Карл Барт цитаты
Карл Барт: Цитаты на английском языке
The Knowledge of God and the Service of God (1939)
Источник: "Jesus Christ and the Movement for Social Justice" (1911), p. 44
The Humanity of God (1960), p. 42.
“Grace must find expression in life, otherwise it is not grace.”
As quoted in An Introduction to Protestant Theology (1982) by Helmut Gollwitzer, p. 174.
Karl Barth Protestant Thought From Rousseau to Ritschl, 1952, 1959 p. 284-285
Protestant Thought From Rousseau to Ritschl 1952, 1956
“The best theology would need no advocates; it would prove itself.”
As quoted in Quotations from the Wayside (1998) by Brenda Wong, p. 78.
On his Epistle to the Romans (1918; 1921).
"Witness to an Ancient Truth" (1962)
“Man as man can never know God: His wishing, seeking, and striving are all in vain.”
In "Karl Barth's Conception of God" (1952) http://mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu/primarydocuments/Vol2/520102BarthsConceptionOfGod.pdf by Martin Luther King, Jr., King cites this as a statement of Barth's in The Epistle to the Romans, p. 91, but it does not actually appear in the 1933 translation of Edwin Hoskyns. It may be a paraphrase of some of Barth's ideas which were incorrectly cited.
Disputed
“Faith is never identical with "piety" even if it were the purest and finest.”
As quoted in The Beginnings of Dialectic Theology, Vol. 1 (1968) edited by James M. Robinson
p, 125
The Word of God and the Word of Man (1928)
“The center is not something which is under our control, but something that controls us.”
This has been widely cited to Church Dogmatics, but without citations to volume or chapter, and has not been located in this form in existing translations of that work.
Disputed
“Faith in God's revelation has nothing to do with an ideology which glorifies the status quo.”
As quoted in An Almanac of the Christian Church (1987) by William D. Blake.
“For the millions that suffer unjustly, the Confessing Church does not yet have a heart.”
On the lack of passionate resistence to Nazi policies of persecution of Jews, even in the Confessing Church he helped found in opposition to Nazi influences on churches, in a letter written before leaving Germany in 1935, as quoted in Hitler's Willing Executioners : Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust (1997) by Daniel Jonah Goldhagen, p. 437.