Grand Rapids: Eerdmanns, 2000. Pp. 375. $39.00
(cloth)
[1] Hunsinger is a great teacher because he is the best of
students. He does honor and justice to the theology of Karl Barth
through lucid studies in political, doctrinal, and ecumenical
theology. His writing is the output of a rapt and apt pupil; it
beautifully re-presents Barth, and brings his work powerfully and
carefully into conversation with a host of modern
interlocutors.
[2] Furthermore, Hunsinger's title does full justice to his
theological task. At the heart of Barth's theology is a profound
disruption, a critical moment where life comes in and through
death, where the wholly other God becomes, like us, incarnate.
Dialectically Barth maintains this disruption's locus
classicus in grace itself rather than in a nebulous and
dualistic binary opposite. Any and all studies in the theology of
Karl Barth will begin with this pre-supposition.
[3] What may come as a surprise to some readers of this work is
that it begins with political theology. It is commonly noted that
Barth stood in opposition (via the Barmen Declaration and his
participation in the Confessing Church movement) to a fascist
political system, but it is less well-expressed how his theology
itself contributed to this position. Given the modern propensity to
equate progressive political positions with liberal theology,
Hunsinger's clear and eloquent appeal to recover Barth as a voice
for the uniting of progressive politics with orthodox theology is a
breath of dialectical fresh air.
[4] In fact, within ecumenical conversations, and the American
church more generally, it is difficult to express both how profound
this proposal is and how difficult it is to imagine this proposal
as a third alternative. Almost all radical political stances of the
modern church arise out of a moral reading of the life of Jesus as
exemplar. Or they begin with abstracted understandings of the Good,
True, or Just, applied and assumed apositly to be attributes of the
God revealed in Jesus Christ. On the other hand, much of
conservative Christian politics finds its source in Scripture read
in a literalist fashion as a propositional handbook. And since the
hermeneutical lense of this approach is unacknowledged, the result
is a "religiously glorified conservatism" (104).
[5] Christian communities of discourse seldom entertain the
Barthian option, that a radical over-against-ness in the political
life of the church can arise, in fact must arise, out of the
confessing church's loyalty to Jesus Christ. In short, we have
neither a recoverable historical Jesus to guide us, nor a natural
theology to discern, nor an inerrant and divine text to utilize as
a playbook, but instead a God who maintains a relationship with us,
and establishes a church, through the revelation of Wholly
Other-ness. The church thus established is in this very way
political, a church of reconciliation, nonconformity, and of the
cross (105).
[6] Thus, Part I of Hunsinger's work is an attempt to fill out the
christological basis of this alternative political theology.
Through a series of essays he proposes the maintenance of a high
understanding of the atonement and a realignment of progressive
politics with traditional faith. Within this framework, a
confessing church true to the gospel of peace would realize that in
the world of modern weaponry, the "refusal of noncompliance [is] an
avoidance of the cross" (6). In essays on liberation theology, the
Barmen Declaration, nuclear proliferation, and pacifism, he works
at applying Barth's theology to modern political disorders.
[7] In his capstone piece, "The Politics of the Nonviolent God",
he makes a classically Barthian move. He identifies in René
Girard's cultural anthropology an appeal to a source of revelation
outside of and apart from God's revelation. In this case, it is
Girard's own theory that replaces and supplants the revelation of
God as salvific. If one is aware of the scapegoat mechanism deduced
by Girard, one is set free from the controlling violence of mimetic
desire. For Girard, this revealed mechanism is at the heart of the
gospels, something hidden since the foundation of the world, and
now revealed through his cultural anthropological insights.
[8] But Hunsinger does not allow Girard this hermeneutical excess,
this attempt at making his own theories canonical. He must show
that, contra Girard, sacrifice and nonviolence are not antonyms. By
way of the trinitarian understanding of the atonement of Hans Urs
von Balthasar, and the incarnational unity(s) of Thomas Torrance,
Hunsinger is able to develop a profoundly moving conception of
Christ's salvific work as understood by Barth. "As enemies of grace
who brought him to the cross for their share in the sins of the
world, [Christians] have received [Christ] into their lives by
faith and are learning to be transformed by his love" (41). This is
the revelation which itself gives life and liberates from cycles of
violence, a revelation that qualifies sacrifice without demonizing
it.
[9] Part II exhibits in fascinating detail how Barth was both a
teacher of the tradition and an innovator within it. Barth did not
approach doctrinal theology from a purely utilitarian position, but
instead saw an intimate relationship between careful doctrinal work
and correct ethical and ecclesiastical positions. Because doctrinal
theology is the basis for true proclamation, all questions of
doctrine are worth pursuing inasmuch as they guide us to a better
understanding of God's revelation in Christ and through
Scripture.
[10] This portion of the book is replete with gems. Barth had an
"'almost aesthetic passion' [for] the traditional loci of Christian
theology" (55). In fact, he called theology the most beautiful of
all the sciences. It is no surprise, then, that the essays on
Barth's doctrinal theology would be especially fascinating. But at
this point Hunsinger almost outdoes himself. "Hellfire and
Damnation: Four Ancient and Modern Views," is a brilliant
exposition not only of Barth's "universalism," but of the Christian
tradition's attempt to grapple with this doctrine over the
centuries. It should be a standard essay for adult Bible study
groups.
