Gratitude With Caution

An Overview and Evaluation of Karl Barth’s View of Biblical Revelation



Few theologians have exerted a greater influence on the theological scene of the 20th century than the towering figure of Karl Barth. Even so, his view on biblical revelation has often been targeted for criticism from both liberal and evangelical scholars. It would nonetheless be naïve to suppose that neither camp could benefit from the correctives he offered. According to Hunsinger, Barth has “achieved the dubious distinction of being habitually honored but not much read”. The purpose of this assignment is to provide an overview of Barth’s position and an evaluation of his prodigious contributions on the doctrine of revelation.

Historical And Theological Background

Since no theology developed in vacuum, it would be helpful to locate Barthian theology within the historical setting and theological trends that preceded him. By the 19th century, Enlightenment philosophy had seriously challenged the place for religion in the public square. Religious tradition was viewed with suspicion while boundless confidence was placed in the progress of autonomous reason and empirical science. Even reactionary movement like Romanticism, which emphasized self-expression and human feelings against rationalism, still perceive religious dogma and moralistic authority as a hindrance to authentic, individual freedom. As a response, Schleiermacher sought to reconstruct theology as something relevant and essential to human nature itself. The source of theological discourse is expressing human intuition or universal feeling of total dependence on God. Drawing from a pietistic heritage, he tried to show that true religion is “an immediate relation to the living God, as distinct from submission to doctrinal or creedal propositions about God.” By retreating from the domains of science and ethics, theology was secured a safe refuge as an expression of God’s immanence in religious piety. This methodology of doing theology ‘from below’ and resolving conflicts with Enlightenment thought set the trend for liberal theology, in which Karl Barth was trained.

However, these ‘consciousness-theologians’ were not without critics. The 19th century philosopher Ludwig Feuerbach leveled the crippling charge that such theology is anthropology in disguise. The notion of God is merely mental projections of the theologians themselves, making idols in the image of man. Talk about God is in the final analysis veiled discourse about psychology of man, desiring eternal life and perfect happiness. Rather than satisfying imaginary and unattainable desires with religion, would it not be better to focus on attainable needs in the temporal world? Later, Barth would concern himself with answering Feuerbach’s taunt with a theology that starts exclusively with God’s revelation in Christ, ‘from above’ as it were, rather than man’s consciousness.

Having been a student of liberal theologians like Harnack and Herrmann, Barth was ordained as an assistant pastor at a Reformed Church in 1908. Unfulfilled, he later moved from Geneva to a small parish in Safenwil where the first rumblings of discontent were felt. During the course of his preaching ministry, he found liberal habits of thought unhelpful for ‘the specific minister’s problem, the sermon.’ Studying the Scriptures diligently, Barth began to discover a strange, new world. He wrote, “As ministers we ought to speak of God. We are human, however, and so cannot speak of God. We ought therefore to recognize both out obligation and our inability and by that very recognition give God the glory. This is our perplexity.” Barth’s theology would take seriously the dialectical interaction between our impossibility and necessity of speaking about or for God. Another factor that led to his revolt against liberal theology was the discovery that his former teachers were among 94 German intellectuals who supported Kaiser Wilhelm’s military imperialism . He would later see how easily anthropocentric theology, without a transcendent prophetic message, succumbed to what the Barmen Declaration called “the vicissitudes of the prevailing ideological and political convictions of the day.” Seeing no future for liberal theology, his formidable but latent theological acumen would now be leveled against it.

An Exposition of Barth’s Doctrine of Revelation

Contrary to the heirs of Schleiermacher, we find in Barth the insistence on God’s absolute otherness from any human category or experiences . One cannot speak of God simply by speaking of man in a loud voice. God cannot be seized and made into an object of earthly categories. That does not mean that He is ultimately unknowable. For Barth, the only valid starting point for theological discourse is the claim that the sovereign God proclaims his Word to humankind in three forms of revelation. The divine Word has become incarnate as the man Jesus of Nazareth, and in different senses, took on human form in the prophetic witness of Scripture and in the preaching of the church . Richardson described this Christ-centeredness in this way: “Jesus Christ is the first Word of the word of theology because he is the Word behind the words of Scripture”.



