Justification: The Doctrine of Karl Barth and a Catholic Reflection

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Westminster John Knox Press, Jan 1, 2004 - Religion - 332 pages

Now, forty years since its original publication, Hans Kung's groundbreaking study--acclaimed as a model for ecumenical discussion--has become a classic work. Looking at the doctrine of justification as understood by the Protestant theologian Karl Barth in comparison to classic Roman Catholic theology, Kung found that the two had similar ideas about the main elements of justification. He argued there is fundamental agreement between Catholicism and Barth's doctrine and that the somewhat divergent viewpoints "would not warrant a division in the Church." This anniversary edition now features a new essay assessing Kung's work in light of contemporary ecumenical dialogues between Roman Catholics and Protestants.

 

Contents

II
3
III
6
IV
9
V
13
VI
18
VII
23
VIII
28
IX
33
XXI
89
XXII
92
XXIII
97
XXV
99
XXVI
123
XXVII
135
XXVIII
148
XXIX
171

X
35
XI
41
XII
46
XIII
54
XV
59
XVI
63
XVII
69
XVIII
72
XIX
79
XX
82
XXX
180
XXXI
190
XXXII
195
XXXIII
208
XXXIV
222
XXXV
236
XXXVI
249
XXXVII
264
XXXVIII
275
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About the author (2004)

Hans Kung is President of the Global Ethic Foundation and Professor Emeritus of Ecumenical Theology at the University of Tubingen in Germany. A prolific and important contemporary theologian, he has written over fifty books including On Being a Christian, Does God Exist?, Infallible? An Inquiry, and The Church.

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