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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: George Hunsinger (Princeton Theological Seminary, USA)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: T.& T.Clark Ltd Weight: 0.268kg ISBN: 9780567689986ISBN 10: 0567689980 Pages: 184 Publication Date: 22 August 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Preface George Hunsinger (Princeton Theological Seminary, USA) Chapter 1 Barth, Berkovits, Birkenau: On Whether it is Possible to Understand Karl Barth as a post-Holocaust Theologian, Mark R. Lindsay (MCD University of Divinity, Australia) Chapter 2 Advent Sermon 1933, Karl Barth (Introduction and Translation by Michael Owen, Murdoch University, Australia) Chapter 3 The Covenant of Grace Fulfilled in Christ as the Foundation of the Indissoluble Solidarity of the Church with Israel: Barth's Position on the Jews During the Hitler Era, Eberhard Busch (Karl Barth Institute Gottingen, Germany) Chapter 4 The Jewish Samaritan: Karl Barth's Ethical Critique of the Voelkisch Church, Faye Bodley-Dangelo (Harvard Divinity School, USA) Chapter 5 Saying Yes to Israel's No : Barth's Dialectical Supersessionism and the Witness of Carnal Israel, Derek Alan Woodard-Lehman (University of Otago, New Zealand) Chapter 6 Israel as the Pradigm of Divine Judgment: An Examination of a Theme in the Theology of Karl Barth, David E. Demson (Emmanuel College, University of Toronto, Canada) Chapter 7 Karl Barth's Influence on Catholic Theology about Judaism, Philip J. Rosato (St. Joseph's University, USA) Chapter 9 Karl Barth, Israel, and Religious Pluralism, Paul Chung (Luther Seminary, St. Paul, MN, USA) Chapter 10 Where Is Karl Barth in Modern European History?, Rudy Koshar (University of Wisconsin, USA) Bibliography IndexReviewsThis collection is extremely important not only for an appropriate understanding of Karl Barth, but also for a crucial consciousness regarding all theological efforts in the awareness of enduring theological Anti-Judaism. Responsible ecclesiology and even all ecumenical perspectives have to be substantially aware of the indissoluble relationship between Church and Israel. Obviously there are different approaches but they all serve the same responsibility that has to be discovered anew-not only in Germany. --Michael Weinrich, University of Bochum, Germany The specter of anti-Semitism has haunted Karl Barth's theology like a ghost. Denial and defense, or outright dismissal on those grounds, present all-too-easy-and too familiar-responses, equally inadequate. This book looks at Barth's complicated relationship to Jews and Judaism unflinchingly in its face, and then sets out to rectify Barth in Barthian fashion. The result is debate and elucidation that the church has desperately needed for some time. --Jason A. Springs, University of Notre Dame, USA This welcome volume draws together 'treasures old and new'-Contemporary path-breaking research into Karl Barth's contribution to Christian theology after the Holocaust is joined here by the insights of earlier, now classic, essays on the theme. Together, these authors renew the call to think urgently and responsibly about what Barth himself considered the great ecumenical question: namely, the question of church and synagogue. --Philip G. Ziegler, University of Aberdeen, UK All Christian theology must give an account of its relation to Israel and Jewish people or it is not Christian theology. Karl Barth understood this. This wonderful collection of essays by leading Barth scholars takes up what Barth understood and in so doing asks us whether Karl Barth was a Post-Holocaust theologian. Their answer to this question is not first a matter for historical theology, but for what Christian theology must be in this moment and for our time. Indeed we are yet to understand fully how Christian theology has been changed by the Holocaust, and what a Post-Holocaust theology looks like. This text brings us a long way toward envisioning such a theology by exploring Karl Barth as such a theologian. --Willie James Jennings, Yale Divinity School, USA This collection is extremely important not only for an appropriate understanding of Karl Barth, but also for a crucial consciousness regarding all theological efforts in the awareness of enduring theological Anti-Judaism. Responsible ecclesiology and even all ecumenical perspectives have to be substantially aware of the indissoluble relationship between Church and Israel. Obviously there are different approaches but they all serve the same responsibility that has to be discovered anew-not only in Germany. * Michael Weinrich, University of Bochum, Germany * The specter of anti-Semitism has haunted Karl Barth's theology like a ghost. Denial and defense, or outright dismissal on those grounds, present all-too-easy-and too familiar-responses, equally inadequate. This book looks at Barth's complicated relationship to Jews and Judaism unflinchingly in its face, and then sets out to rectify Barth in Barthian fashion. The result is debate and elucidation that the church has desperately needed for some time. * Jason A. Springs, University of Notre Dame, USA * This welcome volume draws together `treasures old and new`-Contemporary path-breaking research into Karl Barth's contribution to Christian theology after the Holocaust is joined here by the insights of earlier, now classic, essays on the theme. Together, these authors renew the call to think urgently and responsibly about what Barth himself considered the great ecumenical question: namely, the question of church and synagogue. * Philip G. Ziegler, University of Aberdeen, UK * All Christian theology must give an account of its relation to Israel and Jewish people or it is not Christian theology. Karl Barth understood this. This wonderful collection of essays by leading Barth scholars takes up what Barth understood and in so doing asks us whether Karl Barth was a Post-Holocaust theologian. Their answer to this question is not first a matter for historical theology, but for what Christian theology must be in this moment and for our time. Indeed we are yet to understand fully how Christian theology has been changed by the Holocaust, and what a Post-Holocaust theology looks like. This text brings us a long way toward envisioning such a theology by exploring Karl Barth as such a theologian. * Willie James Jennings, Yale Divinity School, USA * Author InformationGeorge Hunsinger is Princeton Theological Seminary's Hazel Thompson McCord Professor of Systematic Theology, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |