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Full Description
From the 1920s on, Karl Barth's thought was received with great interest not only by Protestants but also by Catholic theologians, who analyzed it in detail. This study outlines how and why this happened, especially in the period leading up to Vatican II. Dahlke shows how the preoccupation with Barth's 'Epistle to the Romans' and the Church Dogmatics' triggered a theological renewal among Catholic theologians. In addition to Hans Urs von Balthasar's critical appropriation of Barth's thought the the controversy about the issue of analogia entis with Erich Przywara is also dealt with.
Contents
Introduction 7; Chapter 1: 'Romans' - First Reactions to Karl Barth; Chapter 2: Anti-modern Modernity - The philosophical Presumtions of Dialectical Theology; Chapter 3: Early Ecumenism and Karl Barth; Chapter 4: 'Fides quaerens intellectum' - Barth's Anselm; Chapter 5: The Debate over the analogia entis; Chapter 6: The Contribution of Hans Urs von Balthasar to overcoming Neoscholasticism; Chapter 7: Establishing a relationship - Balthasar on Barth in the 1940th; Chapter 8: Transforming Catholicism - Balthasar's 'Karl Barth'; Chapter 9: Developing an own Theology - Balthasar beyond Barth; Conclusion.



