What is the theologia crucis–the theology of the cross–and what are its radical claims? Which theologians stood within this subversive tradition, and is Karl Barth amongst them?
In this volume New Zealand theologian Rosalene Bradbury throws light on these–surprisingly contentious–questions. She argues convincingly that tethered to the tradition that gave rise to it, the term theologia crucis references a theological system centered around notions of false and true glory, and an ancient conviction that from the cross of Jesus Christ comes a revelatory and a saving Word. The apostle Paul, Athanasius, a school of medieval mystics, and the Reformer Martin Luther, are all shown to be significant classical representatives of these ideas. Bradbury then argues that seminal twentieth-century theologian Karl Barth exhibits many of the classical crucicentric system’s defining characteristics, so that he himself might fairly be deemed a modern theologian of the cross. Until now Barth’s pivotal role in this long, thin, crucicentric tradition has been unsung. This book thus sheds important new light on Barth’s theology.
About the author
Murray Rae is Professor of Theology and Ethics at the University of Otago, New Zealand.