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Barth's christological ecclesiology as theological resource for evangelical free church ecclesiology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 February 2020
Abstract
This essay argues that Barth's christological ecclesiology is worthy of consideration as a resource to fund a more robust and distinctly theological evangelical free church ecclesiology. Specifically, Barth's articulation of the church as witness, combined with his emphases on the gathering, upbuilding and sending of the church, all resonate with a distinctly free church vantage point. Additionally, I argue that Barth's theological interpretation of Matthew 18:20 (a verse of great significance for the free church tradition) further reveals his compatibility with free church ecclesiology. I conclude that while the traditional problems associated with evangelical reception of Barth need to be addressed and his doctrine of the church as grounded in Christ (and thus election) critically assessed, Barth does end up offering a resource that can inform the development of a theologically robust evangelical free church ecclesiology.
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References
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33 Hütter, Bound to be Free, p. 88.
34 CD IV/2, p. 614.
35 Ibid.
36 Bender, Karl Barth's Christological Ecclesiology, p. 221.
37 Barth, CD IV/2, pp. 656–7.
38 Ibid., p. 658.
39 Ibid., p. 676.
40 Ibid., p. 678.
41 Ibid., pp. 698–9.
42 Ibid., pp. 699–706.
43 Bender, Karl Barth's Christological Ecclesiology, p. 215.
44 Personal conversation with Kevin Vanhoozer, fall 2017. I am heavily indebted to Vanhoozer for the summary of Barth's understanding of the sacraments that follows.
45 Ibid.
46 ‘Baptism is a sacrament of truth and holiness; and it is a sacrament, because it is the sign which directs us to God's revelation of eternal life. … It does not merely signify eternal reality, but is eternal reality … Baptism mediates the new creation … [as] a means of grace.’ Barth, Epistle to the Romans, p. 192.
47 Here see Nico den Bok, ‘Barth on Baptism: Concerning a Crucial Dimension of Ecclesiology’, Zeitschrift Für Dialektische Theologie. Supplement Series 5 (2011), p. 137.
48 Cross, Anthony, ‘Baptism in the Theology of John Calvin and Karl Barth’, in MacDonald, Neil B. and Trueman, Carl R. (eds), Calvin, Barth and Reformed Theology (Milton Keynes: Paternoster Press, 2008), p. 79Google Scholar.
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50 Personal conversation with Kevin Vanhoozer, fall 2017. For more on Barth's understanding of the humanity of Jesus as ‘the first sacrament’ see CD II/1, pp. 53–4.
51 Barth, CD IV/4, p. 102.
52 Ibid., p. 2.
53 Ibid.
54 Personal conversation with Kevin Vanhoozer, fall 2017.
55 Barth, CD IV/4, p. 32.
56 Thus Barth can say of this tandem: ‘Without this unity of the two in their distinction there could be no Christian ethics.’ CD IV/4, p. 41.
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62 See David Gibson, ‘The Day of God's Mercy: Romans 9–11 in Barth's Doctrine of Election’, in Gibson and Strange, Engaging with Barth, pp. 136–68; and Michael Horton, ‘A Stony Jar: The Legacy of Karl Barth for Evangelical Theology’, ibid., pp. 346–81.
63 See Michael Horton's ‘Covenant, Election, and Incarnation: Evaluating Barth's Actualist Christology’, in McCormack and Anderson, Barth and American Evangelicalism, pp. 112–47; and relatedly, Henri Blocher's ‘Karl Barth's Christocentric Method’, in Gibson and Strange, Engaging with Barth, 21–54.
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72 Barth, CD IV/2, p. 706.
73 Ibid., p. 680.
74 Personal conversation with Kevin Vanhoozer, fall 2017.
75 Ibid.
76 Stout, Tracey Mark, A Fellowship of Baptism: Karl Barth's Ecclesiology in Light of his Understanding of Baptism (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock Publishers, 2010), pp. 99Google Scholar, 102.
77 Barth, CD, IV/3.2, p. 681.
78 Barth, CD, IV/2, pp. 654, 699.
79 Stout, ‘Free and Faithful Witness’, pp. 180, 186.
80 George, ‘Running Like a Herald’, pp. 206–7.
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82 The collection of essays in Gibson and Strange, Engaging with Barth, and Chung, Barth and Evangelical Theology, are exemplary in this regard.
83 The work of John Webster represents such a resource. Webster, believing that ‘dogmatics is the schematic and analytical presentation of the matter of the gospel’, is perhaps a more reliable guide for evangelical theology than Barth. His theological ecclesiology is similarly amenable to the free church tradition (though he was Anglican), following and yet building upon Barth in emphasising the church as witness, its peculiar visibility, etc. See Webster, John, ‘Biblical Reasoning’, Anglican Theological Review 90/4 (Fall 2008), p. 750Google Scholar.
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