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CHTH236 Māori Theology and Religion

An investigation of the Māori religious worldview and Māori engagement with Christianity.

Paper title Māori Theology and Religion
Paper code CHTH236
Subject Christian Thought and History
EFTS 0.1500
Points 18 points
Teaching period Semester 2 (Distance learning)
Domestic Tuition Fees (NZD) $955.05
International Tuition Fees Tuition Fees for international students are elsewhere on this website.

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Prerequisite
36 100-level points
Restriction
CHTH 336
Schedule C
Arts and Music, Theology
Notes
May not be credited with CHTH 217 or CHTH 317 taught in 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022.
Eligibility
Enrolments for this paper are limited and it requires departmental permission. View more information about limitations of enrolment.
Teaching staff

Course Coordinator: Professor Murray Rae

Lecturers: Revd Wayne Te Kaawa, Professor Murray Rae

Paper Structure

This is a one week intensive course held at the Ohope Marae from Monday 3 July to Friday 7 July inclusive. There will be no additional costs to students for staying at the marae, but students will be expected to fund their own travel to/from the marae.

  1. Module One: Mātauranga Māori
  2. Module Two: The Missionary Era
  3. Module Three: Māori Prophets and Indigenous Churches
  4. Module Four: Blended Wisdom. Theological themes and trends.

Assessment:

  • Short Essay (30%)
  • Major Research Essay (50%)
  • Journal (20%)

Teaching Arrangements

The teaching programme for the paper is through a five-day residential intensive at Ōhope marae, near Whakatāne in the Bay of Plenty. Students will be accommodated in the wharenui and classes will be held in the wharekai (dining room) with reflection sessions also taking place in the wharenui. Wifi is also available at the marae. There will be no additional costs to students for staying at the marae, but students will be expected to fund their own travel to the marae.

Textbooks

Textbooks are not required for this paper

Graduate Attributes Emphasised

Global perspective, Interdisciplinary perspective, Lifelong learning, Information literacy, Environmental literacy, Communication, Critical thinking, Cultural understanding.
View more information about Otago's graduate attributes.

Learning Outcomes

Students who successfully complete this paper will:

  1. Show familiarity with traditional Māori religious thought and practice.
  2. Understand the historical threads of engagement between Māori and Christian missionaries and develop the capacity to critically analyse the impact and consequences of that engagement.
  3. Be able to offer an informed account of selected Māori adaptations of Christianity, particularly those associated with the Māori prophets.
  4. Develop understanding of the distinct insight and enrichment of Christian theology brought about through the influence of mātuaranga and kaupapa Māori.
  5. Develop the capacity to recognise and articulate the ways in which engagement with Māori theology and religion facilitates a constructive critique of the Western theological tradition.

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Timetable

Semester 2

Location
Dunedin
Teaching method
This paper is taught through Distance Learning
Learning management system
Blackboard

Workshop

Stream Days Times Weeks
Attend
A1 Monday 12:00-19:50 27
Tuesday 09:00-19:50 27
Wednesday 09:00-19:50 27
Thursday 09:00-19:50 27
Friday 09:00-12:50 27