Since the English translation from Dutch of Herman Bavinck’s magisterial 4-volume Reformed Dogmatics, there has been a blossoming interest in Bavinck’s theology. Readers have been drawn to Bavinck for his faithfulness to the Reformed tradition while also engaging the questions of 19th-century Europe. Far from simply revisiting the older dogmatic systems, Bavinck faithfully engages modern trends like historical-criticism, the epistemological problems raised by Kant, the rationalism of the philosophes, and the radical changes ushered in through the French and European revolutions.
The question then is, was Bavinck orthodox, modern, or both?
In Orthodox yet Modern, Cory C. Brock argues that Bavinck acts as a bridge between orthodox and modern views, insofar as he subsumes the philosophical-theological questions and concepts of theological modernity under the conditions of his orthodox, confessional tradition. By exploring the relation between Bavinck and Schleiermacher, Orthodox yet Modern presents Herman Bavinck as a theologian eager to engage the contemporary world, rooted in the catholic and Reformed tradition, absorbing the best of modernity while rejecting its excesses. Bavinck represents a theologian who is at once orthodox, yet modern.
248 pages.
- Introduction
- Part 1: Misunderstood and Too Highly Esteemed
- Reformed Catholicity between the Modern and Orthodox
- What Has Berlin to do with Kampen?
- The Kingdom, Conscience, and Consciousness: The Early Years
- Part 2: Appropriation: Knowing and Depending
- Concerning the Unity of Being and Thinking
- True Religion as Absolute Dependence
- Conclusion
Orthodox yet Modern: Herman Bavinck’s Use of Friedrich Schleiermacher is in the following collections: