuries. Seminar topics will be taken from among the following:
*Late Medieval renewal movements
*Biblical humanism and Catholic evangelicalism
*Parish life and its renewal
*Catholic apologetic in the Reformation period
*Parish life and its renewal
*Catholic education
The religious orders and their renewal
*Inquisition and discipline
*The Council of Trent
*Developments in post-Tridentine theology
*Catholicism in post-Reformation Scotland
*Developments in post-Tridentine art, music and spirituality

Structure

Assessment

One Seminar Presentation: 20%
One Book Review: 30%
One Essay: 50%

DR5062 - Method in Theology
Credit Points
10
Course Coordinator
Francesca Murphy

Pre-requisites

Undergraduate degree or equivalent in any area.

Overview

The course will give students training in library skills and using computer data bases for research. It will introduce students to research methods of Biblical Studies; research practices of Practical Theology (e.g. field work) how Systematic Theologians and Church Historians plan research.

Structure

One two-hour tutorial per week

Assessment

All students will write a journal, i.e., continuous assessment, 100%

DR5063 - Dissertation Colloquium
Credit Points
10
Course Coordinator
Nick Thompson

Pre-requisites

Undergraduate degree or equivalent

Co-requisites

None

Notes

None

Overview

Training in research methods appropriate to the particular style of dissertation that is expected in the various MTh programmes (e.g. ethnographic research skills and related ethical issues in the MTh Ministry and Mission; historical skills, knowledge of how systematic theology works, or the way in whch source materials are used in Biblical studies).

Structure

One two hour tutorial per week.

Assessment

100% continuous assessment, in line with the learning outcomes listed above.

DR5064 - Research Methodologies (Anthropology of Religion)
Credit Points
10
Course Coordinator
Dr Martin A Mills

Pre-requisites

None

Co-requisites

Attendance at DR5023 and DR5030

Notes

Not available in 2007-8

Overview

Prelude to student dissertation and designed to run side by side with fieldwork methods course. Examination of research methodologies utilised in the ethnographic study of religion, and their theoretical and ethical implications for the discipline. Principal components:
* Introduction to the empirical study of religion
* Textual and ethnographic methodologies
* Qualitative and quantitative methods
* Case studies in research design
* Case studies in ethical issues

Structure

One 2-hour seminar per week.

Assessment

Two 2,500 word essays

DR5067/DR5566 - Biblical Exegesis: Selected Texts
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Ruth Edwards

Pre-requisites

Two years biblical Greek

Co-requisites

None

Notes

Running in 2007-2008

Overview

The course is designed to be flexible, and will be tailored to the needs and linguistic abilities of individual students. The course will be divided into three parts which reflect the three main course aims, and texts will be selected accordingly. A typical programme might include the following material:
(1) Genesis 1-3 LXX; Text, Interpretation and Influence;
(2) Matthew 1-2 and 5, with special reference to Use of the Old Testament;
(3) Select 'Titles' for Jesus from John's Gospel (Chs 1, 4, 6, 11, 20), in their Jewish and Early Christian Context.
In studying such material, the main emphasis will be on the development of analytical skills, and not just on the acquisition of further knowledge.

Structure

One two hour seminar per week.

Assessment

100% Continuous Assessment, based on a piece of written work for each of the three main parts of the course.

DR5068/DR5532 - Creation in Christian Ethics
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Brian Brock

Pre-requisites

Only available to Postgraduate students level 5

Co-requisites

None

Notes

Available in the second half-session 2007-8

Overview

This course in Christian ethics presents a survey of Christian ethical thinking through engagement with the biblical book of Genesis and the Christian tradition of its interpretation. These will include the ethics of marriage and procreation, parenthood, disability, politics, government and political violence, the environment, and non-human life.

Structure

1 two hour session per week

Assessment

1 two hour written examination (60%); continuous assessment: 1 class presentation and 1 x 5,000 word essay (40%)

DR5069/DR5569 - The Bible in Ministry
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Professor John Swinton

Pre-requisites

Only available to students in Year 5 programme

Co-requisites

None

Notes

Available in the first half-session 2007-8

Overview

The course will comprise four sections:
Old Testament
New Testament
Practical Theology
Christian Ethics

Each of these disciplines/sections will offer a vital and unique perspective on the Bible in ministry. Taken together they present a full, multidisciplinary approach which should be both interesting and educationally vital.

