Amy Marga studies Karl Barth's early encounter with Roman Catholic theology during the 1920s, especially seen in his seminal set of dogmatic lectures given in Gottingen, and his second set of dogmatic lectures, given in Munster and which remain unpublished. Her analysis demonstrates his search for a concept of God's objectivity - Gegenstandlichkeit - which would not be dependent upon philosophically-laden concepts such as the analogia entis , but which would rather be anchored in God's being alone. The author shows that Roman Catholicism, especially the thought of Erich Przywara, became the key interlocutor that helped Barth bring this clarity to his doctrine of revelation and the triune God.
| ISBN: | 9783161501487 |
| Publication date: | 9th February 2010 |
| Author: | Amy Marga |
| Publisher: | Mohr Siebeck |
| Format: | Hardback |
| Pagination: | 199 pages |
| Series: | Beitrage Zur Historischen Theologie |
| Genres: |
Theology Christianity |
Amy Marga studies Karl Barth's early encounter with Roman Catholic theology during the 1920s, especially seen in his seminal set of dogmatic lectures given in Gottingen, and his second set of dogmatic lectures, given in Munster and which remain unpublished. Her analysis demonstrates his search for a concept of God's objectivity - Gegenstandlichkeit - which would not be dependent upon philosophically-laden concepts such as the analogia entis , but which would rather be anchored in God's being alone. The author shows that Roman Catholicism, especially the thought of Erich Przywara, became the key interlocutor that helped Barth bring this clarity to his doctrine of revelation and the triune God.
Karl Barth's Dialogue With Catholicism in Gottingen and Munster features in the following genres: Theology, Christianity
Karl Barth's Dialogue With Catholicism in Gottingen and Munster is available in Hardback
Karl Barth's Dialogue With Catholicism in Gottingen and Munster was written by Amy Marga and published by Mohr Siebeck
Karl Barth's Dialogue With Catholicism in Gottingen and Munster has 199 pages
Yes it is part of Beitrage Zur Historischen Theologie series
£89.01