[11] "The Mediator of Communion: Karl Barth's Doctrine of the Holy
Spirit" is another welcome essay. Here Hunsinger deals with a
puzzling and often neglected aspect of Barth's theology. For Barth,
the relationship between what had happened illic et tunc
and what continues to happen hic et nunc was central in
understanding the Spirit's saving work. Furthermore, although
Barth's central theological focus was the revelation of God, Barth
always understood this concept as inseparable from, and fluid with,
reconciliation and redemption as well. Thus, much of his doctrine
of the Spirit is exhibited implicitly rather than explicitly in his
Church Dogmatics. This Christ-centered pneumatology is
"trinitarian in ground, christocentric in focus, miraculous in
operation, communal in content, eschatological in form, diversified
in application, and universal in scope" (151). This quote alone
gives substance to Hunsinger's claim that Barth's doctrine of the
Spirit is rich and complex.
[12] Other essays in this section continue the explication of
Barth's doctrinal fecundity. For example, "Mysterium Trinitas"
reflects on what is characterized as "perhaps the first sustained
attempt in history to reformulate eternity's mystery in fully
trinitarian terms. The mystery of eternity becomes in effect a
subtopic of the Trinity" (189). Anyone familiar with Barth's
extensive reflections on the "divine perfections" will find this
essay both a helpful review and a recasting of the reflections in
an even more eschatological key that yet maintains a connection to
beginning and middle.
[13] Finally, in his essay on "Beyond Literalism and
Expressivism," Hunsinger seeks to propose Barth's hermeneutical
realism as a much neglected, yet needed, postliberal proposal in
modern scriptural intepretation.
[14] If Part I works at bringing together misaligned poles
(progressive politics and traditional faith), and Part II is a
celebration of Barth's love of dogmatics, Part III is an attempt to
bring Barth, the lonely theologian, more fully into the ecumenical
conversation. This is not a new proposal. Von Balthasar has already
said of Barth, "we have in Barth... two crucial features: the most
thorough and penetrating display of the Protestant view and the
closest rapprochement with the Catholic" (255). Not an
insignificant appraisal from a theologian often considered to fill
a similiar place from the Catholic side.
[15] Central in this regard is Barth's consistent assertion that
salvation is a finished and perfect work which we receive in faith,
not a possibility attainable through participation in redemptive
activity. This is because, within the Reformation tradition, "grace
perfects nature precisely by destroying it" (270). Over against the
gradualism or naturalism of Catholicism and liberal Protestantism,
Barth always maintained that salvation is an accomplished act in
which we already participate because we have died and risen with
Christ, because we are hid with Christ in God, because in baptism
we have once-and-for-all been saved.
[16] Central also, and of interest especially to Lutheran readers,
is the essay on "What Karl Barth Learned from Martin Luther."
Again, anyone who picks up volume I/1 of Barth's Church
Dogmatics will immediately see Barth's debt to Luther. From
Luther Barth learned his christocentrism, as well as his focus on
the theology of the cross. In addition, Barth learned his focus on
the Word of God, and in fact, because in Luther he found this focus
so well expressed, Barth granted "uncompromising precedence to the
Reformation over modernity itself" (293). Finally, from Luther
Barth learned to reject every form of soteriological gradualism,
and instead to celebrate the perfection of Christ's salvific work
on the cross. All of which are, for Hunsinger, genuinely ecumenical
proposals, for "Luther's breadth may offer the greatest ecumenical
promise not only for advancing Reformation soteriology after Barth,
but also for renewed dialogue with Catholicism" (14).
[17] Here we can see that Hunsinger has learned from Barth what
constitutes a genuine dialogue rather than a false irenicism.
Forthright ecumenical dialogue will not hide or disguise true
difference, for to do so is to fail to have dialogue in such a way
that the truth of revelation is honored. If truth is truly truth,
it is a self-involving truth that cannot be accepted without
believing, and is a truth that has an objective superiority to the
actions that follow, and thus is necessarily something to be spoken
in spite of difference and conflict, it will be spoken in naked
honesty rather than gaudy and over-dressed double-speak
(310).
[18] The remaining essays illustrate these fundamental principles.
A paraphrase of the Harnack/Barth correspondence exhibits Barth's
primary theological motifs, and shows him fully engaging and
contradicting his correspondent when necessary. In an essay on what
evangelicals and postliberals can learn from each other, Hunsinger
generously celebrates the contributions of both camps while
criticizing their obvious failings. His recipe for a sympathetic
ear working in unison with a concise and critical mind is indeed a
model for ecumenical theology.
[19] Although a collection of essays centered on the theology of a
single theologian runs the risk of repeatedly trouncing other
thinkers while forwarding the author under consideration, Hunsinger
largely avoids this problem through a clear and generous
presentation. In addition, the format lends itself to use in the
congregation, because Hunsinger's style is precise and eminently
readable, and the individual essays do not demand expert, or even
prior, knowledge of Barth in order to join in the discussion. The
book is an exercise in bridge-building, a recommendation of Barth
to a broader readership, and a lively and faithful presentation of
an under-considered theological alternative in the life of the
church.
© June
2004
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 4, Issue 6