Theology

Ulrich Wiedenroth

Krypsis und Kenosis

Studien zu Thema und Genese der Tübinger Christologie im 17. Jahrhundert

[Krypsis and Kenosis. Studies of the Theme and Origins of the Tübingen Christology in the 17th Century.]

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Published in German.
Ulrich Wiedenroth studies the »classic« Tübingen Christology, which developed as a result of the kenosis-krypsis controversy starting in 1619, and which terminated – with its theory of a strictly uninterrupted albeit »hidden« participation of Jesus as mankind in the omnipresent world authority of God – a 50-year consensus of Concordist-Lutheran Christology.
The »classic« Tübingen Christology, which developed as a result of the kenosis-krypsis controversy starting in 1619, terminated – with its theory of a strictly uninterrupted albeit »hidden« participation of Jesus as mankind in the omnipresent world authority of God – a 50-year consensus of Concordist-Lutheran Christology. Ulrich Wiedenroth studies the theme and origins of this doctrine. In a detailed analysis of previously unknown texts written around the beginning of the 17th century, he shows that the reorientation, at first sight erratic, is deeply rooted in the history of Christological ideas. The person of Christ is merely the continuous process of communication between his natures, the implementation of the reciprocal commitment of God and man. The goal of the resulting final form of Lutheran Christology is to think of the story of Jesus Christ as God's own story – the story of the human God in the world of human beings.
Authors/Editors

Ulrich Wiedenroth Geboren 1959; Studium der Evangelischen Theologie in Hamburg und Tübingen; geschäftsführender Pfarrer der Evangelischen Michaelskirche Stuttgart-Degerloch; 2010 Promotion und Verleihung des Promotionspreises der Universität Tübingen.

Reviews

The following reviews are known:

In: Theologische Literaturzeitung — 138 (2013), S. 1366–1369 (Walter Sparn)
In: Blätter f.Württ.Kirchengeschichte — 112 (2012), S. 500–503 (Stefan Strohm)