Barth, Karl
Barth, Karl
(1886-1968) Swiss theologian, widely influential among current social pessimists. God, he holds, is wholly other than man, not apprehensible by man’s reason nor attainable by human endeavor. Christianity is a revealed and supernatural religion. Man must trust God’s plan of salvation or be doomed to utter ruin. God is the sole judge and his judgments are beyond man’s attainments. The Barthian position is called “crisis theology” (crisis, the Greek word for judgment) and “dialectical theology” (because of the emphasis upon the contradict on between God and this world). For a summary of Barth’s position see The Knowledge of God and the Service of God (1939). — V.F.