Structure

1 2hr seminar per week

Assessment

1 x 2hr examination and 40% continuous assessment (oral presentation [10%] and 1 3,000 word essay [30%])

DR5070/DR5570 - Pastoral Care and Counselling
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Prof John Swinton

Pre-requisites

Available to level 5 students in appropriate degree programmes

Co-requisites

none

Notes

Available in the first half-session 2007-8

Overview

This course offers vital practical theological insights and perspectives on the practice of pastoral care and counselling. The course provides skills for practising and thinking critically and theologically about pastoral care. Issues explored include: the theology and spirituality of care and counselling, forgiveness and lament as modes of pastoral care, disability, caring for families, communities and marginalised people. The course is suitable as an introduction to advanced studies in pastoral care and as a rigorous foundation for further research.

Structure

1 2hr seminar per week

Assessment

The course will be assessed by a 2hr examination and 40% continuing assessment.

DR5073/DR5573 - Introductory Modern Hebrew
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer

Pre-requisites

None

Co-requisites

None

Notes

This course will be available in the first half-session in 2006/2007

Overview

The class hours comprise a variety of integrated learning activities and exercises including grammar practice, reading comprehension, vocabulary building, productive writing, translation and listening comprehension.

Structure

2 one hour classes per week (times to be arranged)

Assessment

Examination (50%) and continuous assessment (50%). The continuous assessment includes homework assignment (10%), class participation (10%), quizzes (20%) and an oral presentation (10%)

DR5074/DR5577 - The Reformation in Scotland
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Nicholas Thompson

Pre-requisites

Available only to students in Programme Year 5

Co-requisites

None

Notes

None

Overview

This course examines the radical changes, as well as the continuities in Scottish religious life and thought between c1450 and the revolutions of the 17th century. Students will be introduced to a range of primary sources relating to the following topics: Scottish religious life and thought on the eve of the Reformation, Christian Humanism in Scotland, martyrdom and the privy kirks, poetry and drama in the service of reform, Catholic reformers and controversialists, the Reformed confessions of faith, fasting and communion seasons, discipline and repentance, recusancy and exile, Episcopacy and Presbyterianism, theologies of resistance and obedience, the National Covenant and the Covenanting revolution, the 'Sectaries' (e.g. Society of Friends).

Structure

One two-hour seminar per week

Assessment

Continuous assessment 100%: one essay/project (60%), a literature review (20%) and a seminar preesentation (20%)

DR5078/DR5578 - PRINCIPLES OF SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Prof. John Webster

Pre-requisites

N/A

Co-requisites

None

Notes

This course will be available in either the first or second half session - it will not be taught in both.

Overview

Key topics in systematic theology, including: the methods, norms and sources of Christian doctrine; the doctrine of the Trinity; creation, nature, history and providence; the human creature; covenant and election; sin; the person and work of Christ; the Christian life; eschatology.

Structure

One two hour seminar per week.

Assessment

1 three hour written examination (50%) and one 5,000 word paper (50%).

DR5079/DR5579 - The Followers of Lady Poverty: St Francis and His Disciples
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Ehrenschwendtner

Pre-requisites

Abailable to level 5 students

Co-requisites

None

Notes

Will run in second half-session 2007-2008

Overview

‘St Francis called himself and his followers Friars Minor. It was a new name, to signify, he once said, a company of people differing in humility and in poverty from all who had gone before, and content to possess Christ alone.’
(Rosalind B Brooke, The Coming of the Friars, 1975, p. 2)

The aim of the course is to equip students with a thorough understanding of the nature of the Franciscan movement and its reverberations in European religious lifestyle, spirituality, theology, literature and art. It also will familiarise students with appropriate historical sources and methodologies and will provide students with an insight into religious and theological developments during the medieval period.

Structure

1 x 2 hour seminar per week

Assessment

100% continuous assessment consisting of a major essay (60%), a presentation (10%) and a book review (30%)

DR5080/DR5580 - Jewish History and Culture
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Joachim Schaper

Pre-requisites

Available only to students on Postgraduate level 5

Co-requisites

None

Notes

This course will be available in the first half-session in 2007-8

Overview

Key topics in Jewish history in the Persian, Hellenistic, Roman, Mediaeval and modern periods.
Selected aspects of Jewish culture through the ages, concentrating on religion and ritual.

Structure

1 one hour lecture and 1 one hour seminar per week.

Assessment

Written examination (60%) and continuous assessment (40%: 10% for oral presentation and 30% for a 2,000 word paper developed from that presentation).

DR5081/DR5581 - Rabbinic and Jewish
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Tiemeyer

Pre-requisites

x

Co-requisites

x

Notes

x

Overview

x

Structure

x

Assessment

x

DR5082/DR5582 - DOCTRINE OF THE TRINITY
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Francesca Murphy

Pre-requisites

N/A

Notes

This course will be taught in either the first or second half session - not both.

