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Schleiermacher's Christology Revisited: A Reply to his Critics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2009

Jacqueline Mariña
Affiliation:
Purdue University1360 Liberal Arts & Education Building West Lafayette, Indiana 47907

Extract

It has often been remarked by Schleiermacher's critics that his surprisingly high Christology is an awkward interlude in what may otherwise be described as a transcendental philosophy of religion. Schleiermacher's brief intoxication with Romanticism as evidenced in the Speeches, the undeniable influence of Schelling and Spinoza upon his early intellectual development, and the fact that The Christian Faith begins with a general description of the God-consciousness, all contribute to the suspicion that The Christian Faith is primarily an attempt to harmonize Christianity with the prevailing cultural thought forms of the day. This is, for instance, the way that Barth describes Schleiermacher's project: first and foremost, he understands it as an enterprise in apologetics.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Scottish Journal of Theology Ltd 1996

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