The Oxford Handbook of Karl Barth
Edited by Paul Dafydd Jones and Paul T. Nimmo
Author Information
Paul Dafydd Jones, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, University of Virginia,Paul T. Nimmo, King's Chair of Systematic Theology, University of Aberdeen
Paul Dafydd Jones is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Virginia. He is the author of The Humanity of Christ: Christology in Karl Barth's Church Dogmatics (2008), which was awarded a John Templeton Award for Theological Promise in 2010. He has published widely in the fields of Christian thought, political theology, and constructive theology and is co-editor, with Paul T Nimmo, of the monograph series Explorations in Reformed Theology. He is currently completing a substantial constructive work on patience as a theological concept and serves as co-director of the project on 'Religion and its Publics' at the University of Virginia.
Paul T Nimmo is the King's Chair of Systematic Theology at the University of Aberdeen. His first monograph, Being in Action: The Theological Shape of Barth's Ethical Vision (2007), was awarded a John Templeton Award for Theological Promise in 2009. He has since authored Barth: A Guide for the Perplexed (2017), co-edited with David Fergusson The Cambridge Companion to Reformed Theology (2016), and edited the church resource Learn: Understanding Our Faith (2017). He is Senior Editor of International Journal of Systematic Theology; co-editor, with Paul Dafydd Jones, of the monograph series Explorations in Reformed Theology; and co-Chair of the AAR Reformed Theology and History Unit.
Contributors:
Faye Bodley-Dangelo, Harvard Theological Review and Harvard Divinity Bulletin
Matthew J. Aragon Bruce, Wheaton College
Eberhard Busch, University of Göttingen
Christophe Chalamet, University of Geneva
David Clough, University of Chester
David W. Congdon, University of Dubuque Theological Seminary
Jessica DeCou, Quixote Center
Hans-Anton Drewes, Karl Barth-Archiv
Adam Eitel, Yale Divinity School
David Fergusson, University of Edinburgh
Tim Gorringe, University of Exeter
Tom Greggs, University of Aberdeen
Angela Dienhart Hancock, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary
George Hunsinger, Princeton Theological Seminary
Frank Jehle, University of St Gallen
Willis Jenkins, University of Virginia
Willie James Jennings, Yale Divinity School
Keith L. Johnson, Wheaton College
Paul Dafydd Jones, University of Virginia
Cornelis (Kees) van der Kooi, Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam
Wolf Krötke, Humboldt University of Berlin
Mark Lindsay, Trinity College Theological School, University of Divinity
Bruce L. McCormack, Princeton Theological Seminary
John C. McDowell, University of Divinity
Gerald McKenny, University of Notre Dame
Joseph L. Mangina, Wycliffe College, Toronto School of Theology
Daniel L. Migliore, Princeton Theological Seminary
Paul D. Molnar, St. John's University
Paul T Nimmo, University of Aberdeen
Kenneth Oakes, University of Notre Dame
Georg Pfleiderer, University of Basel
Joshua Ralston, University of Edinburgh
Randi Rashkover, George Mason University
Rinse H. Reeling Brouwer, Protestant Theological University
Cynthia Rigby, Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary
Christoph Schwöbel, University of St. Andrews
Katherine Sonderegger, Virginia Theological Seminary
Günter Thomas, Ruhr-Universitat Bochum
Dolf (R.T.) te Velde, Evangelical Theological Faculty at Leuven
William Werpehowski, Georgetown University
Donald Wood, University of Aberdeen
Derek Alan Woodard-Lehman, University of Otago
Randall C. Zachman, University of Notre Dame