Immagine dell'autore.

Karl Barth (1886–1968)

Autore di Dogmatics in Outline

432+ opere 14,611 membri 55 recensioni 32 preferito

Sull'Autore

Karl Barth was born in Basel, Switzerland, in 1886. A theologian, Barth is considered to be one of the most prolific writers Christendom has ever produced. His Church Dogmatics runs well over 12,000 pages in English translation. There also is a great body of occasional writing. Barth would be mostra altro worthy of note if only for his first published work, a commentary on The Epistle to the Romans. In 1918, when he published this study, Barth was a young pastor in his native Switzerland. The guns of World War I could still be heard, their angry shells destroying, perhaps forever, the liberal optimism of Continental theology. Where was the progress young Barth had learned about from Harnack in Berlin? Where was human rationality, dispelling the noisome holes of ignorance and superstition, when the great leaders of Christendom descended to the barbarity of trench warfare? For answers Barth turned St. Paul's greatest epistle, as St. Augustine of Hippo and Martin Luther had before him. Barth obtained a post at the University of Bonn, but Hitler objected to his work with the Confessing Church (see Dietrich Bonhoeffer), and he was forced to return to his own country, there to produce all his great tomes. Turning theologians from their rational optimism, Barth has driven them to consider again the power of the Word of God-the acted, spoken, inscripturated, incarnated Word was always his chief theme. Against it, all human pride and pretension, all schemes for utopian societies, all theologies based on anything other than the Bible and Christ have proved transient. Barth's objectors reply that Barth's God is too far away like Soren Kierkegaard; that Barth spoke of the "infinite qualitative distinction" between God and man; that Barth ignores scientific advances; and that he cares little for dialogue with other religions. Yet Barth's oppposers never complain of a lack of erudition or ecumenical concern. To some Barth is the greatest theologian the church has produced. Barth died in 1968 as he had hoped-with his Dogmatics still unfinished. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno
Nota di disambiguazione:

(eng) Carl Barth,1896-1976 is a different author than Karl Barth, 1886-1968, and so has been nevered, despite the fact that several book titles written by Karl Barth have been entered in LT with the name Carl Barth as author.

Fonte dell'immagine: Photo © ÖNB/Wien

Serie

Opere di Karl Barth

Dogmatics in Outline (1949) 1,265 copie
L'Epistola ai Romani (1918) 1,221 copie
Church Dogmatics (1932) 700 copie
The Humanity of God (1961) 653 copie
Prayer (1952) 245 copie
Deliverance to the Captives (1961) 188 copie
Epistle to the Philippians (1927) 173 copie
Credo (1962) 171 copie
Homiletics (1991) 149 copie
The Theology of John Calvin (1995) 139 copie
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1956) — Autore — 116 copie
God in action (1963) 79 copie
Ethics (1981) 76 copie
Letters, 1961-1968 (1981) 69 copie
Prayer and Preaching (1964) 65 copie
Come, Holy Spirit (1933) 62 copie
Fifty Prayers (2008) 61 copie
How I Changed My Mind (1966) 55 copie
Final testimonies (1977) 52 copie
Fragments Grave and Gay (1867) 45 copie
Call for God (1967) 42 copie
Karl Barth's table talk (1962) 39 copie
Against the stream (1954) 31 copie
The Great Promise: Luke 1 (1963) 22 copie
Selected prayers (1966) 18 copie
The Church and the War (1944) 18 copie
Christmas (1934) 15 copie
The Doctrine of God (2009) 13 copie
God, Grace and Gospel (1959) 9 copie
Letters, 1922-66 (1982) 8 copie
Gebeden (2005) 7 copie
Barth Brevier (1966) 6 copie
Mann und Frau (1964) 4 copie
Rechtfertigung und Recht (1938) 4 copie
Vom christlichen Leben (1926) 4 copie
Religie is ongeloof (2011) 3 copie
Suchet Gott, so werdet ihr leben! (1917) — Autore — 3 copie
Der reiche Jüngling (1988) 3 copie
La chiesa (1964) 3 copie
Christliche Ethik. (1946) 2 copie
Der Christ als Zeuge. (1934) 2 copie
Der gute Hirte (1934) 2 copie
Hegel 2 copie
Il Natale 2 copie
Dio e il niente (2000) 2 copie
Het gebed 2 copie
Eine Schweizer Stimme (1945) 2 copie
Pai Nosso, O (2003) 1 copia
Div Vánoc 1 copia
Mozart: 1756-1956 (2020) 1 copia
Dialogue 1 copia
Antologia 1 copia
ANTWORT 1 copia
Ethik I, Gesamtausgabe, (1973) 1 copia
Ein Briefwechsel (1981) 1 copia
Gottes Gnadenwahl (1988) 1 copia
Schritte 1 copia
all 1 copia
L'avvento-Il Natale (1992) 1 copia
Preghiere (1987) 1 copia
Uomo e donna 1 copia
La priere 1 copia
Evangelium und Bildung (1947) 1 copia
Ultime testimonianze (2015) 1 copia
L'humanité de dieu (2010) 1 copia
La riforma protestante (2018) 1 copia
Avent (2019) 1 copia
L'Eglise en péril (2000) 1 copia
Predigten 1911 (2015) 1 copia
La oración (1980) 1 copia

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Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome legale
Barth, Karl
Altri nomi
Barth, Karl
巴特
巴爾特
Data di nascita
1886-05-10
Data di morte
1968-12-10
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
Switzerland
Luogo di nascita
Basel, Switzerland
Luogo di morte
Basel, Switzerland
Luogo di residenza
Basel, Switzerland
Bern, Switzerland
Safenwil, Switzerland
Göttingen, Germany
Münster, Germany
Bonn, Germany
Istruzione
University of Marburg
University of Tübingen
University of Berlin
University of Bern
Attività lavorative
theologian
professor
pastor
Relazioni
Zuckmayer, Carl (friend)
Organizzazioni
Reformed Church
University of Göttingen
University of Münster
University of Bonn
University of Basel
Nota di disambiguazione
Carl Barth,1896-1976 is a different author than Karl Barth, 1886-1968, and so has been nevered, despite the fact that several book titles written by Karl Barth have been entered in LT with the name Carl Barth as author.

