Emil Brunner A Reappraisal.
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Newark :
John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,
2014.
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Colección: | New York Academy of Sciences Ser.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Series page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- A Note on Translations and Editions
- 1: Emil Brunner: The Origins of a Theological Mind, 1914-1924
- Theological Studies at Zurich
- Pastoral Ministry and Contacts in England
- The Swiss Crisis of Identity, 1914-1919
- Brunner and Dialectical Theology: The Origins of an Ambivalent Relationship
- Brunner in America, 1919-1920
- Brunner, Barth, and Thurneysen: Continuing Debate
- The Quest for Recognition: Erlebnis, Erkenntnis und Glaube (1921-2)
- Brunner and American Psychology of Religion
- The Limits of Humanity: Reflections on Revelation and Reason (1922)
- The Critique of Schleiermacher: Die Mystik und das Wort (1924)
- Part I: The Making of a Dialectical Theologian
- 2: Brunner's Theology of Crisis: Critique and Construction, 1924-1929
- The 1925 Inaugural Lecture at Zurich: Revelation and Theology
- Reason and Theology: An Ecclesial Engagement (1927)
- The Mediator: A Manifesto for Dialectical Theology (1927)
- The Trinity: Dogma, not Kerygma
- The American Reception of the "Theology of Crisis" (1928)
- 3: Reflections on the Tasks of Theology, 1929-1933
- Crisis: The Rise of Ideology in Western Europe, 1920-1935
- Brunner's Challenge to Ideology: The "Other Task of Theology" (1929)
- Presenting Dialectical Theology in Britain: The Word and the World (1931)
- A Theological Ethics: The Divine Imperative (1932)
- A Problematic Liaison: Brunner and the Oxford Group
- The Work of the Holy Spirit: The Copenhagen Lectures (1934)
- 4: Natural Theology? The Barth-Brunner Debate of 1934
- Natural Theology: A Contested Notion
- Karl Barth's Views on Natural Theology, 1918-1933
- A Game-Changer: The Nazi Power Grab of 1933
- Brunner's Public Criticism of Barth: Nature and Grace (1934)
- Brunner's Later Views on Natural Theology: Revelation and Reason (1941)
- Barth's Response: No! (1934)
- 5: Brunner's Theological Anthropology: Man in Revolt (1937)
- The Need for a Theological Anthropology
- The Impossibility of an "Objective" Anthropology
- The Dependence of Humanity on God
- The "Contradiction" within Humanity
- The Image of God and Human Identity
- Humanity and Evolution: The Limits of Darwinism
- 6: Objectivity and Subjectivity in Theology: Truth as Encounter (1937)
- Object and Subject in Theology: The Context to Brunner's Thought
- Objectivity and Subjectivity: Brunner's Criticism of Existing Paradigms
- Overcoming the Object-Subject Impasse: Brunner's Strategy
- The Implications of Brunner's Notion of "Truth as Encounter"
- America: The Call to Princeton Theological Seminary, 1937-1939
- Part II: Consolidation: Brunner's Vision for Post-War Theological Reconstruction
- 7: Brunner's Vision for the Christian Community: The Church, State, and Culture
- The Ideological Origins of Totalitarianism