Books I Read in 2012
Just for fun last year I decided to keep track of books that I read cover to cover. Reading in this way has been a bit of an anomaly for me the last couple years laboring under the burden of teaching lots of things for the first time, so that is my excuse in advance for why this list is rather short. But I did get to work through some good and rewarding books, and I thought that I would share them with you, gentle readers. Enjoy!
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- Barth, Fragment Grave and Gay
- Bayassee, Reading Augustine
- van Buren, Austin Dogmatics
- Calvin (McKim, ed.), Institutes of the Christian Religion (abridged)
- Calvin, Tracts and Letters, vol 4
- Cottret, John Calvin
- Gollwitzer, The Demands of Freedom
- Gollwitzer, An Introduction to Protestant Theology
- Gollwitzer, The Rich Christians and Poor Lazarus
- Gollwitzer, Unwilling Journey
- Gordon, Calvin
- Green, Doxological Theology
- Hammann, Rudolf Bultmann
- Levering, Predestination
- Littlejohn, Confucianism
- Migliore, Faith Seeking Understanding
- Moorhead, Princeton Seminary in American Religion and Culture
- Oberman, Dawn of the Reformation
- Paffenroth, Reader’s Companion to Augustine’s Confessions
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Comments
The two are very different. Gunton is someone who was distantly appreciative of Barth. Van Buren was one of Barth's students with a bit of an independent / rebellious streak (but one which I suspect he got from Barth).
Matt, in this particular case Barth wasn't too pleased. He basically disowned PMvB after Secular Meaning (which came after the Austin Dogmatics). But I suspect that Barth might have been a bit hasty there.
Matt, in light of our conversations on Barth & Pannenberg these two quotes made me smile:
"It always strikes me how much more I find the resonance of Barth in people who try to fix him."
"But one can only depart so far from Barth before one isn't fixing him, and is fixing to part company."
The latter sounds like you, but the former ... ;). Of course to be fair, in the case of Pannenberg I doubt that Barth always saw the resonance himself. His comments about/to Pannenberg in the "Letters" are quite, um, blunt ;).
Thanks for reviewing my book. I'm an internet recluse, but I sometimes see my own name out there when I'm snooping around!
Hope you enjoyed it above all. Blessings in Christ,
Christopher Green