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Trinity and Election

The Christocentric Reorientation of Karl Barth’s Speculative Theology, 1936-1942

Dr. Shao Kai Tseng (Zhejiang University, China)

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English
T.& T.Clark Ltd
22 August 2024
Challenging Bruce McCormack’s paradigm of post-Kantian Barth scholarship, this book builds on the interpretative model that Sigurd Baark developed in 2018. This model interprets Barth’s innovative adoption of an Anselmian mode of theological speculation, against the intellectual-historical background of the idealist tradition of speculative metaphysics that culminated in Hegel.

This book argues that Barth adopted the Anselmian mode of speculation in which immediate self-identity between subject, object, and act is found in the triune God alone, while the speculative identity that enables human knowledge of God is none other than the identity between God-in-and-for-Godself and God-for-us. Exploring the nationalistic dimension of speculative metaphysics in 19th-century Germany, Tseng identifies this as an important aspect of the context of Barth’s development of a Christocentric form of speculative theology.
By:  
Imprint:   T.& T.Clark Ltd
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 232mm,  Width: 154mm,  Spine: 16mm
Weight:   440g
ISBN:   9780567709356
ISBN 10:   0567709353
Pages:   280
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Shao Kai Tseng is ZJU100 Research Professor in the School of Philosophy, Zhejiang University, China

Reviews for Trinity and Election: The Christocentric Reorientation of Karl Barth’s Speculative Theology, 1936-1942

"""In this compelling work, Shao Kai Tseng offers a careful, detailed, sophisticated and convincing alternative to both ahistorical and historicized readings of Karl Barth with practical implications regarding social and political matters. By carefully considering the Anselmian and Hegelian moments in Barth's theology, this important book moves Barth studies beyond the problems embedded in McCormack's view of Barth's ""actualism."" Anyone interested in Barth's theology today will surely want to read this book."" --Paul D. Molnar, St. John's University, USA ""Tseng's illuminating analysis of Barth's Christological concentration in the 1930s confirms the far-reaching theological fruitfulness of in-depth studies of Barth's theological development. It is on the precise determination of election and Trinity that the clarity of Barth's chosen path is decided. At the same time, the political implications that Tseng finally brings into focus show that his emphasis on the speculative character of Barth's thought is by no means in complete contradiction to a critical rationalism that Barth is attested by others."" --Michael Weinrich, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany ""Over against the neo-Kantian paradigm that has drawn so much attention these last decades, Tseng offers us a fascinating new reading of the intellectual impetus of Barth's mature theology. There may be (too) many books about Barth; but this is one any serious Barth scholar will have to reckon with."" --Edwin Chr. van Driel, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, USA"


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