Oxford University Press, Apr 29, 1993
This critical study decodes the most cryptic and elusive patterns of Karl Barth's dialectic. Hunsinger not only offers a new and authoritative interpretation of Barth's mature theology, but also places Barth's work in relation to contemporary discussions of truth, justified belief, double agency, and religious pluralism. Through a fresh and compelling reading of Church Dogmatics, Hunsinger offers a new account of the coherence of that work as a whole.
Popular Passages
Page 235 - Jesus Christ, as he is attested to us in Holy Scripture, is the one Word of God, whom we have to hear, and whom we have to trust and obey in life and in death.
Appears in 52 books from 1936-2006
Page 37 - Colossians 33 which is that of all Scripture — that our life is our life hid with Christ in God. With Christ : never at all apart from Him, never at all independently of Him, never at all in and for itself. Man never at all exists in himself. And the Christian man is the very last to try to cling to existing in himself.
Appears in 6 books from 1936-2004
Page 80 - Revelation means the giving of signs. We c
an say quite simply that revelation means sacrament, ie, the self-witness of God, the representation of His truth, and therefore of the truth in which He knows Himself, in the form of creaturely objectivity and therefore in a form which is adapted to our creaturely knowledge.
Appears in 8 books from 1936-2007
Page 34 - Himself from it. God is free to be and operate in the created world either as unconditioned or as conditioned. God is free to perform His work either within the framework of what we call the laws of nature or outside it in the shape of miracle.
Appears in 6 books from 1936-2004
Page 72 - According to Holy Scripture God's revelation is a ground which has no sort of higher or deeper ground above or behind it, but is simply a ground in itself, and therefore as regards man an authority from which no appeal to a higher authority is possible. Its reality and likewise its truth do not rest upon a superior reality and truth...
Appears in 11 books from 1969-2004
Page 80 - He unveils Himself as the One He is by veiling Himself in a form which He Himself is not. He uses this form distinct from Himself, He uses its work and sign, in order to be objective in, with and under this form, and therefore to give Himself to us to be known. Revelation means the giving of signs. We can say quite simply that revelation means sacrament, ie...
Appears in 11 books from 1936-2006
Page 263 - Jesus, these everyday happenings become what they were not before, and what they cannot be in and of themselves ... the New Testament parables are as it were the prototype of the order in which there can be other true words alongside the one Word of God, created and determined by it, exactly corresponding to it, fully serving it and therefore enjoying its power and authority...
Appears in 9 books from 1986-2005
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Bibliographic information
Title
| How to Read Karl Barth: The Shape of His Theology |
Author | George Hunsinger |
Edition | reprint |
Publisher | Oxford University Press, 1993 |
ISBN | 0195359305, 9780195359305 |
Length | 298 pages |
Subjects |
Religion
›
Christian Theology
›
General
Religion / Christian Theology / GeneralReligion / Christianity / Protestant |
Price : Free (Offer)
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