Ebook: Doxological Theology: Karl Barth on Divine Providence, Evil, and the Angels
Author: Christopher C. Green
- Series: T&T Clark Studies in Systematic Theology
- Year: 2011
- Publisher: T&T Clark
- Language: English
- pdf
In 1949, Karl Barth confidently upholds a high doctrine of divine providence, maintaining God’s control of every event in history. His argument is at once cheerful, but also defiant in the face of a Europe that is war-weary and doubtful of the full sovereignty of God. Barth’s movement to praise God shows his affinity for the Reformed theological tradition. While Barth often distances himself from his Calvinist predecessors in important ways, he sees his own view of providence to be a positive reworking of the Reformed position in order to maintain what he understands as its most important insights: the praiseworthiness of the God of providence and the doxology of the creature. Doxological Theology investigates how the theologian, in response to the praiseworthy God of the Reformed tradition, is expected to pray his or her way through the doctrine of providence.
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