Man could not possibly work his way up to a true knowledge of God through philosophical and anthropological supports. Barth saw in every form of natural theology a failure to do justice to the ‘infinite qualitative distinction’ between God and man. Our search for intellectual understanding only functions within the framework of faith. In his mature discussion on the theological method of Anselm, Barth wrote, “Therefore it is not a question of faith requiring the ‘proof’ or the ‘joy’. There is absolutely no question at all of a requirement of faith. Anselm wants ‘proof’ and ‘joy’ because he wants intelligere and he wants intelligere because he believes.”

Revelation, in Barth’s understanding, is neither a collection of static statements found in Scripture nor mythical metaphors representing the truth found behind Scripture. Barth sought to do justice to the dialectic between the word of God and the words of man, disclosure and concealment, the form of revelation and the revealing Subject. As a witness or vehicle of revelation, Scripture points away from itself to the self-revelation of God. Torrance summed it up in this way, “Biblical statements are true not because they capture the truth in themselves but because they refer to truth independent of themselves. A distinction is thus to be recognized between true statements and the truth of the statements.” Instead of an inerrant deposit of divine truth, revelation is conceived as a dynamic event whereby the Word himself freely and actively speaks to us through the historically conditioned, sometimes contradictory and limited human words of Scripture. The words of man in scripture and preaching become the Word of God whenever that sovereign and gracious personal act happens .

“The Bible is the concrete means by which the Church recollects God’s past revelation, is called to expectation of His future revelation… The Bible, then, is not in itself and as such God’s past revelation.” In response to the emergence of biblical criticism and Strauss’ search for the historical Jesus, Barth does not deny the value of studying the biblical text as a text per se. However, he would object to the attempt to find God by treating the texts as merely an object of historical study. Truth cannot be captured in “abstraction from an encounter with the person of the living God”. God must ever be the Subject who freely reveals despite its human imperfections in and of itself. From that vantage point, divine revelation remains possible and invincible, unperturbed by any archeological finding or textual evidence that may suggest any scientific or historical errors.

It has been popular nowadays to repeat clichés like “Truth is a person, not a proposition”. Indeed, Jesus is the Word of God. However, the personal character of God’s Word should not be played off against its verbal character. It rather means that Jesus Christ is a free subject, rather than a thing that can be objectified or captured. “He is not bound to it but it to Him. He has free control over the wording of the Holy Scripture. He can use it or not use it… What Holy Scripture proclaims as His Word can be proclaimed in a new wording as His Word so long as it is He himself who speaks in this wording.” As such, the wording in Scripture could never be reduced or fossilized as a human system. The human subject should always be the object of the speaking God who initiates and completes his knowledge. This personal encounter should not be mistaken for some mystical feeling for God speaks in the form of Word with its cognitive content. “As event or happening we can no more hold on to it or recreate it than we can cause it. We can only live in faith, recollecting it has happened once in the past, and trusting God’s promise that it will happen in the future”. We should not confuse the event of a romantic encounter with the empty hall in which it once took place.

An Evaluation of Barth’s View of Revelation

There has been increasing interest in the evangelical community to rediscover Barth as scholars sought to rethink theology within an emerging postmodern context. His methodology in which theology retains autonomy over other sciences has been lauded as a fruitful non-foundational response to the Enlightenment demand for objective and universal truth. In light of some affinities with postmodern tendencies, post-foundational theologian John Franke is hopeful that Barth’s greatest influence still lies in the future through the works of Hans Frei, Graham Ward, Walter Lowe and others.

Barth’s emphasis on the unique Word of God, from above, also offered a prophetic stance over world events, powers and movements. When Hitler rose to power in 1933, Barth was quick in criticizing Nazi ideology of expelling Jewish Christians from ministry and growing encroachment of a “German Christian” movement which regarded the Fuhrer as a German prophet . Co-founding the Confessing Church, he was also instrumental in drafting the Barmen Declaration, which resisted the temptation to identify God’s revelation in other events, powers and historical figures beyond the God incarnate, Jesus Christ. His courageous refusal to submit to the Fuhrer cost him teaching positions in universities and he was subsequently sent back to Switzerland. From our vantage point after the World World, we could see with moral clarity the evils of Nazi ideology. However, it is a testament of Barth’s theology that it offered a powerful critique of oppressive political powers at a time when the church and world in general were still having moral blind spots.

