Theology and Church. Karl Barth

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Theology and Church - Karl Barth

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      THEOLOGY AND CHURCH

      SHORTER WRITINGS 1920–1928

      KARL BARTH

       Translated by

      LOUISE PETTIBONE SMITH

      With an Introduction (1962) by

      T. F. TORRANCE

       Professor of Christian Dogmatics

       in the University of Edinburgh

      WIPF & STOCK • Eugene, Oregon

      Translated from the German

      Die Theologie und die Kirche (Gesammelte Vorträge 2)

      Evangelischer Verlag AG, Zollikon-Zürich

      (original edition, Munich 1928)

      Wipf and Stock Publishers

      199 W 8th Ave, Suite 3

      Eugene, OR 97401

      Theology and Church

      Shorter Writings 1920–1928

      By Barth, Karl and Torrance, Thomas F.

      Copyright©1962 Theologischer Verlag Zurich

      ISBN 13: 978-1-4982-1861-0

      EISBN 13: 978-1-4982-7083-0

      Publication date 2/5/2015

      Previously published by Harper & Row, 1962

      © 1962 of the German original version by Theologischer Verlag Zurich.

      CONTENTS

       Introduction by T. F. Torrance (1962)

       IUnsettled Questions for Theology Today (1920)

       IILuther’s Doctrine of the Eucharist: its Basis and Purpose (1923)

       IIIThe Desirability and Possibility of a Universal Reformed Creed (1925)

       IVSchleiermacher’s Celebration of Christmas (1924)

       VSchleiermacher (1926)

       VIThe Word in Theology from Schleiermacher to Ritschl (1927)

       VIILudwig Feuerbach (1920)

       VIIIThe Principles of Dogmatics according to Wilhelm Herrmann (1925)

       IXThe Concept of the Church (1927)

       XChurch and Theology (1925)

       XIRoman Catholicism: a Question to the Protestant Church (1928)

       XIIChurch and Culture (1926)

       Index of Names

       Index of Subjects

       INTRODUCTION (1962)

       by T. F. Torrance

      KARL BARTH is the greatest theological genius that has appeared on the scene for centuries. He cannot be appreciated except in the context of the greatest theologians such as Athanasius, Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin, Schleiermacher, Kierkegaard, nor can his thinking be adequately measured except in the context of the whole history of theology and philosophy. Not only does he recapitulate in himself in the most extraordinary way the development of all modern theology since the Reformation, but he towers above it in such a way that he has created a situation in the Church, comparable only to the Reformation, in which massive clarification through debate with the theology of the Roman Church can go on. Karl Barth has, in fact, so changed the whole landscape of theology, Evangelical and Roman alike, that the other great theologians of modern times appear in comparison rather like jobbing gardeners.

       Who is he?

      Karl Barth is a native of Switzerland, born and brought up in the home of a Swiss pastor who when Karl was but two years old became a Professor of Church History in the University of Bern. It was in Bern that Karl Barth grew up and went up to University to study philosophy and theology, and from there he went on to the Universities of Berlin, Tübingen, and Marburg. After spending some twelve years in the pastorate, mostly in the Alpine village of Safenwil in Aargau, he was called to be Professor of Reformed Theology in Göttingen. Then after more than a decade of teaching and debating in the Universities of Münster and Bonn, in which he was the living centre of a volcanic disturbance in the whole field of theological thinking, and the great mind behind the German Church’s struggle for survival against National-Socialism, he was ejected from Germany, and found refuge in Basel, the city of his birth, where he was appointed to the chair of Dogmatics, which for centuries had been occupied by some of the greatest thinkers of the Reformed Church.

       What is he like?

      Perhaps more than any other theologian of modern times Barth resembles Luther in his sheer Menschlichkeit. That is to say, he has an overflowing love for all things human, whether they are the simplicities of natural life or the great achievements of the human spirit, in the midst of which he manifests a frankness, and childlikeness, and sincerity toward other human beings, which can be both gentle and rough, but always with compassion. His whole attitude to life, and even to theology, is expressed in his passionate love for the care-free, light-hearted music of Mozart, in which the profoundest questions are put to the eternal and the creaturely alike without the dogmatic presumption to any final answer or last word, and it is to the accompaniment of Mozart’s music that his engagement in the hard work of dogmatics becomes sheer enjoyment of the majesty and beauty of God.

      In the depth of this humanity

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