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Historical Theology









Historical Theology

Historical theology seeks to study, understand, and evaluate how, in the past, Christians have reflected on the Church's faith and practice. It may investigate specific theologians (Augustine, Aquinas, Luther), historical periods (the early Byzantine era, the Catholic Reformation, American Catholicism), or themes (asceticism and monasticism, Jewish-Christian relations), all in their institutional, cultural and intellectual contexts.

T
he historical section offers five major fields of study, namely: Early Christianity, the Middle Ages, the Reformation, Modern Europe (church history and theology), and American Christianity. The interests of the faculty members of the historical section include:

  • in the field of Early Christianity: Origen, Augustine, patristic biblical exegesis, and asceticism and monasticism;
  • in the Middle Ages: Gregory the Great, asceticism, relations between the West and Byzantine East, Christian understanding of Judaism, and the Bible in the Middle Ages;
  • in the Reformation era: the Protestant and Catholic Reformations in Europe, Great Britain, and Ireland;
  • in modern Europe: the history of the Catholic Church in Great Britain and Ireland, the modern papacy, and the history of modern Protestant theology;
  • and in American Christianity: the theology and practice, piety and culture of Catholic and Protestant Christians in the United States.

Doctoral students in historical theology are expected to take courses in at least three of the major fields of study. They normally write dissertations in one of the fields and thus acquire specialized skills in the methods, resources, and literature of that field.

Historical Theology Faculty:
Christophe Chalamet
George Demacopoulos
Brian E. Daley, S.J. (Loyola Visiting Professor 08-09)
James T. Fisher
Franklin T. Harkins
J. Patrick Hornbeck, II
Joseph Lienhard, S.J.
Mark Massa, S.J.
Thomas Shelley
Maureen Tilley


Current Events:
News & Events (updated 05/2008)
Curran Center
Center on Religion and Culture
Center for Medieval Studies

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