Full Description
This important work by one of the most significant New Testament scholars of the modern period, now available in English for the first time, explores the significance of Christian apocalyptic for the church in times of conflict and crisis. Engaging with global social and political realities that are still very much with us, Ernst Käsemann offers a theological indictment of global white supremacy, capitalism, and militarism and passionately articulates an apocalyptic theology of liberation. The book includes a foreword by James H. Cone and an introduction by Ry O. Siggelkow.
Contents
Contents
Foreword by James Hal Cone
Editor's Introduction by Ry O. Siggelkow
Translator's Preface
Author's Preface (1982)
1. Aspects of the Church
2. Primitive Christian Conflicts over the Freedom of the Congregation (1979)
3. On the Ecclesiological Use of the Key Words "Sacrament" and "Sign" (1974)
4. "Jesus Christ Frees and Unites" (1975)
5. The Presence of the Crucified (1967)
6. The Place That Cannot Be Surrendered (1977)
7. On the Way toward Abiding (1977)
8. The Appeal to Reason (1977)
9. Guests of the Crucified (1979)
10. Presence of Mind (1969)
11. Love, Which Rejoices in the Truth (1972)
12. The Proclamation of the Cross of Christ in a Time of Self-Deception (1974)
13. Cross and Healing Activity (1974)
14. The Healing of the Possessed (1978)
15. Meaning and Problematic of the 1981 Kirchentag Motto (1980)
16. The Eschatological Royal Rule of God (1980)
17. Where Eternal Life Begins on Earth (1981)
18. What I, as a German Theologian, Unlearned in Fifty Years (1981)
Indexes



