God and the creature in the trinitarian methodology of Karl Barth
dc.contributor.author
Watson, Gordon W.
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-05-22T12:49:40Z
dc.date.available
2018-05-22T12:49:40Z
dc.date.issued
1973
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
In this thesis we are concerned to present &n analysis of the
development, meaning and implications of the doctrine of the Trinity in
the thought of Karl Barth, as it relates to the question of the relationship between God and the creature.
en
dc.description.abstract
To this end we begin our presentation with an analysis of the
development in which, it is contended, the doctrine of the Trinity
assumed a constitutive place in Barth's theological programme. As a
result of a critical re-appraisal of his first systematic work, which
attempted a confrontation with theological realism and idealism in
contemporary Protestant and Catholic thou^it, Barth is understood to
have seen the doctrine of the Trinity as of continuing critical importance
in his developing thought. Not least in the factors influencing Barth's
thinking in this direction was his understanding of St.Anselm's
theological scheme. The doctrine of the Trinity within the concept of
his Prolegomena to Dogmatics served to emphasise the lesson that he
learned from St.Anselm. For if the possibility and necessity of Theology
are rooted and grounded in the nature of God's being who He is, then the
doctrine of the Trinity within the doctrine of Revelation serves to emphasise
that the possibility and necessity of Revelationufe rooted in God's
self revelation. Dogmatics can only give an account of itself by
describing the reality which posits the possibility and validates the
truth of past, present and future revelation in and by its own actuality.
en
dc.description.abstract
We raise the question at the conclusion of this presentation
whether Barth's way of understanding and expounding both the point of
departure and the substance of the doctrine of the Trinity does not
preclude appreciation of factors which have been felt to be important in
understanding the Trinity. One of these is understood to be the relationship
between the creaturely form of God's revelation and the life of the
creature as such or its experience of God's salvation within the sphere
of the church; where the soteriological purpose of the trinitarian
economy is actively pressing towards a consummation in history.
en
dc.description.abstract
Subsequently we present an analysis of the relationship between
Barth's exposition of the doctrine of the Trinity and Ghristology. The
significance of this exercise is that it elucidates the relationship,
presupposed by the event of God's Self revelation as subsisting
between God and the creature, in terms of the unitive act in which God
constitutes Himself as the creature's Lord in His Self revelation*
Thus the creaturely form of revelation can only be understood in terms
of the possibility which posits the actuality of God's Self revealed
Lordship, The christological question is a viewirg from a different
perspective of the same question by which the doctrine of the Trinity
was raised to understanding: "Who" is the Self revealing God? It is a
viewing of this question from the specific point of view of what this
God who reveals Himself as Lord does for us and in us. The importance
of the conclusions reached in this chapter relates to an understanding
of how Barth, on the basis of his view of the worldly forms of revelation
established in this context, considers the relationship between God
and the creature which is presupposed by this event.
en
dc.description.abstract
When we therefore come to consider the doctrine of Creation
and its orientation within Barth's systematic perspective we note that
we can only posit the reality and possibility of creaturely existence
as the technical possibility of the realisation of the divine compact
and decision in which God determines Himself to be "Who" He is. Thus
the doctrine of Creation is rooted and grounded in the doctrine of
Election considered as part of the doctrine of God, Therefore the
creature is raised to understanding in terms of the being and action of
God who, in revealing Himself, presupposes the Self positing of His
eternal election of Himself and the creature in the majesty of His
freedom; which is the grace of Jesus Christ, Consequently, all the
relationships between God and the creature, and creature and creature,
are expounded in terms of this reality. Both the origin and goal, the
goal because it is the origin, of all God's ways and works ad extra
are seen to be rooted and grounded in the unity and diversity of God's
self constitutive act in which He posits Himself as man's Lord,
en
dc.description.abstract
An analysis is then presented of the God-creature and creaturecreature
relationship, in terms of what Berth's theological method
presupposes and implies for understanding the question of knowledge of
God and knowledge of the creature. This analysis serves to confirm
the conclusions reached so far and to pose the question which is then
taken up in our final chapter: the relative importance of the structures
of creaturely existence in understanding the question of God's relation¬
ship to the world.
en
dc.description.abstract
In the final chapter we thus explore the issue of God's
relationship to the creature by posing what we believe to be pertinent
questions in understanding God's transcendence and immanence. In this
we make use of material from both the Catholic and Reformed traditions.
It is held that for both traditions the God-creature relationship entails
a proper emphasis on the relative structure and being of creaturely
existence in appreciating the full implications of God's creation.
en
dc.description.abstract
The view is expressed and developed that elements within the
Eastern and Reformed traditions prove helpful in overcoming what is seen
to be a lack, a methodological hiatus, in Barth's exposition of the
God-creature relationship within a trinitarian context. As distinct from
Barth's presentation we put forward the view that in understanding the
Trinity in relation to creation it is necessary to see the unique and
undivided act of God's self revelation in terms which provide,
methodologically, for the meaningfulness of the worldliness of
revelations form. That is, both the unity of God and the unity of God
and the creature d"6. such as to be declared to us, not only amidst or
with, but through and by the worldliness of its form. It is felt that
the analysis of the event structure of revelation and its subsequent
development in the doctrines of the Trinity, God and Creation, preclude
Barth's appreciation of what we would see as an important aspect of the
problem. Unless the worldliness of Christ is allowed to stand,
determining how God speaks, we have nothing left in understanding
God's relation to the creature but the intra trinitarian speaking and
acting of God which presupposes the event of revelation ad extra.
Instead we should understand God the Son and the unity of God's self
revelation by means of the Sonship actually achieved towards man in the
incarnate Christ. This Sonship, celebrated in the Spirit by the church's
liturgy, is, as such, the means by which the church is pressed and
called forward toward the consummation of the creature's vocation in
history.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/30896
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2018 Block 19
en
dc.relation.isreferencedby
en
dc.title
God and the creature in the trinitarian methodology of Karl Barth
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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