Karl Barth


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Related to Karl Barth: Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Paul Tillich
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Synonyms for Karl Barth

Swiss Protestant theologian (1886-1968)

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
VON, Karl Barth. Darstellung und Deutung seiner Theologie (1951), 2a ed., Einsiedeln: Johannes, 1976.
The sermon concludes with Karl Barth urging the inmates to believe in their salvation and live in the light of the glorious truth that they have been saved.
After the Great War, when the integrity of European Christianity was under threat (don't forget, the German army had prayed to the same God), an injection of optimism was delivered by the young theologian Karl Barth, whose humane approach helped to make him the most important Christian thinker of the 20th century.
The doctrine of God in reformed orthodoxy, Karl Barth, and the Utrecht School; a study in method and content.
Karl Barth was the twentieth century's greatest theologian.
He astutely and fairly critiques seminal theologians (Ernst Troeltsch, Paul Tillich, Karl Barth) while carefully mining their enduring insights for use as paving stones on the road to understanding a theology of Japan.
Sheveland, Piety and Responsibility: Patterns of Unity in Karl Rahner, Karl Barth, and Vedanta Desika.
Making Waves in the Baptismal Font: Karl Barth and Infant Baptism.
Asked what qualities he believed his successor needed Dr Williams quoted the theologian Karl Barth, who said: "You have to preach with a Bible in one hand and a newspaper in the other."
No surprises, then, that among the theologians most frequently cited are Karl Barth, Dietrich Bonhoeffer and T.F.
The centerpiece of this framework is Karl Barth's account of the relationship of covenant and creation, and the possibilities for ad hoc engagement of theology and secular disciplines that it enables, according to the perceptive interpretations of Barth offered by Hans Frei and William Werphehowski.
Here is a very scholarly study of a much-used phrase (missio Dei), which is quite familiar to readers of this journal, and of a much misunderstood theologian, Karl Barth, called in to give the phrase a thorough theological grounding.
This book offers a new insight into the biography of Heino Falcke, a student of Karl Barth who played a key role in charting a path for the Protestant Church in the German Democratic Republic (GDR) in the years before German unification in 1990.
Neville believes that there are fundamentally two ways to approach religious truth which are exemplified in the two twentieth-century Protestant theologians, Karl Barth and Paul Tillich.