Thou Who Art: The Concept of the Personality of God
By (Author) John Robinson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
15th January 2006
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Christianity
Theology
231.4
Hardback
384
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
730g
In 1960, Eric Mascall the Oxford Theologian published a book called He Who Is., a neo Thomist approach to the existence of God. This ran against all that Robinson believed most deeply about belief in God- influenced as he was by the new wave of German theologians. Bultmann, Buber but above all Dietrich Bonhoeffer. This book was his response to Mascall and hence the title . The book is about the notion of personality and its relation to Christian theology, with particular reference to the contemporary I-Thou Philosophy of Martin Buber.and its relation to the doctrine of The Trinity and the Person of Christ. This book was unquestionably the foundation of John A. T. Robinson theological work. Barth, Brunner, Berdayev, Kierkegaard, Heim and Mc Murray all had an influence on this book (as the reader will quickly observe). But at the heart of Roboinson's thinking was Buber's small but seminal volume I and Thou. More than anyone else, Robinson integrated the insights of Buber philosophy with the biblcial doctrines of God and man. It was in this way that Robinson in this book explored both the history and implications of this tradition of thought of how one could speak of personality in God rather than God as a person. In this book Robinson began to work as a theologian as he meant to go on: questuioning accepted doctrine, stripping away, getting to the heart, resinterpreting. He was in Karl Barth great phrase taking rational trouble over the mystery
'the book is very passionate in its arguments...it contains passages, especially on the God_man relationship, of great power and beauty and is faithful to that type of Anglican theology which is both academic and devotional.' Church of Ireland Gazette, John McDowell, 25th August 2006
"Extraordinarily comprehensive and thorough" Expository Times
"Thou Who Art is a remarkable early achievement of an acute and erudite theological mind, certainly worthy of publication." - The Journal of Religion
(T)he book continues to have interest for researchers exploring the theology of the past century, and not least the thought of Robinson himself. Its author, John Robinson, ....later publish[ed] Honest to God, the most widely read and discussed work of English theology in the 20th Century. ~ Canon Macquarrie, Church Times -- Canon Macquarrie * Church Times *
'a most useful piece of historic theology to have been published and should be available to all undergraduates to read. It is a valuable work.' Paul Brazier, Heythrop Journal * Heythrop Journal *
John A. T. Robinson was Bishop of Woolwich and Dean of Trinity College, Cambridge. He was the author of Honest to God (SCM Press)