

BA Religion and Theology
About this course
Religion and theology are disciplines that explore two of the most fundamental dimensions of human experience: the search for meaning, and the social and institutional forms through which that search has been organised. Theology examines the internal logic of religious traditions, the texts, doctrines, and practices through which communities of faith understand God, morality, and the cosmos. Religious studies takes a broader, more comparative view, asking how religious phenomena can be studied using the tools of history, anthropology, philosophy, and sociology. Together, they give you the conceptual vocabulary to understand how billions of people across the world make sense of life's most profound questions. At Bristol this three-year full-time BA includes a foundation year, which gives you a preparatory stage to build academic skills and subject knowledge before you move into the main degree programme. Across the degree you will develop expertise in understanding how cultures and individuals deal with life-shaping questions, how religious traditions change over time, and why conflicts and transformations occur within and between religious communities. You will engage with primary texts, historical evidence, and contemporary case studies, learning to apply a range of analytical frameworks to diverse religious traditions from Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and Buddhism to newer and indigenous religious movements. The skills you develop, including the ability to interpret complex texts, understand cultural difference, analyse arguments, and communicate clearly about sensitive and contested topics, are directly applicable across a wide range of professional contexts. Religious literacy has become increasingly important in journalism, public policy, law, education, international relations, and social work as societies navigate growing religious diversity. Graduates pursue careers in education, journalism, publishing, law, government, international development, social care, and heritage institutions. Many also continue to postgraduate study in theology, religious studies, philosophy, or related fields, and some go on to professional training in law, social work, or teaching.
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