Hans Urs von Balthasar once likened his theology to an hourglass “where God and man meet at the center through Jesus Christ. There is no other point of encounter between the top and bottom portions of the glass.” However, in his understandable zeal to emphasize the transcendence of God’s revelation in Christ, an alleged “christomonism” may have failed to do justice to God’s general revelation available to the entire human race through nature as mentioned in Romans 1-2 and Psalm 19. His assumptions that genuine revelation would always bring forth positive and salvific response influenced his interpretation of such texts as merely expressing a witness in nature that is already known from special revelation. Yet the thrust of Paul’s argument in Romans 1 is that both Gentiles and Jews, with and without the law, knew God because He has made it plain by the things that have been created. Therefore, they are without excuse of being totally ignorant of God. Bertrand Russell’s plea that God has not given him enough evidence for faith would have some currency if God did not leave a universal and accessible witness apart from the law. For Paul, at least, the issue is willful suppression of knowledge already in their comprehension.

In the works of conservative scholars like Francis Schaeffer and Cornelius Van Til, Barth was criticized for clinging to the ‘upper story’ of religious meaning without being grounded in the ‘lower story’ of historical facts, rationality and science. “His position was that though the Bible contains mistakes, “a religious word” comes truth anyway. “Religious truth” is separated from the historical truth of the Scriptures.” There is no way to verify its truth claims. The critique of fideism should not be dismissed too quickly. Concerning those who would use any ‘other fact’ besides the fact of God to support the Christian religion, he has this poignant critique:

“But the Christian religion cannot be supported from without if it can no longer stand alone. If it does stand alone it does not allow itself to be supported from without. Standing alone, it stands upon the fact of God, which justifies it, and upon that alone. There is therefore no place for attempts to support it any other way.”

In more recent times, Wolfhart Pannenberg, a former student of Barth, has made necessary corrective to what he perceived to be increasing privatization of modern theology as a merely subjective sphere ‘sheltered’ from public scientific or historical inquiry. The retreat of theology into a cultural ghetto owes much to a post-Enlightenment milieu which views authority with suspicion. Systematic theology ought to be a discipline in search for universal truth that illumines all human knowledge. As such, theological statements ought to be boldly open to rational inquiry of the historical basis on which they rest. Faith is not to be seen as a pietistic leap in the dark. The Christian faith hinges on the historical event of Christ’s bodily resurrection in space-time (1 Corinth. 15:14). As an event in history, it is open to rigorous investigation according to sound principles of historiography.

While Barth would insist that the human words in biblical text are fallible, he also forbid judgment to be made since there is no “absolute position from which to establish actual errors”. We may justifiably suspect that Barth is happily inconsistent at this point. For what hermeneutical value is it to “say that errors are present but cannot be firmly delineated?” Not a few scholars have also pointed the paradoxical fact that for someone who denies the infallibility of Scripture, he somehow managed to come up with voluminous propositions in the Church Dogmatics! Grenz and Olson put this question pointedly, “Would it have been possible for Barth to spin out his magnificent modern exposition of classical Christian belief if he had held consistently to his theory of Scripture?” Perhaps, evangelicals of an earlier generation like Carnell were right in calling Barth ‘an inconsistent evangelical’ at heart.

Concluding Remarks

In conclusion, evangelicals have much to gain from a closer reading of Barth’s theology in order to avoid the danger of bibliolatry. That is, in our zeal to defend the inerrancy of Scripture from critics, the temptation is to confuse or merge its humanity with its divine character. The result is a docetic view of Scripture. If a Christological analogy is appropriate here, we may stretch it further and say that inspired Scripture is fully human like us in every way yet without sin or error. In the same token, the distinct human dimension should not be ‘separated’ from the divine in a Nestorian fashion either. In holding them in tension, we could affirm an authentic, Chalcedonian union of its dual natures.

After all, the inherent authority of Scripture located in God’s once-for-all verbal inspiration of its authors is compatible with Barth’s stress upon the ongoing internal testimony of the Holy Spirit, which shines in the readers’ darkened hearts to give them full assurance of its authority. Didn’t Article V of Westminster Confession also teaches that “our full persuasion and assurance of the infallible truth and divine authority thereof, is from the inward work of the Holy Spirit bearing witness by and with the Word in our hearts”? There is perhaps more convergence of views here than meet the eye.

However, I am also wary of a certain circularity in this argument here which Strauss called “the Archilles’ heel of the Protestant system”. To be sure, we know that the Word is inspired through the gracious work of the Spirit. However, while showing to others that the Bible is God’s Word, especially in a pluralistic context where our presuppositions are not shared, Christians may need to broaden the circle further. It is legitimate to start from the claims of Scripture and then work out how on its own self-testimony alone could we make sense of our human experience, history, the cosmos and morality in a comprehensive and coherent manner. In our own time, the question of biblical authority encounters the twin dangers of restrictive authoritarianism on one side and lawless individualism on the other. Here Barth is a reliable guide in showing us that in its freedom, God’s word exercise authority and the interpretive community is truly free when it is obedient to the Word.

