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CT9297B The Triune God

  • Unit Code & NameCT9297B The Triune God
  • Description

    This unit will help you to examine the contemporary resurgence of interest in the doctrine of the Trinity by exposing you to representative theologians in the field of Trinitarian theology, both classical and contemporary.

    The unit code contains information on the level of study, field, discipline, unit and college. Click here to learn what the unit code for this unit represents.

  • DisciplineDelivery ID: 48241
  • LevelPostgraduate Level 9
  • Semester4. Semester 2, 2023
  • Delivery ModeOnline
  • Date

    31 July 2023 - 3 November 2023

    Weekly Zoom tutorials Fridays 2:00 - 3:00 pm.

    We recommend that you allocate 12 hours a week for all study activities.

  • Lecturer(s) Reverend Professor Glen O'Brien
  • Prerequisites

    24 points in CT postgraduate foundational level or equivalent

  • Learning Activities

    Lectures, tutorials, online videos, online meetings, class discussions, discussion boards

    Once you are enrolled in this unit, explore content on ARK, the Learning Management System, before the unit commences. Participation activities will include attendance at weekly Zoom tutorials or watching the recording of missed Zoom tutorials and posting a comment on the noticeboard in Ark.  

    *This unit is offered at Undergraduate and Postgraduate level. Students may engage with people across both levels when this unit is delivered.

  • Assessments

    1 x Essay 3,500 words - 50%

    1 x Learning resource on the trinity 3,500 words - 50%

  • Learning Outcomes

    Upon successful completion of this unit, it is expected that students will be able to:

    1. Demonstrate advanced understanding of the key biblical passages that give rise to Trinitarian reflection.

    2. Exhibit critical awareness of the place of the Christological debates of the fourth and fifth centuries in establishing Trinitarian orthodoxy.

    3. Demonstrate a thorough working knowledge of the critical issues in contemporary and classical discourse on the Trinity.

    4. Articulate practical implications of the doctrine of the Trinity for the church's life and witness.

    5. Demonstrate the value of the place and priority of the doctrine of the Trinity as constitutive of Christian identity and action in the world.

    6. Demonstrate a capacity to research a specific topic in a critically rigorous, sustained and self-directed manner.

  • Text Books

    There is no set text for this unit.