Discussion 8: Karl Barth

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BIBLICAL INTERPRETATION SERIES: PART 8

[Click here for the companion YouTube video]

Karl Barth (1886–1968) was a Swiss-born pastor, professor, and theologian whose career was primarily in Germany. He was educated in the liberal German theology of his time but became concerned with the outbreak of World War II and how many church leaders and liberal theologians supported the Nazi regime. He therefore initiated a theological movement away from liberalism into what is now called neoorthodoxy. Barth emphasizes the complete unknowable nature of God and uses a dialectical approach to explore seemingly contradictory or paradoxical metaphysical teachings in the Bible. Barth recorded his theology in his massive Church Dogmatics (thirteen volumes and more than 6 million words), which is considered one of the one of the most important theological works of the 20th century.

Barth performed extensive, careful, scholarly, and impressive exegesis. This said, Barth in all of his writings never describes his general hermeneutical approach. Nevertheless, one can make a confident inference, starting with Barth’s understanding of a threefold form of the Word of God: as Jesus Christ; as the apostolic and prophetic witness through Scripture; and as the faithful interpretation of Scripture and proclamation of the Church to its members. With this background, the following description of Barth’s hermeneutics is taken from a journal paper by Peter Oulton.

Reading: Again what Barth spoke of were three moments of exegesis: observation, assimilation, and between these, meditation or reflection. ‘‘To this reflection,’’ writes Barth, ‘‘corresponds dogmatics, as the theological task which along with exegetical and practical theology is laid upon the Church in its mission and proclamation.’’ For Barth, ‘‘It is at this central and transitional point between the question of the origin and that of the method of Christian proclamation that there obviously emerges the really critical theological question, that of its actual content.’’ In Barth’s discussion of the second element in the activity of exegesis, the reason he believes universal participation in interpretation is essential to a critical appreciation of textual meaning becomes evident. As Barth describes what necessarily occurs in that moment identified as meditation or reflection,

“In an exploratory way we attribute to that which confronts us, . . . one or other of the possibilities of meaning already known to us through our philosophy—without regard to the fact that this something as such is not already there in the text and as such is not an object of our observation, but is very properly added in our own mind… —for after all it is we who observe.”

On account of this disposition toward self-deception, none can independently claim certainty to understand the Word. Yet, neither are they absolved of their responsibility for the Word, its proclamation […] Therefore, insofar as dogmatics has as its object Christian proclamation, which is the aim of scriptural exegesis, the critical hermeneutical task follows, or at best accompanies the act of ‘‘listening’’ to the Word of God in the context of its manifold interpreters. It is this identification of the critical work of hermeneutics with the dogmatic tasks that is Barth’s answer to the question of rival interpretations and the critical element of his hermeneutic […] Barth’s principle hermeneutical insight was that in reading Scripture each reader is both inevitably biased and, given that his interpretations have theological significance, theologically engaged. Moreover, he recognized that the inevitability of human fallibility required, as the sole genuine safeguard against biased interpretation, for each interpreter to be given opportunity to share in the context of a community of disciplined readers in openness and readiness to revise his findings in the light of others’ interpretations both past and present. [Peter Oulton, “Understanding as a Liturgy of the Whole Church: The Critical Hermeneutics of Karl Barth’s Church Dogmatics, Volume 1, Part 2,” Toronto Journal of Theology, 30/2, 2014: 220]

7 responses to “Discussion 8: Karl Barth”

  1. Kraig Stanforth Avatar
    Kraig Stanforth

    Barth is complicated to understand even more so his hermanuetic. To me he is the deathknell of the old European Tubigan Protestant liberal theology and yet at the same time redefines revelation as Christocentric. God is the wholly other and human words can not fully give us imperfect humans perfect revelation. Human words are inadequate in Barth view. Therefore his hermanuetic of scripture would be like a giant puzzle that no one is capable to piece together. It is only thru Christ that revelation can be interpeted and God understood. Human words fall short. To Barth, Christ is the fulness of revelation. The fallacy of this theology is that God is capable of comunicating thru written words, and that Christ primary mission was the work of salavation ( death,burial and resurection) and not revelation. I suppose that Barth could replace Biblical interpretation with a WWJD bracelot and that would suffice.

    1. Richard Avatar
      Richard

      Thanks for the insightful post, Kraig. You write, “Human words are inadequate in Barth view.” This is clear, but it does not seem to deter Barth from performing some of the best exegesis ever done. I see a divide here from Barth’s theological approach (revelation apart from Christ limits God’s freedom) and academic Barth, who clearly identifies much meaning in Scripture. In any case, studying Barth has been helpful for me, even though there is much to which I disagree.

  2. Ron Nelson Avatar
    Ron Nelson

    The idea that as flawed humans we cannot interpret scripture in a vacuum resonates with me. As His Church, God designed us for community. He designed us to sit before His Word together, with each bringing their God given gifts to the table, and then the Holy Spirit uses this dynamic to bring truth to light for us. I think these ideas are all reflected in the NT.

    There is also the need for individual time in the Word alone with God. I have learned so much from God through my alone time with Him and His Word–and certainly have grown to know Him better! But as a flawed human, I then bring what I’ve learned to the table with others. If God uses a gifted pastor or author or brother in a theological study group to enhance or expand or even correct my theology, praise God! His Holy Spirit within His Church is at work to transform us all! Lord, we pray for wisdom, and we pray for the fruit of Your Spirit, humility.

    1. Richard Avatar
      Richard

      Thanks for this, Ron. It is very much the same for me. In a simple sense, I have two ways of using Scripture. The first is exegetical, where I am basically studying verses, trying to make intellectual sense of them, researching historical interpretations, and then discussing this with other Christians. The second is to encounter God, in which I am reading short sections of the Bible as an act of prayer. This is similar to the Christian tradition of “Lectio Divino,” or divine reading.

  3. Ron Nelson Avatar
    Ron Nelson

    Barth’s 3 moments of exegesis sounds like SOAP journalling. Scripture, Observation, Application, and Prayer. When I journal as I study scripture, both alone and with other Christians, I often use this method.

    1. Richard Avatar
      Richard

      I like it. If you are feeling a bid unclean, use some SOAP! This is similar to Lectio Divina, which I mentioned in response to your other post. Modern practice of Lectio Divina typically involves the contemplation of a short passage using the following steps: preparation, reading, reflecting, responding, and resting.

  4. Kraig Stanforth Avatar
    Kraig Stanforth

    In my view the real danger in methods such as mentioned are that subjective application of the scriptures is elevate over the real meaning that the author intended and the audience to which is being addressed. Yes this involves studying the historical context. The Bible is a historical document it must be applied as such.

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