I am quite certain the statement "the only place where medieval theology survives is pure math" attributed to one of Gödel's essays by Chaitin, does not appear as a paraphrase in the <A HREF="https://monoskop.org/images/a/aa/Kurt_Gödel_Collected_Works_Volume_III_1995.pdf">collected works</A>. (At least a search for "medieval" or "theology" does not return anything close.) However, if I understand the question in the OP more generally as an interest in this line of thought of Gödel, then the 1961 essay <A HREF="https://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/at/godel.htm">The modern development of the foundations of mathematics in the light of philosophy</A> develops it as follows:

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> I would like to attempt here to describe, in terms of philosophical
> concepts, the development of foundational research in mathematics
> since around the turn of the century, and to fit it into a general
> schema of possible philosophical world-views. For this, it is
> necessary first of all to become clear about the schema itself. I
> believe that the most fruitful principle for gaining an overall view
> of the possible world-views will be to divide them up according to the
> degree and the manner of their affinity to or, respectively, turning
> away from metaphysics (or religion). In this way we immediately obtain
> a division into two groups: skepticism, materialism and positivism
> stand on one side, spiritualism, idealism and theology on the other.     
> [...]    
> Now it is a familiar fact, even a platitude, that the development of
> philosophy since the Renaissance has by and large gone from right to
> left - not in a straight line, but with reverses, yet still, on the
> whole. Particularly in physics, this development has reached a peak in
> our own time. [...] It would truly be a miracle if this (I would like
> to say rabid) development had not also begun to make itself felt in
> the conception of mathematics. Actually, mathematics, by its nature as
> an a priori science, always has, in and of itself, an inclination
> toward the right, and, for this reason, has long withstood the spirit
> of the time that has ruled since the Renaissance.

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A related line of thought is the question whether mathematics is invented or discovered. Gödel was inclined to the latter, and in a <A HREF="https://partiallyexaminedlife.com/wp-content/uploads/Godel-Basic-Theorems-and-Their-Implications-1.pdf">1951 essay</A> cited Hermite: *There exists, unless I am mistaken, an entire world consisting of the totality of mathematical truths, which is accessible to us only through our intelligence, just as there exists the world of physical realities; each one is independent of us, both of them divinely created.*