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Titre : | How Karl Barth Changed My Mind |
Auteurs : | Donald K. McKim, Éditeur scientifique |
Type de document : | texte imprimé |
Editeur : | Eugene [USA] : Wipf and Stock, 1998 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-1-57910-119-0 |
Format : | xi + 186 p. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Index. décimale : | LM (Etudes sur des théologiens) |
Résumé : |
Karl Barth (1886-1968) was one of the theological giants of all time—not just of this century. He has taken his place with Augustine, Aquinas, and Calvin as a mover and shaker of the theological world. Now, one hundred years after his birth, Barth’s theology continues to make an impact on the theological landscape, as did his commentary on the Book of Romans, once described as “a bomb on the playground of the theologians.”
The following essays are written by contemporary theologians who have been influenced in varying ways by Karl Barth. Many of them knew him first-hand and studied with him. The personal impact of Barth seemed always to make a lasting impression. Others here have read his works and learned from him through them. All have taken stock of how they have wrestled with or been shaped by Barth’s theology. At many points they have appropriated his insights; at others they have expressed their reservations. But all have met Barth’s mind and engaged it mightily. Taken together, the essays show how some present-day theologians are working and how they have responded to Barth’s views in their various ways. The rubric used is “How Karl Barth Changed My Mind,” a twist on the popular series “How I Changed My Mind” that has appeared in The Christian Century through the years and to which Karl Barth himself contributed three times. |
Note de contenu : |
- Donald K. McKim: Introduction - Markus Barth: My Father: Karl Barth - Christoph Barth: Letter to the Editor - Eberhard Busch: Memories of Karl Barth - Arthur C. Cochrane: Whether Karl Barth Changed My Mind - Hendrikus Berkhof: Beginning with Barth - Bela Vassady: Gleanings - Paul Lehmann: The Ant and the Emperor - Paul S. Minear: Rich Memories, Huge Debts - Thomas F. Torrance: My Interaction with Karl Barth - Geoffrey W. Bromiley: The Karl Barth Experience - T. H. L. Parker: Learning the Meaning of What I Believe - Dietrich Ritschl: How to Be Most Grateful to Karl Barth Without Remaining a Barthian - Robert McAfee Brown: Good News from Karl Barth - Martin E. Marty: Barth - Elizabeth Achtemeier: Relevant Remembering - James A. Wharton: Three Confidences - Bernard Ramm: Helps from Karl Barth - Donald G. Bloesch: Karl Barth: Appreciation and Reservations - I. John Hesselink: Karl Barth and Emil Brunner—A Tangled Tale with a Happy Ending (or, The Story of a Relationship) - Harvey Cox: Barth and Berlin: Theology at the Wall - Langdon Gilkey: An Appreciation of Karl Barth - Michael Wyschogrod: A Jewish Perspective on Karl Barth - Clark H. Pinnock: Assessing Barth for Apologetics - John H. Yoder: Karl Barth: How His Mind Kept Changing - John B. Cobb, Jr.: Barth and the Barthians: A Critical Appraisal - Geoffrey Wainwright: Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam - Contributors - Chronology / Major Works |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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LM Bart 026 | LM Bart 026 | Livre | Bibliothèque principale | Livres empruntables | Prêt possible Disponible |