Utenti

Recensioni

One of the most eminent theologians of the 20th century explains the Apostles' Creed as a foundation of the Christian religion.
 
Segnalato
PendleHillLibrary | 1 altra recensione | Feb 13, 2024 |
Christian Theology, Evangelical Theology The theology of Karl Barth is centered upon God Christ in the Bible. It is not a man centered theology nor visited theology which has made peace with the humanistic assumptions of the West. It is evangelical precisely because it stresses God's encounter with man instead of man's discovery of God.
 
Segnalato
PendleHillLibrary | 8 altre recensioni | Sep 27, 2023 |
 
Segnalato
SrMaryLea | Aug 22, 2023 |

I’m really glad I begun my cursory little glance back into theology with this work after a little over three years of having done virtually zero serious work on the subject. Having possessed both a feigned belief in Christianity during my enrolment at a Catholic primary school in my youth and a subsequently confrontational style of discussion during my predictable, yet still intensely irritating, stage of adolescence where I thought that New Atheism was the real deal it was refreshing to come at things from a Protestant perspective.

The series of lectures that Barth has penned here has its slow moments but the two central chapters on theological existence and the threats that the discourse of theology faces both internally and externally were incredibly enlightening and enjoyable. In particular the lecture on Temptation was very moving, causing a momentary atheistic vitriol to be stirred in my gut which I hadn’t felt in years. Thankfully this quickly subsided, but nevertheless the idea that God’s righteous wrath can cause Him to up and turn his back completely on a devoted community’s intellectual and practical efforts, ‘disdain[ing] these offerings of your fatted calves’, was a pretty difficult to pill to swallow. Tough love I guess, eh? The assertion by Barth that one should study the secondary witnesses (say, for instance, the Church doctors who never directly encountered Christ), with their theological systems which stand as the very pinnacles of Christianity, only to have to remain constantly aware while doing so that they too possess a danger which all must be cognisant of, was particularly striking. I can understand why Barth posits this, simul justi et peccatores and all that, but it’s an insight so novel to me to that I haven’t quite got round to fully digesting it yet. I was always a staunch proponent of the idea of Sola Scriptura, a clear heresy decried by my teachers, even during my atheist days - but the idea that some of the finest theologians may have written during periods of God’s withdrawal was patently dismaying.

That’s all to say that only one small discussion within this slim volume was enough to set me down a whole trail of thought I hadn’t considered in years. There are plenty of insights to be gleaned in here and I’d highly recommend it. I’ll close this out with a some fairly sizeable quotes that resonated with me fairly strongly:

‘So excellent may be the theologian's work. But of what help is it? Everything is in order, but everything is also in the greatest disorder. The mill is turning, but it is empty as it turns. All the sails are hoisted, but no wind fills them to drive the ship. The fountain adorned with many spouts is there, but no water comes. Science there is, but no knowledge illumined by the power of its object. There is no doubt piety, but not the faith which, kindled by God, catches fire. What appears to take place there does not really take place. For what happens is that God, who is supposedly involved in all theological work, maintains silence about what is thought and said in theology about him’

‘The God of whom we speak is no god imagined or devised by men. The grace of the gods who are imagined or devised by men is usually a conditional grace, to be merited and won by men through supposedly good works, and not the true grace which gives itself freely. Instead of being hidden under the form of a contradiction, sub contrario, and directed to man through radical endangering and judgment, man's imagined grace is usually directly offered and accessible in some way to him and can be rather conveniently, cheaply, and easily appropriated. Evangelical theology, on the other hand, is to be pursued in hope, though as a human work it is radically questioned by God, found guilty in God's judgment and verdict—and though collapsing long before it reaches its goal, it relies on God who himself seeks out, heals, and saves man and his work. This God is the hope of theology.’

‘In this love there is no fear. This perfect love drives out fear because in it God loved man for his own sake and man loved God for his own sake. What took place on both sides was not a need, wish, and desire but simply the freedom to exist for one another gratis. This was God's own primal freedom for man and at the same time man's freedom which was granted him by God. This was Agape, which descends from above, and by the power of this descent, simultaneously ascends from below. Agape is both movements in equal sovereignty, or, rather, this single movement.’

‘But theological observation of God cannot be a genial and detached survey. Theology cannot be an easygoing (or even interested and perhaps fascinated) contemplation of an object. For in the last analysis the attitude of the more or less enraptured subject toward this object might remain indifferent or skeptical, if not spiteful. If this object allowed its beholder to protect himself behind a fence of reservations, it would not at all be the wonder of God of which we spoke. When this object arouses wonderment of the type we have described, transforming the man whom it involves into an astonished subject, this man also becomes concerned.’

‘The question about truth, therefore, is not stated in the familiar way: is it true that God exists? Does God really have a covenant with man? Is Israel really his chosen people? Did Jesus Christ actually die for our sins? Was he truly raised from the dead for our justification? And is he in fact our Lord? This is the way fools ask in their hearts—admittedly such fools as we are all in the habit of being.’
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
theoaustin | 8 altre recensioni | May 19, 2023 |

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Statistiche

Opere
432
Opere correlate
7
Utenti
14,611
Popolarità
#1,575
Voto
4.0
Recensioni
55
ISBN
494
Lingue
14
Preferito da
32

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