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El. knyga: Barth Reception in Britain

  • Formatas: 320 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Jun-2010
  • Leidėjas: T.& T.Clark Ltd
  • ISBN-13: 9780567011565
  • Formatas: 320 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Jun-2010
  • Leidėjas: T.& T.Clark Ltd
  • ISBN-13: 9780567011565

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" This is the first book length assesment in English of the impact of Karl Barth's theology in Britain. Beginning with the essays of Adolf Keller and H.R. Mackintosh in the 1920s, it analyses the interplay between Barth's developing thought and different strands of English, Scottish and Welsh church history up to the 1980s. Barth's impact on British perceptions of the German Church Struggle during the 1930s is discussed, along with the ready acceptance that his theology gained among the English Congregationalists, Welsh Nonconformists and theologians of the Church of Scotland. Half forgotten names such as John McConnachie and Nathaniel Micklem are brought to light along with better known representatives of British Barthianism like Daniel T. Jenkins and T.F. Torrance. Barth and the secular theology of the 1960s are assessed, along with the beginnings of the Barthian renaissance linked with Colin Gunton and others during the 1980s. Barth Reception in Britain is a contribution to modern church history as well as the history of doctrine. "

Recenzijos

"This study is full of interesting information and evaluation. It deserves to be widely read, and it will no doubt be used as a work to which readers will wish to return for reference. (The Rt Revd Dr Alec Graham Church Times) 'This is a very welcome addition to the history of Christian thought in modern Britain.' (Baptist Quarterly)"

Daugiau informacijos

A monograph on the history of the reception of Karl Barth's theology in Great Britain.
Acknowledgements viii
Introduction 1(4)
1 Adolf Keller and the Continental Introduction to Karl Barth in Britain, 1925-30
5(20)
Barth and his work, 1914-25
5(3)
Adolf Keller and `The Theology of Crisis'
8(6)
The Anglo-German Theological Conferences
14(7)
Adolf Keller and `The Dialectical Theology'
21(4)
2 Hugh Ross Mackintosh, John McConnachie and the Reception of Karl Barth in Scotland, 1925-33
25(23)
The earliest response to Barth: H. R. Mackintosh
25(4)
The earliest response to Barth: John McConnachie
29(4)
Deepening engagement
33(2)
McConnachie's initial volume
35(5)
The continuing early impact
40(3)
McConnachie's second volume
43(5)
3 The Reception of Karl Barth's Theology in Wales, 1927-33
48(15)
Wales and the Scottish precedence
48(2)
Theology in post-Edwardian Wales
50(3)
The triumph of liberalism
53(3)
J. D. Vernon Lewis, E. Keri Evans and J. E. Daniel
56(7)
4 English Nonconformity and the Reception of Karl Barth, 1926-32
63(37)
The Nonconformist impulse
63(4)
P. T. Forsyth, Nathaniel Micklem and `Orthodox Dissent'
67(6)
Congregationalists and the early Barth: Sydney Cave and John Phillips
73(3)
Congregationalism's `sharp turn to the theological right'
76(8)
R. Birch Hoyle and the Baptist response to Barth
84(7)
Further response
91(2)
J. Arundel Chapman and the Methodist response to Barth
93(5)
A Presbyterian response?
98(2)
5 Barth Reception and the Church of England, 1927-33
100(19)
Barth reception and Anglican modernism
100(5)
Barthianism and evangelicalism
105(4)
Anglo-Catholicism: John Kenneth Mozley and Edwyn Clement Hoskyns
109(6)
Hoskyns and Barth
115(4)
6 Barth, Britain and the Mid-1930s
119(30)
Hoskyns's translation of Romans
119(4)
F. W. Camfield's Revelation and the Holy Spirit
123(5)
The `first blast' of the German Church Struggle
128(6)
Gerhart Kittel, Cambridge and Edwyn G. Hoskyns
134(4)
A. J. Macdonald and opposition to the Confessing Church
138(4)
Barth by mid-decade
142(7)
7 Towards the Second World War
149(25)
Edwyn C. Hoskyns's `Letter from England'
149(5)
Developments in Wales
154(6)
The Scottish connection in the later 1930s
160(5)
Nathaniel Micklem and `Natural Theology'
165(6)
The Gifford Lectures and their implications
171(3)
8 Barth Reception in Wartime and Beyond
174(36)
Daniel T. Jenkins and the catholicity of the Word
174(9)
The mission of The Presbyter
183(6)
This is the Message and Good News of God
189(5)
J. E. Daniel, R. Ifor Parry and developments in Wales
194(6)
Towards Reformation Old and New
200(6)
The growing critique
206(4)
9 Barth Reception during the Post-War Years, 1948-56 (I)
210(25)
The World Council of Churches and the clash with Reinhold Niebuhr
210(8)
The establishment of The Scottish Journal of Theology
218(6)
Torrance, Brand Blanshard and `Reason and Belief'
224(4)
The English Baptists, Wales and Northern Ireland
228(7)
10 Barth Reception during the Post-War Years, 1948-56 (II)
235(22)
Barth and the demythologizing controversy in Britain
235(3)
Ronald Gregor Smith
238(4)
The eschatological note
242(2)
Evangelicalism and British Barth reception
244(4)
Torrance, Barthianism and the IVF
248(3)
The growing divide
251(6)
11 Barth Reception in Britain during the Final Decade, 1956-68
257(19)
The translation of the Church Dogmatics
257(3)
The decade of the secular
260(7)
British Barthianism during the mid-1960s
267(9)
Postlude: Barth in Britain 1968-86 276(9)
Bibliography 285(19)
Index 304
D. Densil Morgan is Professor in the School of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Wales, Bangor, and has published on Karl Barth, modern doctrine and twentieth century church history.