Instead of accepting everything Barth wrote as ‘gospel truth’ or tearing it apart in reactionary fashion, we should instead read Barth dialectically as a response suggested by Bernard Ramm. “The evangelical who reads Barth dialectically is just as ready to grant Barth one point as to criticize him at another.” With caution, we could recognize a debt to him for dropping a bomb on the theologians’ playground and putting orthodox doctrines like Trinity back to center stage. We also find in him admirable qualities like the humility and courage in which he continually refine his views from foreign philosophical baggage. When someone once asked Barth to summarize his massive volumes, he thought for a moment and then said: "The greatest theological insight that I have ever had is this: Jesus loves me, this I know, for the Bible tells me so."

Bibliography

1. 20th Century Theology: God & the World in a Transitional Age, Stanley Grenz & Roger Olson, InterVarsity Press: Downers Grove, 1992

2. Anselm: Fides Quaerens Intellectum, Karl Barth, Translated by Ian W. Robertson, The World Publishing: Ohio, 1962

3. Christianity And Barthianism, Cornelius Van Til, Presbyterian And Reformed Publishing: Pennsylvania, 1962

4. Christian Theology, Millard Erickson, Baker Books: Grand Rapids, 2001

5. Church Dogmatics I..i: The Doctrine of the Word of God, Karl Barth, Translated by G.W. Bromiley, T & T Clark: Edinburgh, 1999

6. Church Dogmatics: Selections, Karl Barth, Selections by Helmut Gollwitzer, T & T Clark: Edinburgh, 1961

7. How To Read Karl Barth: The Shape Of His Theology, George Hunsinger, Oxford University Press: New York, 1991

8. Introduction to the Theology of Karl Barth, Geoffrey Bromiley, Eerdmans Publishing: Grand Rapids, 1979

9. Karl Barth, Biblical and Evangelical Theologian, Thomas Torrance, T & T Clark: Edinburgh, 1990

10. Karl Barth & Evangelicalism, Gregory Bolich, InterVarsity Press: Downers Grove, 1980

11. Reading Karl Barth: New Directions For North American Theology, Kurt Anders Richardson, Baker Academic: Grand Rapids, 2004

12. Regarding Karl Barth, Trevor Hart, Paternoster Press: Cumbria, 1999

13. The Gottingen Dogmatics: Instructions in the Christian Religion, Karl Barth, Translated by G. W. Bromiley, Eerdmans Publishing: Grand Rapids, 1990

Comments

Anonymous said…
Thanks for this excellent treatise on Barthian epistemology. I do wonder how Barth would delineate the boundaries of the "interpretive community" or whether he has any space at all for an "interpretive community" as such.
Dave said…
Hey bro, dateline for assignment is 30 june so i did quite a rushed piece here... am sure there is a lot of things to improve on later... wish i had more time to understand him better...

although its tricky to say tat barth address pomo concerns, (perhaps not really) here is something John Franke on a CT article wrote: "According to Frei, Barth affirmed that “absolute priority be given to Christian theology as Christian self-description within the religious community called the Church, or the Christian community”... In this understanding, Christian theology can be viewed as being primarily concerned with teaching the
particular language and concepts that shape the beliefs and practices of the community"

maybe just to add, that this language points beyond itself to Someone or something out there too.
SATheologies said…
HI,

What do you mean by this language points beyond itself??
Dave said…
maybe an analogy cud be helpful...

"words" are like a map, which shows us the way to get to a 'place' i.e. Ipoh

And Ipoh is a place 'outside' of the map. But if the map is any good, it points us away from itself and points us to the real place.

So if I'd like to eat taugeh chicken in Ipoh, it would not do just studying the map... for 'inside' the spot marked X on the map, I'd find no food. I have to 'follow' the map and actually 'go' to Ipoh, which lies beyond the map :D

But of course, that presumes tat the map is a reliable and accurate one! An errant map wud lead us to Timbuktu instead hahaa...
Anonymous said…
guess wat? the lecturer who marked this paper asks me if i know u... cos it's so good tat he wonders if this fella plagiarised??! haha

I put in a good word for u, dun worry!