The Epistle to the Romans (Karl Barth)

E883361

The Epistle to the Romans is Karl Barth’s groundbreaking early theological work that launched his reputation and laid the foundations for his later Church Dogmatics by radically reinterpreting Paul’s letter in a Christocentric and dialectical way.

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Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf biblical commentary
theological book
work of Protestant theology
author Karl Barth NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin Switzerland
firstEditionYear 1919
focus critique of liberal Protestantism
radical reinterpretation of Paul’s letter to the Romans
genre commentary on a biblical book
historicalSignificance landmark of early 20th-century theology
launched Karl Barth’s international reputation
influenced 20th-century Protestant theology
Bultmannian theology debates
Reformed theology
ecclesial neo-orthodoxy
influencedBy Epistle to the Romans NERFINISHED
Paul the Apostle NERFINISHED
Reformed tradition
biblical theology
keyConcept God’s freedom
Word of God
crisis theology
infinite qualitative distinction between God and humanity
judgment and grace in Christ
revelation in Jesus Christ
languageOfNotableTranslation English
movement dialectical theology
neo-orthodoxy
originalLanguage German
placeOfWriting Safenwil NERFINISHED
publicationYear 1919
relationToOtherWork foundation for Church Dogmatics
secondEditionYear 1922
subject Christocentric theology
Epistle to the Romans NERFINISHED
New Testament theology
Paul the Apostle NERFINISHED
dialectical theology
eschatology
grace
human sinfulness
justification by faith
revelation of God
sovereignty of God
theologicalApproach Christocentric
dialectical
revelation-centered
title Der Römerbrief NERFINISHED

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Church Dogmatics relatedWork The Epistle to the Romans (Karl Barth)
Neo-orthodoxy keyWork The Epistle to the Romans (Karl Barth)
this entity surface form: Karl Barth’s Epistle to the Romans