Faith in search of certainty: Karl Barth's method in dogmatics and apologetics. A study in historical theology and cultural history
dc.contributor.author
Haupert, Thomas J.
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-05-22T12:42:20Z
dc.date.available
2018-05-22T12:42:20Z
dc.date.issued
1977
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
She thesis seeks to examine Karl Earth's theo
logical method against the backdrop of the historical
context in which it developed, that is, the politicalsocial-econonic
context, and the philosophical-theological context.
en
dc.description.abstract
After outlining this context, and tracing
Earth's theological development up to 1930 in Part I,
the thesis turns its attention to Earth's study of
Anselra'e theological method, the Fides -uaerens Intellectual of 1931. here, prior to the commencement of
his Church Dogmatics, both Earth himself, and his major
interpreters (after I960), concur that Earth "found
himself" methodologically. Thus Part II of the thesis
seeks to examine both (1) the accuracy of Earth's
interpretation of Arise 1m and (2) the nature of the
theological method Earth attributes to Anselra, The
thesis maintains that Earth "found himself" methodologically only by seriously misinterpreting Ansel® at a
quite basic level.
en
dc.description.abstract
Part III of the thesis seeks to examine several
basal aspects of the actual method of Earth's theology.
As 'the Credo', or the credal tradition and dogmas of
the Early Church, was of central importance to the
method Earth attributed to Ansel® (in contrast to
cripture), Part III asks questions as to the place,
importance and type of relation to Tradition, specificx
4
ally the credal Tradition of the Early Church, in
Barth's theology# This aspect of Earth's laethod has
been all but ignored by the major interpreters of Barth,
Among our findings are that (1) credal beliefs form a
significant portion of the basis upon which this theology is built; (2) the type of relation to credal
Tradition is characterized by unquestioning submission
to, and dogmatic assertion of these credal beliefs.
In addition, there is significant evidence that Barth
operates on the assumption that credal Tradition is
an infallible articulation of revelation, and an
infallible form of "the Word of God."
en
dc.description.abstract
Part III goes on to examine issues of method
concerning the relationships between man, ti:oology and
revelation. Here the thesis finds that unquestioning
submission to Tradition is accompanied by unquestioning
submission to what is alleged to be revelation, that
is, to what is experienced as "the Word of God" in
an "EVent" in which human words (allegedly) become
"the Word of God" by the action of the deity (the
human words of Boripture, etc.)
en
dc.description.abstract
Evidence is also found that Barth operates
upon the assumption that Dogmatics itself, like
Scripture, preaching (and creeds) is, at least at
points, a human form of "the Word of God," It is
from this vantage point that Barth's conception of
Apologetics is viewed. It is a conception in which
the deity allegedly 'validates' the theologians own
words as "the Word of God" for "unbelievers".
en
dc.description.abstract
After laying out and examining these several
.
basal aspects of Garth's method, the thesis seeks to
put t is ethod into historical perspective, viewing
it firstly with reference to the development of another
influential figure, the composer, Igor Stravinsky;
and secondly, by seeking possible reasons for the
develop e it of Garth*s method by turning to consider
the extremely troubled economic, social and political
context In W'.ic.i this ...ethod developed.
en
dc.description.abstract
The thesis concludes by summarizing the results
of research, and by listing eight reasons for holding
that Earth's theological programme should not be
t a en seriously as a real option for theology. In a
concludiing critique Earth's theology is found to nave
only minimal relevance for preaching, that is specifically for Earth's own preaching. Thus Earth theology apparently has only minimal relevance for its
most central aim: to serve the preaching of 'the
Church'.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/30256
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2018 Block 19
en
dc.relation.isreferencedby
en
dc.title
Faith in search of certainty: Karl Barth's method in dogmatics and apologetics. A study in historical theology and cultural history
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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