Barth Reception in Britain
, by Morgan, D. Densil- ISBN: 9780567031860 | 0567031861
- Cover: Hardcover
- Copyright: 8/12/2010
Acknowledgements | p. viii |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Adolf Keller and the Continental Introduction to Karl Barth in Britain, 1925-30 | p. 5 |
Barth and his work, 1914-25 | p. 5 |
Adolf Keller and 'The Theology of Crisis' | p. 8 |
The Anglo-German Theological Conferences | p. 14 |
Adolf Keller and 'The Dialectical Theology' | p. 21 |
Hugh Ross Mackintosh, John McConnachie and the Reception of Karl Barth in Scotland, 1925-33 | p. 25 |
The earliest response to Barth | p. 25 |
The earliest response to Barth | p. 29 |
Deepening engagement | p. 33 |
McConnachie's initial volume | p. 35 |
The continuing early impact | p. 40 |
McConnachie's second volume | p. 43 |
The Reception of Karl Barth's Theology in Wales, 1927-33 | p. 48 |
Wales and the Scottish precedence | p. 48 |
Theology in post-Edwardian Wales | p. 50 |
The triumph of liberalism | p. 53 |
J. D. Vernon Lewis, E. Keri Evans and J. E. Daniel | p. 56 |
English Nonconformity and the Reception of Karl Barth, 1926-32 | p. 63 |
The Nonconformist impulse | p. 63 |
P. T. Forsyth, Nathaniel Micklem and 'Orthodox Dissent' | p. 67 |
Congregationalists and the early Barth: Sydney Cave and John Phillips | p. 73 |
Congregationalism's 'sharp turn to the theological right' | p. 76 |
R. Birch Hoyle and the Baptist response to Barth | p. 84 |
Further response | p. 91 |
J. Arundel Chapman and the Methodist response to Barth | p. 93 |
A Presbyterian response? | p. 98 |
Barth Reception and the Church of England, 1927-33 | p. 100 |
Barth reception and Anglican modernism | p. 100 |
Barthianism and evangelicalism | p. 105 |
Anglo-Catholicism | p. 109 |
Hoskyns and Barth | p. 115 |
Barth, Britain and the Mid-1930s | p. 119 |
Hoskyns's translation of Romans | p. 119 |
F.W. Camfield's Revelation and the Holy Spirit | p. 123 |
The 'first blast' of the German Church Struggle | p. 128 |
Gerhart Kittel, Cambridge and Edwyn G. Hoskyns | p. 134 |
A. J. Macdonald and opposition to the Confessing Church | p. 138 |
Barth by mid-decade | p. 142 |
Towards the Second World War | p. 149 |
Edwyn C. Hoskyns's 'Letter from England' | p. 149 |
Developments in Wales | p. 154 |
The Scottish connection in the later 1930s | p. 160 |
Nathaniel Micklem and 'Natural Theology' | p. 165 |
The Gifford Lectures and their implications | p. 171 |
Barth Reception in Wartime and Beyond | p. 174 |
Daniel T. Jenkins and the catholicity of the Word | p. 174 |
The mission of The Presbyter | p. 183 |
This is the Message and Good News of God | p. 189 |
J. E. Daniel, R. Ifor Parry and developments in Wales | p. 194 |
Towards Reformation Old and New | p. 200 |
The growing critique | p. 206 |
Barth Reception during the Post-War Years, 1948-56 (I) | p. 210 |
The World Council of Churches and the clash with Reinhold Niebuhr | p. 210 |
The establishment of The Scottish Journal of Theology | p. 218 |
Torrance, Brand Blanshard and 'Reason and Belief' | p. 224 |
The English Baptists, Wales and Northern Ireland | p. 228 |
Barth Reception during the Post-War Years, 1948-56 (II) | p. 235 |
Barth and the demythologizing controversy in Britain | p. 235 |
Ronald Gregor Smith | p. 238 |
The eschatological note | p. 242 |
Evangelicalism and British Barth reception | p. 244 |
Torrance, Barthianism and the IVF | p. 248 |
The growing divide | p. 251 |
Barth Reception in Britain during the Final Decade, 1956-68 | p. 257 |
The translation of the Church Dogmatics | p. 257 |
The decade of the secular | p. 260 |
British Barthianism during the mid-1960s | p. 267 |
Postlude: Barth in Britain 1968-86 | p. 276 |
Bibliography | p. 285 |
Index | p. 304 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.