<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>In recognition of Karl Barth's stature as a theologian and public figure in the life of Europe and the West, Swiss publisher Theologischer Verlag Zurich (TVZ) published Conversations, a collection of correspondence, articles, interviews, and other short-form writings by Barth. Collected in three...<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Karl Barth is widely regarded as the most important theologian of the twentieth century, and his observations about the church and its place in a modern world continue to engage religious scholars nearly fifty years after his death. This English translation of the Swiss-published Conversations is a three-volume collection featuring correspondence, articles, interviews, and other short-form writings by Barth from 1959-1962. Among them are dialogues with representatives of the Evangelical Community Movement (1959); conversations with prison chaplains and a question-and-answer session with the Conference of the World Student Christian Federation (1960); discussions with Methodist preachers, Zurich pastors, and Catholic students of theology (1961); press conferences in New York and Chicago (1962); and an interview at the United Nations (1962). Within these pages, scholars and students will find a comprehensive view into Barth's life and thinking about theology and its role in society today.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>â oeIn the first decade of my work as a pastor, I read the Church Dogmatics often. The help I received was immeasurable. Yet, I frequently found myself wishing I could have sat with professor Barth, face to face. To ask my questions. To press him further than he went. To bring before him the concrete challenges of the community of faith and hear him speak to my specific concerns. </p><br><p>          The conversations, available for the first time in English in this volume, are as close to what I had wished for as one could get. Here, I am invited into the exchange. My questions are put to him in othersâ (TM) voices. Barthâ (TM)s answers address my own concerns. The tone and tenor of the transcriptions put me there with the old teacher. He speaks to me as a pastor, a student, and a colleague seeking the path to faithful ministry today. </p><p> This is a gift to the church, and to every pastor who wants to grow.</p><br><p>Christian Andrews, Lead Pastor, Renaissance Church, Summit, New Jersey.</p><br><br><p>â oeThe appearance in English translation of these interviews and conversations with Karl Barth in 1963 is a welcome event. A sharp sense of context, an enthusiasm for theological conversation, an irrepressible humour, and a restless intellect are all at work here. More importantly perhaps, Barth's musings reveal the ways in which theology was never for him a formulaic exercise or set of defensive manoeuvres. With its explanatory footnotes, this volume should prove an enjoyable read for a wide audience.â � </p><br><p>â "David Fergusson, Professor of Divinity, University of Edinburgh</p><br><br><p>â oeTheological systems and philosophical tomes remain important, but now more than ever we're aware that it's not brain in vats that do theology, but living, embodied persons, with histories, commitments, and senses of humor. Barth told us long ago that it's a joyful task to be a theologian, because it's something that living persons do in contemplation of a living God. In this volume you'll find a treasure of little known pieces of Barth that reveal, suddenly but surely, a living person doing theology with joy. Each piece gives us insight not only into Barth the theologian, but Barth the person. It is a joy to read, inspiring the reader to look again and again for revelation of God in Jesus Christ.â �</p><br><p>â "Andrew Root, </p><br><p>The Carrie Olson Baalson Professor of Youth and Family Ministry, Luther Seminary, and author of <em>The Pastor in a Secular Age</em></p><br><p> </p><br><br><p>â oeThis translation of the second of three volumes of Barth's conversations and interviews, this time from 1963, is yet another welcome addition to Barth scholarship in English, and of the same excellent technical quality as the earlier volume. Readers will again find intriguing personal perspectives on many themes, events, figures, questions, developments. The volume brings joy,  insight, and inspiration to many who do not read as scholars, after all, bringing to life the voice of someone keenly interested in the students and the pastors he is listening and talking to. Again and again one cannot help but see the smile, hear the laughter, smell the pipe, and sense the urging - â ~to show some courage, â (TM) â ~be a bit younger, â (TM) â ~speak less complicated, â (TM) â ~become more like children, â (TM) â ~not be boring, â (TM) â ~keep things simple, â (TM) â ~drink more coffee.â (TM) Still, the joy and the laughter never hides the seriousness, both of his responses and of his often critical counter questions. Indeed, â ~this joy is a serious joy, â (TM) still today.â �</p><br><p>â "Dirk Smit, Rimmer and Ruth De Vries Professor of Reformed Theology and Public Life, Princeton Theological Seminary</p><br><br><p><em>Barth in Conversation</em>is every beginning and even advanced Barth reader's dream - Barth without the footnotes but with all the feeling. No less profoundly theological and Biblical, Barth in these dialogues, discussions, and debates, is all the more practical and personal. You can now overhear the recently retired professor be interviewed by<em>TIME</em>magazine and the BBC, answer questions put to him by missionaries, church leaders, youth pastors, and by students at his neighborhood restaurant. The transcripts, recordings, and notes of a full, very critical, year of international and intentional engagements are now available for the English reader. For those who feasted with (and on) Barth, now you can sit down at table with him. I recommend these conversations for any who would desire to know better the churchman who wrote the<em>Church Dogmatics</em>.</p><br><p><em>Barth in Conversation</em>presents a delightful, smiling, personally engaging Christian without being any less of an engaging, exacting theologian. Barth on a whirlwind travel schedule meets with many in small and large venues, inviting them to speak, listening to their questions and responses to his answers, and thus initiating genuine dialogue, all the while embracing them as his equals in their commitment to Christ and the church. These conversations reveal more fully the disciple of Christ glad for the companions along the way. Not alone in his study, but gathered with fellow believers, <em>Barth in Conversation</em>is Barth not read but witnessed, not overheard so much as heard. I recommend this volume to all who would meet, witness, and be welcomed by Karl Barth.</p><br><p>Jerry Andrews, Pastor, First Presbyterian Church of San Diego</p><br>
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