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Karl Barth
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Karl Barth

theologian, university teacher, pastor, writer

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1886  – 1968

Karl Barth was a Swiss Reformed theologian. Barth is best known for his commentary The Epistle to the Romans, his involvement in the Confessing Church, including his authorship of the Barmen Declaration, and especially his unfinished multi-volume theological summa the Church Dogmatics. Barth's influence expanded well beyond the academic realm to mainstream culture, leading him to be featured on the cover of Time on 20 April 1962.

All Quotes by Karl Barth

“Faith in God's revelation has nothing to do with an ideology which glorifies the status quo.”
— Karl Barth
“For the millions that suffer unjustly, the Confessing Church does not yet have a heart.”
— Karl Barth
“What expressions we used – in part taken over and in part newly invented! — above all, the famous 'wholly other' breaking in upon us ‘perpendicularly from above,’ the not less famous 'infinite qualitative distinction' between God and man, the vacuum, the mathematical point, and the tangent in which alone they must meet.”
— Karl Barth
“Faith is never identical with "piety" even if it were the purest and finest.”
— Karl Barth
“Grace must find expression in life, otherwise it is not grace.”
— Karl Barth
“Faith in God's revelation has nothing to do with an ideology which glorifies the status quo.”
— Karl Barth
“Laughter is the closest thing to the grace of God.”
— Karl Barth
“Joy is the simplest form of gratitude.”
— Karl Barth
“The best theology would need no advocates; it would prove itself.”
— Karl Barth
“Jesus is the movement for social justice, and the movement for social justice is Jesus in the present.”
— Karl Barth
“And now to my socialist friends who are here present: I have said that Jesus wanted what you want, that he wanted to help those who are least, that he wanted to establish the kingdom of God upon this earth, that he wanted to abolish self-seeking property, that he wanted to make persons into comrades. Your concerns are in line with the concerns of Jesus. Real socialism is real Christianity in our time.”
— Karl Barth
“Even a child can see that an industrial enterprise would have neither net profits nor profits in general without the participation of the worker. Why does he receive only a wage from the entrepreneur instead of a share in the profits? There is no other reason other than the fact that the means of production are the private property of the entrepreneur. ... This inequality and dependence is precisely the injustice that we don't want.”
— Karl Barth
“In conclusion, a word about your tired expression that there is a difference between theory and praxis. ... Thereby you want to say that praxis should be an unencumbered as possible by theory. Coming from you, this wish is quite intelligible. What you mean by praxis is private profit; what I mean by theory is justice.”
— Karl Barth
“The Gospel is not a religious message to inform mankind of their divinity or to tell them how they may become divine. The Gospel proclaims a God utterly distinct from men.”
— Karl Barth
“The power of God can be detected neither in the world of nature nor in the souls of men. It must not be confounded with any high, exalted, force, known or knowable.”
— Karl Barth
“We know that God is He whom we do not know, and that our ignorance is precisely the problem and the source of our knowledge. The Epistle to the Romans is a revelation of the unknown God; God chooses to come to man, not man to God. Even after the revelation man cannot know God, for he is ever the unknown God. In manifesting himself to man he is farther away than before.”
— Karl Barth
“The revelation in Jesus, just because it is the revelation of the righteousness of God is at the same time the strongest conceivable veiling and unknowableness of God. In Jesus, God really becomes a mystery, makes himself known as the unknown, speaks as the eternally Silent One.”
— Karl Barth
“Religion is the possibility of the removal of every ground of confidence except confidence in God alone. Piety is the possibility of the removal of the last traces of a firm foundation upon which we can erect a system of thought.”
— Karl Barth
“It is evident that the relation to God with which the Bible is concerned does not have its source in the purple depths of the subconscious, and cannot be identical with what the deep-sea psychical research of our day describes in the narrower or broader sense as libido fulfilment.”
— Karl Barth
“The Truth lies not in the Yes and not in the No, but in the knowledge and the beginning from which the Yes and the No arise.”
— Karl Barth
