GETS Theological Seminary Library

Waiting for the Word : Dietrich Bonhoeffer on Speaking about God / Frits de Lange ; translated by Martin N. Walton

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Original language: Dutch Publication details: Grand Rapids, Mich. : W.B. Eerdmans Pub., 2000Description: vii, 154 p. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 97808028453200802845320
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • BX4827.B57  .L2613 2000
Contents:
Silence on God? an exploration -- Bonhoeffer as conversation partner -- The speechlessness of church and theology -- A cautious way with words -- "The word that changes the world": thoughts for a day of baptism -- The crisis of upper-middle-class culture -- Reconciling and redeeming, shocking and overwhelming (the performative power of the word) -- "It is our own fault" (the pragmatic context) -- A religionless era -- A new language -- What remains unsaid: the Bonhoeffer family -- How he spoke with others -- Naturalness, tact, and simplicity (the art of conversation) -- The aversion to the "phraseological" (Karl Bonhoeffer) -- What remains unsaid (religious humanism) -- Pious chatter (experiences as a youth in church) -- Deus dixit: the profusion of the Word of God -- The depth and the weight of a word -- "It is God who must speak on Sunday morning" (the a priori of Karl Barth) -- The given word (the concentration on Christology) -- Christ as idea and as address -- The inexpressible -- A red apple, a glass of cool water: proclamation in the Church -- The poverty of the Word -- "It is Christ who is the Word" (lectures on homiletics, 1935-39) -- The "rules of language" -- Waiting for the Word (a meditative approach to the Bible) -- Out of the pulpit (lectures on spiritual care, 1935-39) -- The ears of God -- Qualified silence -- The credibility of the Church -- The aristocratic word: resistance and imprisonment -- The "declericalization" of proclamation -- "There is too much talk" (the impotence and misuse of words) -- "The inability to say a Christian word to others" (the ultimate and the penultimate).
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Translation of : Wachten op het verlossende woord.

Silence on God? an exploration -- Bonhoeffer as conversation partner -- The speechlessness of church and theology -- A cautious way with words -- "The word that changes the world": thoughts for a day of baptism -- The crisis of upper-middle-class culture -- Reconciling and redeeming, shocking and overwhelming (the performative power of the word) -- "It is our own fault" (the pragmatic context) -- A religionless era -- A new language -- What remains unsaid: the Bonhoeffer family -- How he spoke with others -- Naturalness, tact, and simplicity (the art of conversation) -- The aversion to the "phraseological" (Karl Bonhoeffer) -- What remains unsaid (religious humanism) -- Pious chatter (experiences as a youth in church) -- Deus dixit: the profusion of the Word of God -- The depth and the weight of a word -- "It is God who must speak on Sunday morning" (the a priori of Karl Barth) -- The given word (the concentration on Christology) -- Christ as idea and as address -- The inexpressible -- A red apple, a glass of cool water: proclamation in the Church -- The poverty of the Word -- "It is Christ who is the Word" (lectures on homiletics, 1935-39) -- The "rules of language" -- Waiting for the Word (a meditative approach to the Bible) -- Out of the pulpit (lectures on spiritual care, 1935-39) -- The ears of God -- Qualified silence -- The credibility of the Church -- The aristocratic word: resistance and imprisonment -- The "declericalization" of proclamation -- "There is too much talk" (the impotence and misuse of words) -- "The inability to say a Christian word to others" (the ultimate and the penultimate).

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