Overview

Students will study Augustine's "De Trinitate", Anselm "On the Trinity", the Trinitarian treatise in Thomas Aquinas' "Summa Theologiae" (and the Trinitarian sections of his other writings), Calvin's "Institutes", Hegel's "Phenomenology of the Spirit", Karl Barth's "Church Dogmatics I.1" and sections from the "Theo-Drama" of Hans Urs von Balthasar. These texts will be informed by discussion of the history and development of the doctrine of the Trinity.

Structure

One two hour seminar per week.

Assessment

Examination (50%); continuous assessment (50%).

DR5083/DR5583 - SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY SINCE THE ENLIGHTENMENT
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Philip Ziegler

Pre-requisites

N/A

Notes

This course will run in either the first or second half session - not both.

Overview

Key topics in the development of modern theology in the West from the Enlightenment to the end of the 20th Century. Themes will include doctrines of God, revelation, anthropology, salvation, history, the idea of 'religion', the nature of the Christian Scriptures and their interpretation, theological method and the nature of Christian doctrine. The work of the smeinar will centre on critical examination of the primary and 'agenda setting' texts by leading Protestant and Catholic figures from across the period.

Structure

One two hour seminar per week.

Assessment

Written examination (40%) and continous assesment (60%).

DR5084/DR5584 - God, Christ and Salvation
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Donal Wood

Pre-requisites

x

Co-requisites

x

Notes

x

Overview

x

Structure

x

Assessment

x

DR5087/DR5587 - The Study of the Hebrew Bible
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Joachim Schaper

Pre-requisites

Available only to students in Postgraduate level 5

Co-requisites

None

Notes

This course will be available in 2006/07

Overview

The subjects covered are those which are currently of special importance to the development of Hebrew Bible Studies, namely the history of ancient Israel, Pentateuch Studies and exegetical methodology, anthropology and its use in Hebrew Bible research, and the history and theology of the Septuagint (inasmuch as it pertains to the understanding of the Hebrew Bible).

Structure

2 one hour lectures per week and 1 one-hour seminar per fortnight

Assessment

Written examination (60%) and continuous assessment (40%): 10% for oral presentation and 30% for a 2,000 word paper developed from that presentation.

DR5088 - TRINITY AND CHRISTIOLOGY
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
x

Pre-requisites

x

Co-requisites

x

Notes

x

Overview

x

Structure

x

Assessment

x

DR5089/DR5589 - Interpreting Myth
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Prof. Segal

Pre-requisites

None

Co-requisites

None

Notes

Running in 2nd half-session 2007-2008

Overview

A survey of eight leading theories of myth from the fields of anthropology, sociology, psychology, and religious studies. The focus will be on the differing answers the theories give to the questions of the origin, the function, and the subject matter of myth. Each theory will be applied to a familiar myth.

Structure

1 x 2 hour seminar plus 1 x 1 hour seminar plus 1 x 1 tutorial per week

Assessment

100% continuous assessment - 6,000 word essay

DR5151 - Special Subject
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
NYK

Pre-requisites

To be inserted

Co-requisites

To be inserted

Notes

To be inserted

Overview

To be inserted

Structure

To be inserted

Assessment

To be inserted

DR5516 - Dissertation I
Credit Points
60
Course Coordinator
Dr Nick Thompson

Pre-requisites

Satisfactory progress in Diploma/Master's programme

Overview

10-15,000 word dissertation written on a topic related to the student's taught Master's programme and agreed to by the supervisor and the programme co-ordinator

Structure

Students will normally have passed the course DR5063 (Dissertation Colloquium), in which they will have been assigned a dissertation supervisor and will have developed a dissertation proposal in consultation with the supervisor. During the second half-session and summer months students will meet and consult with their supervisors regularly as they continue their research and bring their project to completion.

Assessment

The dissertation is to be submitted by the due date (normally 31 August) and is marked by two examiners.

DR5523 - Leadership Skills for Christian Ministry
Credit Points
Course Coordinator
NYK

Pre-requisites

To be inserted

Co-requisites

To be inserted

Notes

To be inserted

Overview

To be inserted

Structure

To be inserted

Assessment

To be inserted

DR5540 - Diploma in Pastoral Studies Fieldwork Placement
Credit Points
40
Course Coordinator
Prof. Swinton

Pre-requisites

x

Co-requisites

x

Notes

x

Overview

x

Structure

x

Assessment

x

DR5557 - Contemporary Catholic Thought
Credit Points
Course Coordinator
NYK

Pre-requisites

none

Co-requisites

none

Notes

Running 2007-2008

Overview

The aim of the course is to provide an overview of Catholic theological, philosophical and cultural thought in the era between Vatican I and Vatican II. The four main threads of the course are 'Faith and Reason', 'The Nature of the Church', 'Aesthetics', and 'Christian Humanism.' The course considers the flowering of lay Thomism under the influence of Aeterni Patris. We will study the idea of the Church in Vatican I, Hans Urs von Balthasar and in the ecumenical theology of Yves Congar. We consider the 'Catholic Imagination' in such writers as Chesterton, Maritain and Flannery O'Connor. The course concludes by considering the interaction of faith and reason in the Christocentric anthropology of Henri de Lubac and John Paul II.

