Loading…

Barth’s Moral Theology: Human Action in Barth’s Thought is unavailable, but you can change that!

John Webster shows how Barth’s work as a whole should be regarded as a moral theology. He opens with a study of Barth’s ethical thinking in key writings from the period of his break with theological liberalism, and then highlights the moral anthropology set out in his lectures on ethics from the end of the 1920s. He studies the themes of original sin, hope and freedom in Barth’s Church Dogmatics,...

Human wickedness is bound up with supra-personal realities that both pre-exist and are unleashed by sinful acts with renewed energy. Paul Ricoeur notes the ‘mysterious aspect of evil, namely that if anyone of us initiates evil, inaugurates it, each of us also discovers evil, finds it already there, in himself, outside himself, and before himself’.41 What Barth protests against is not that sin is derived, but against the view that its derivation bypasses deliberation and choice, so that it becomes
Page 75