“There is no way from us to God — not even via negativa not even a via dialectica nor paradoxa. The god who stood at the end of some human way — even of this way — would not be God.”
— Karl Barth
“Our Yes towards life from the very beginning carries within it the Divine No which breaks forth from the antithesis and points away from what now was the thesis to the original and final synthesis. The No is not the last and highest truth, but the call from home which comes in answer to our asking for God in the world.”
— Karl Barth
“God is personal, but personal in an incomprehensible way, in so far as the conception of his personality surpasses all our views of personality.”
— Karl Barth
“While it is beyond our comprehension that eternity should meet us in time, yet it is true because in Jesus Christ eternity has become time.”
— Karl Barth
“Eternity is here (in the stable at Bethlehem and on the cross of Calvary) in time.”
— Karl Barth
“Scientific dogmatics must devote itself to the criticism and correction of Church proclamation and not just to a repetitive exposition of it.”
— Karl Barth
“We begin by stating that religion is unbelief. It is a concern, indeed, we must say that it is the one great concern, of godless man...”
— Karl Barth
“There is a notion that complete impartiality is the most fitting and indeed the normal disposition for true exegesis, because it guarantees complete absence of prejudice. For a short time, around 1910, this idea threatened to achieve almost a canonical status in Protestant theology. But now, we can quite calmly describe it as merely comical.”
— Karl Barth
“Where dogmatics exists at all, it exists only with the will to be a Church dogmatics, a dogmatics of the ecumenical Church.”
— Karl Barth
“At bottom, knowledge of God in faith is always this indirect knowledge of God, knowledge of God in His works, and in these particular works in the determining and using of certain creaturely realities to bear witness to the divine objectivity. What distinguishes faith from unbelief, erroneous faith and superstition is that it is content with this indirect knowledge of God.”
— Karl Barth
“Religion is the possibility of the removal of every ground of confidence except confidence in God alone.”
— Karl Barth
“The revelation of God, in which man's fulfilment of the true knowledge of God takes place, is the disposition of God in which He acts towards us as the same triune God that He is in Himself, and in such a way that, although we are men and not God, we receive a share in the truth of His knowledge of Himself. Certainly it is the share which He thinks proper and which is therefore suitable for us. But in this share we have the reality of the true knowledge of Himself.”
— Karl Barth
“We are now assuming that we have here the centre and goal of all God's works, and therefore the hidden beginning of them all. We are also assuming that the prominent place occupied by this divine work has something corresponding to it in the essence of God, that the Son forms the centre of the Trinity, and that the essence of the divine being has, so to speak, its locus … in His work, in the name and person of Jesus Christ.”
— Karl Barth
“The saving of anyone is something which is not in the power of man, but only of God. No one can be saved — in virtue of what he can do. Everyone can be saved — in virtue of what God can do. The divine claim takes the form that it puts both the obedient and the disobedient together and compels them to realise this, to recognise their common status in face of the commanding God.”
— Karl Barth
“Who God is and what it is to be divine is something we have to learn where God has revealed Himself and His nature, the essence of the divine.”
— Karl Barth
“The goal of human life is not death but resurrection.”
— Karl Barth
“The enterprise of Adolf Hitler, with all its clatter and fireworks, and all its cunning and dynamic energy, is the enterprise of an evil spirit, which is apparently allowed its freedom for a time in order to test our faith in the Resurrection of Jesus Christ.”
— Karl Barth
“I had to show that the Bible dealt with an encounter between God and Man. I thought only of the apartness of God. What I had to learn after that was the togetherness of Man and God — a union of two totally different kinds of beings.”
— Karl Barth
“I do not preach universal salvation, what I say is that I cannot exclude the possibility that God would save all men at the Judgment.”
— Karl Barth
“When the angels praise God in Heaven I am sure they play Bach. However, en famille they play Mozart, and then God the Lord is especially delighted to listen to them.”
— Karl Barth
“When I come before these men I do not have to explain that we are all sinners. They have committed every sin there is. All I have to tell them is that I, too, am a sinner.”
— Karl Barth
“Laughter is the closest thing to the grace of God.”
— Karl Barth