

MA Theology
About this course
Theology is the disciplined study of religious belief, practice, and experience, as well as the texts, traditions, institutions, and philosophical questions that religious life has generated over millennia. It is not a discipline confined to any one faith: it engages seriously with Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and other traditions, asking what people have believed about the divine, about human nature and ethics, about death and meaning, and about how those beliefs have shaped individual lives and entire civilisations. It is a subject that brings together textual scholarship, philosophy, history, and social analysis, and it asks some of the deepest questions about what it means to be human. At the University of Edinburgh, this four-year full-time programme includes a year abroad, which gives you the opportunity to study theology in another country and tradition, enriching your understanding of how religious questions look different from different cultural positions. Edinburgh's School of Divinity and Edinburgh Theological Seminary together form one of the most distinguished centres of theological study in the world, with research strength spanning biblical studies, Christian theology, the history of religion, and religious ethics. You will study foundational texts in more than one tradition, philosophical theology, the history of religious thought, and the contemporary sociology and ethics of religion, developing the capacity to analyse complex material from multiple interpretive perspectives. The analytical and writing skills that theology demands are of the highest order. Close reading of texts in their original languages or in translation, the construction of philosophical arguments about contested matters, and engagement with traditions of interpretation stretching back centuries all contribute to a graduate profile that is intellectually serious and remarkably versatile. Graduates in theology pursue careers in religious ministry and chaplaincy, teaching at secondary and higher levels, the charitable and faith-based sector, journalism, policy work, community development, and academic research. The transferable skills of the degree, including critical analysis, ethical reasoning, and intercultural communication, are valued across many professional contexts. Postgraduate study in theology, religious studies, philosophy, ethics, or related fields is a natural route for those who want to develop a research practice or academic career.
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