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Covering Up Luther - How Barth's Christology Challenged the Deus Absconditus That Haunts Modernity (Paperback)
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Covering Up Luther - How Barth's Christology Challenged the Deus Absconditus That Haunts Modernity (Paperback)
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Karl Barth's Christology provides a key to out-narrating the Deus
absconditus, which, as Rustin Brian contends, is in fact the god of
modernity. Included in this is the rejection of the logical and
philosophical systems that allow for the modern understanding of
God as the Deus absconditus, namely, dialectics and nominalism.
This rejection is illustrated, interestingly enough, in Barth's
decision to literally cover up, with a rug, Martin Luther's works
in his personal library. Surely this was more than a decorative
touch. The reading of Barth's works that results from this starting
point challenges much of contemporary Barth scholarship and urges
readers to reconsider Barth. Through careful examination of a large
body of Barth's writings, particularly in regard to the issues of
the knowledge or knowability of God, as well as Christology, Brian
argues that contemporary Barth scholarship should be done in
careful conversation with the finest examples of both Protestant
and, especially, Roman Catholic theology. Barth's paradoxical
Christology thus becomes the foundation for a dogmatic ecumenicism.
Barth's Christology, then, just might be able to open up
possibilities for discussion and even convergence, within a church
that is anything but one.
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