Book contents
- The Humility of the Eternal Son
- Current Issues in Theology
- The Humility of the Eternal Son
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue to a Trilogy of Works
- Introduction
- Part I A Critical History of Kenotic Christologies and Their Antecedents:
- 1 Chalcedon and Its Legacy
- 2 Divine Kenosis as Either Depotentiation or Divestment
- 3 Divine Kenosis as Proper to the Eternal Son
- 4 The Post-Barthian Temptation
- Part II Returning to Scripture
- Part III Repairing Chalcedon
- Select Bibliography
- Names Index
- Concepts Index
4 - The Post-Barthian Temptation
Collapse of the Eternal Son into Jesus and Surrender of an Immanent Trinity in Protology
from Part I - A Critical History of Kenotic Christologies and Their Antecedents:
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 November 2021
- The Humility of the Eternal Son
- Current Issues in Theology
- The Humility of the Eternal Son
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue to a Trilogy of Works
- Introduction
- Part I A Critical History of Kenotic Christologies and Their Antecedents:
- 1 Chalcedon and Its Legacy
- 2 Divine Kenosis as Either Depotentiation or Divestment
- 3 Divine Kenosis as Proper to the Eternal Son
- 4 The Post-Barthian Temptation
- Part II Returning to Scripture
- Part III Repairing Chalcedon
- Select Bibliography
- Names Index
- Concepts Index
Summary
The first two theologians treated in this chapter – Robert Jenson and Eberhard Jüngel – were conditioned by both a deep-lying attraction to revisionary metaphysics and by eschatology in their reception of Barth’s theology. This helped to uncover aspects of Barth’s dogmatics that had previously gone unnoticed. Ultimately, however, the temptation for both Jenson and Jüngel was to treat the immanent Trinity as something that is “complete” only in the eschaton. For divine kenosis, this meant that it was not an ontological precondition to incarnation but something that takes place in Jesus’ way to the cross. The third theologian treated in this chapter is Piet Schoonenberg. He shares a starting point with Jenson and Jüngel in the narrated history of Jesus of Nazareth attested in the New Testament, yet the “principles” he employs in his constructive Christology could just as easily be taken in a direction in which the second person of the Trinity is not collapsed into a human being. This chapter’s historical analysis finally raises the questions: why resist a collapse of the eternal Son into Jesus of Nazareth? Why engage in any sort of return to the received Christological dogma, however modified we might make it to be?
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- The Humility of the Eternal SonReformed Kenoticism and the Repair of Chalcedon, pp. 159 - 196Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021