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Article
Thomas Torrance's Reformulation of Karl Barth's Christological Rejection of Natural Theology
Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary (1973-2015)
  • John D. Morrison, Liberty University
Publication Date
1-1-2001
Comments
Published in the Evangelical Quarterly, 73 no 1 Ja 2001, p 59-75.
Abstract

Karl Barth is widely noted for his antipathy to all forms of natural theology. Indeed, the results of Barth’s Christocentricity have made his name synonymous with the negation of all divine revelation apart from Christ, the one Word of God. if this is so, then the theology of Thomas Torrance, as a highly significant development of Barth’s thought and as vitally concerned with proper natural theology (in dialogue with the physical sciences), becomes a questionable enterprise. This article examines this question and concludes that, while Torrance clearly goes beyond Barth, he is faithful to subthemes in Barth’s theology relating to ‘natural theology’, making explicit and bringing to prominence streams of Barthian thought often left unnoticed.

Citation Information
John D. Morrison. "Thomas Torrance's Reformulation of Karl Barth's Christological Rejection of Natural Theology" (2001)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/john_morrison/43/