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John Bowden (1) (1935–2010)

Author of Encyclopedia of Christianity

For other authors named John Bowden, see the disambiguation page.

John Bowden (1) has been aliased into John Stephen Bowden.

20+ Works 371 Members 3 Reviews

Works by John Bowden

Associated Works

Works have been aliased into John Stephen Bowden.

The Crucified God (1973) — Translator, some editions — 1,288 copies, 6 reviews
The Four Gospels and the One Gospel of Jesus Christ (2000) — Translator, some editions — 116 copies
History and the Triune God: Contributions to Trinitarian Theology (1992) — Translator, some editions — 53 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Bowden, John Stephen
Other names
Bowden, John S.
Birthdate
1935-05-17
Date of death
2010-12-06
Gender
male
Education
Corpus Christi College, Oxford
Occupations
Anglican priest
publisher
Translator/editor
Professor | University of Sussex, King's College London
Organizations
SCM Press
Awards and honors
Society of Authors' Schlegel-Tieck prize (1975) ( 1985)
Short biography
see obituary links above.
Nationality
England
UK
Birthplace
Halifax, Yorkshire, England, UK
Places of residence
Highgate, London, UK
Place of death
Hampstead, London, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
I picked this up at a used book sale. I know a little about Karl Barth and would like to know more. I knew nothing of John Bowden. If you are looking for a biographical sketch from someone who was not Barth's biggest fan this is the book for you. It was first published in 1971, only a few years after Barth's passing and makes the dubious argument (from my vantage point) that as much of a genius as Barth was, he would have no lasting impact on theology because none of Barth's students were as show more brilliant as him and there were problems with Barth's system. In particular, he takes issue with Barth's insistence of God's wholely-otherness (insisting that this paved the way for practical atheism in those who did not have Barth's theological commitments), he faults Barth for misunderstanding the liberal theological establishment (of which Bowden is sympathetic), and he faults the German theological educational system for setting up Barth as the patriarch without allowing sufficient dialog between other theologians (this criticism may have some traction, but I don't know enough).

But while I did not always agree with or appreciate Bowden's editorializing, his biographical sketch is primarly culled from comments in Barth's works and correspondence. So some good. I like this book enough to keep, but not to recommend. If any one has another Barth bio they'd like to recommend, I'd appreciate it.
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Examines the problem as whether we can, in fact, know anything at all about Jesus.
The author characterizes this work as a guide to the landscape of Christianity.

Awards

Statistics

Works
20
Also by
4
Members
371
Popularity
#64,991
Rating
4.0
Reviews
3
ISBNs
82
Languages
4

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