Unit rationale, description and aim
The Synoptic Gospels, Matthew, Mark and Luke, share similarities in content, arrangement, and specific language. Commentators attribute this to literary interdependence. The question of the precise nature of this literary relationship, the so-called Synoptic Problem, continues to figure prominently in contemporary Gospel scholarship. The longstanding majority view favours Marcan priority and holds that both Matthew and Luke made direct use of the Gospel of Mark as a source, along with an additional hypothetical document, called Q Sayings Gospel.
This unit builds on the knowledge and skills developed in the prerequisite Biblical Studies unit, which included the study of the Gospel of Mark. This unit provides students with the opportunity to study the Synoptic Gospels further via an examination of either the Gospel of Matthew or the Gospel of Luke, applying a variety of methodologies used in the discipline, including both historical and literary approaches. Students will learn advanced text-critical skills, become acquainted with scholarship in the field, and engage the Gospel in contexts relevant to their professional and personal lives.
Campus offering
No unit offerings are currently available for this unitLearning outcomes
To successfully complete this unit you will be able to demonstrate you have achieved the learning outcomes (LO) detailed in the below table.
Each outcome is informed by a number of graduate capabilities (GC) to ensure your work in this, and every unit, is part of a larger goal of graduating from ACU with the attributes of insight, empathy, imagination and impact.
Explore the graduate capabilities.
Describe the key narrative themes and literary cha...
Learning Outcome 01
Discuss the various reading communities represente...
Learning Outcome 02
Apply knowledge and skills gained through critical...
Learning Outcome 03
Content
Topics will include:
- A survey of the history of the first century Mediterranean world with an emphasis on the religious and social conditions informing the synoptic gospels.
- A detailed study of either Matthew or Luke, drawing on historical, narrative, and/or social-scientific methodologies.
- A study of the distinguishing stylistic and theological characteristics of the selected gospel.
Assessment strategy and rationale
In this unit, all activities, direct teaching, structured learning, assigned readings, and collaborative tasks build towards the assessment of students’ ability to apply the necessary knowledge and skills required to interpret Gospel texts effectively. The three assessment tasks are designed to provide progressive engagement with key passages from the selected Gospel and, therefore, focus on different contextual situations. Each of the three assessment tasks has been designed to test the students’ developed and developing capacity to understand and interpret the selected Gospel in a meaningful and relevant way. This aligns with the achievement of each of unit’s learning outcomes.
The first task requires students to describe the state of current research on the socio-cultural, historical and/or literary contexts of the Evangelist’s community (LO1) and communicate their results via an oral or written review of selected scholarly literature. Students will have the opportunity in subsequent weeks to develop, refine and improve their skills in interpreting key texts from the selected Gospel within different contexts (LO2), founded upon their knowledge of relevant scholarship (LO1) and utilising one critical approach (LO2), which will culminate in Assessment Task 2 – an exegetical analysis of selected passages for the selected Gospel. This final task will provide students with the scope to demonstrate their attainment of all three learning outcomes via a written, oral or multimedia presentation demonstrating the application of critical approaches to passages from the selected Gospel within a contemporary pastoral, theological, academic, liturgical or pedagogical situation.
Overview of assessments
Literature Review Oral or written presentation o...
Literature Review
Oral or written presentation of the current scholarship on the socio-cultural, historical and/or pastoral circumstances of the selected Gospel or an issue/theological theme from either the Gospel– e.g., a literature review, op-ed article, or multimedia presentation.
The purpose of this assessment task is to provide students with the opportunity to develop a foundation for subsequent exegesis of selected passages in the Gospel texts.
20%
Exegesis Exegetical examination of one or more k...
Exegesis
Exegetical examination of one or more key passages from the selected Gospel; e.g., an exegetical essay, commentary, or journal article.
Building on the foundational work done in assessment one, this assessment provides students with the opportunity to demonstrate their skill in interpreting Gospel texts within a specific critical framework.
30%
Proposal for Teaching, Preaching or Praying a Syn...
Proposal for Teaching, Preaching or Praying a Synoptic Gospel
Written or multimedia proposal on the application of one or more key texts to a pastoral, pedagogical, or personal situation – e.g., a lesson plan, outline for a retreat, homily plan, design of an educational wiki or blog.
The purpose of this assessment task is to bring the knowledge and skills acquired throughout the semester to bear on a practical application for the interpretation of the selected Gospel and or passage/s examined in assessment tasks one and two.
50%
Learning and teaching strategy and rationale
The Gospels are ancient texts that require interpretation via the application of specific historical knowledge and interpretive skills. For modern Christians, and especially for teachers, ministers and pastoral associates in faith-based organisations, the Synoptic Gospels remain central to their spiritual and professional lives. For this reason, the curriculum for this unit has been designed to build students’ capacity and competency in reading, interpreting, teaching and preaching the Synoptic Gospels as leaders, teachers, pastoral assistants and/or ministers in faith-based organisations.
This unit is a fully online unit that involves 150 hours of focused learning, or the equivalent of 10 hours per week for 15 weeks. The structure of this unit is shaped by the Gradual Release of Responsibility (GRR) model of pedagogy – sometimes called “Scaffolded instruction” – and, hence, uses a mix of direct instruction and synchronous engagement, as well as asynchronous collaborative and cooperative learning opportunities.
Formally structured learning activities, such as lectures, tutorials and workshops, will be presented in an online environment using video-conferencing or supervision. The remaining hours typically involve reading, research, and the preparation of tasks for assessment, including contributions to cooperative learning in the form of online facilities, such as forums, reflective journals, wikis, blogs and interactive chat. The GRR model, as used in this unit, is designed to encourage students’ autonomy and to facilitate students’ capacity in the development and application of the necessary knowledge and skills within the context of their personal and/or professional lives.