Karl Barth's reception in Korea : focusing on ecclesiology in relation to Korean Christian thought

Author(s)

    • Kim, Young-Gwan

Bibliographic Information

Karl Barth's reception in Korea : focusing on ecclesiology in relation to Korean Christian thought

Young-Gwan Kim

(Studien zur interkulturellen Geschichte des Christentums = Études d'histoire interculturelle du christianisme = Studies in the intercultural history of Christianity, v. 134)

P. Lang, c2003

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [329]-361) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Oxford, Wien. This book describes the unique relationship between Christianity and Confucianism. Korean Confucianism played an important role in the explosive growth of the Christian community and provided a basic foundation for the reception of Barth's theology in Korea. The author analyses whether Barth's ecclesiology, especially his theology of mission, pays sufficient attention to different cultures and religions; and whether Barth's Christocentric theology is compatible with Korean Confucianism. Contents: The Reception of Karl Barth's Theology in Korea - An Account of The History and Development of Christianity in Korea and The Role of Confucianism in its Rapid Growth - The Characteristics of Karl Barth's Theology and His Christocentric Ecclesiology - The Indigenization of Karl Barth's Christocentric Ecclesiology in Korean Christian Thought: Sung-Bum Yun's Theology of Sung.

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