Structure

To be inserted

Assessment

To be inserted

DR5558 - Early Modern Catholicism
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
NYK

Pre-requisites

To be inserted

Co-requisites

To be inserted

Notes

To be inserted

Overview

To be inserted

Structure

To be inserted

Assessment

To be inserted

DR5564 - Dissertation II
Credit Points
Course Coordinator
Dr Nick Thompson

Pre-requisites

Satisfactory progress in Diploma/Master's programme

Notes

80 credits

Overview

15-20,000 word dissertation written on a topic related to the student's taught Master's programme and agreed to by the supervisor and the programme co-ordinator

Structure

Students will normally have passed the course DR5063 (Dissertation Colloquium) or DR5064 (Research Methodologies) as appropriate to their masters programme, in which they will have been assigned a dissertation supervisor and will have developed a dissertation proposal in consultation with the supervisor. During the second half-session and summer months students will meet and consult with their supervisors regularly as they continue their research bring their project to completion.

Assessment

The dissertation is to be submitted by the due date (normally 31 August) and is marked by two examiners.

DR5567 - Canons and Histories of the Himalayas
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Will Tuladhar-Douglas

Pre-requisites

Admission to MRes/MSc in Himalayan Studies; or Year 5 standing and consent of coordinator

Co-requisites

None

Notes

Available in 2007-8

Overview

The initial weeks of the course will be a broad survey of languages, canonical traditions and vernacular traditions. With this wide framework established, we will then look at the history and anthropology of specific practices (fasting, shamanic rituals, the use of specific medical substances) with multiple Himalayan forms; their distinct historical trajectories; and the development of zones of struggle or collaboration among different Himalayan groups. We will then look at the recourse to constructed traditions, such as the Haha-Kiranti debate.

Structure

2 one hour lectures and 1 two hour tutorial per week.

Assessment

100% continuous assessment - 2 x 2,500 word papers (45% each) and 1 x presentation (10%)

DR5572 - Ministry with the Marginalised
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Prof John Swinton

Pre-requisites

Available to level 5 students in appropriate degree programmes

Co-requisites

None

Notes

Available in first half-session of 2006-7

Overview

The course aims to introduce students to the theology and practice of ministry with people who are considered or consider themselves to be marginalised. It will develop a multidisciplinary approach which will enable students to reflect critically and theologically on the care of people considered ‘outsiders,’ and will develop rigorous practical theological responses to issues of marginalisation. Areas explored will include the theology of disability, mental illness, homelessness, children and disaffection, ministry with people who have HIV and AIDS.

Structure

One two hour seminar once per week.

Assessment

100% continuing assessment: 1 essay of 4000 words(60%); two book reviews of 1500 words each(30%); 1 oral presentation. (10%)

DR5574 - Intermediate Modern Hebrew
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer

Pre-requisites

Introductory Modern Hebrew (DR5073) or equivalent

Co-requisites

None

Overview

The class hours comprise a variety of integrated learning activities and exercises including grammar practice, reading comprehension, vocabulary building, productive writing, translation and listening comprehension.

Structure

2 one hour classes per week (times to be arranged)

Assessment

Examination (50%) and continuous assessment (50%). The continuous assessment includes homework assignment (10%), recorded class participation (10%), quizzes (20%), and an oral presentation (10%)

DR5581 - Rabbinics and Jewish Philosophy
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
Dr Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer

Pre-requisites

none

Co-requisites

none

Notes

Running in 2007-2008

Overview

This course provides a foundation of knowledge in the areas of rabbinics and Jewish philosophy and explores the interaction
between the two. It centres on the origins of rabbinic literature and its further development (with a special accent on the
mediaeval period) and of Jewish philosophy, with a special accent on Hellenism (especially Philo) and on the twentieth century.

Structure

1 x 2 hour lecture

Assessment

Examination (60%) and continuous assessment (40%) consisting of a presentation (10%) and a short paper of 2000 words (30%).

DR5644 - Special Subject
Credit Points
20
Course Coordinator
NYK

Pre-requisites

To be inserted

Co-requisites

To be inserted

Notes

To be inserted

Overview

To be inserted

Structure

To be inserted

Assessment

To be inserted