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Ferdinand Christian Baur

Ferdinand Christian Baur (21 June 1792 – 2 December 1860) was a German Protestant theologian and founder and leader of the (new) Tübingen School of theology (named for the University of Tübingen where Baur studied and taught). Following Hegel's theory of dialectic, Baur argued that second century Christianity represented the synthesis of two opposing theses: Jewish Christianity (Petrine Christianity) and Gentile Christianity (Pauline Christianity). This and the rest of Baur's work had a profound impact upon higher criticism of biblical and related texts.

Ferdinand Christian Baur
Dr. F. C. von Baur
(Steel engraving by Christoph Friedrich Dörr, 1830s)
Born(1792-06-21)21 June 1792
Died2 December 1860(1860-12-02) (aged 68)
NationalityGerman
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Tübingen
Academic work
DisciplineTheology
New Testament
School or traditionTübingen School

Adolf Hilgenfeld followed Baur's lead and edited the Tübingen School's journal, though he was less radical than Baur.[1] A patristic scholar and philosopher at Tübingen, Albert Schwegler, gave the School's theories their most vigorous expression.[2] The School's influence peaked in the 1840s, but was waning by the early twentieth century.[3]

Baur's views were radical, but "one thing is certain: New Testament study, since his time, has had a different colour" (H.S. Nash). He had a number of followers, who in many cases modified his positions, and the groundwork laid by Baur continues to be built upon in the twenty-first century.

Early years edit

Baur was born at Schmiden, near Cannstatt. After training at the theological seminary of Blaubeuren, he went in 1809 to the University of Tübingen. Here he studied for a time under Ernst Bengel, grandson of the eminent New Testament critic, Johann Albrecht Bengel, and at this early stage in his career he seems to have been under the influence of the old Tübingen School. But at the same time the philosophers Johann Gottlieb Fichte and Friedrich Schelling were creating a wide and deep impression. In 1817 Baur returned to the theological seminary at Blaubeuren as professor. This move marked a turning-point in his life, for he now set to work on the investigations on which his reputation rests. He had already, in 1817, written a review of G. Kaiser's Biblische Theologie for Bengel's Archiv für Theologie (ii. 656); its tone was moderate and conservative.[4]

Early works edit

When, a few years after his appointment at Blaubeuren, he published his first important work, Symbolik und Mythologie oder die Naturreligion des Altertums ("Symbol and mythology: the natural religion of Antiquity", 1824–1825), it became evident that he had made a deeper study of philosophy, and had come under the influence of Schelling and more particularly of Friedrich Schleiermacher. The learning of the work was fully recognized, and in 1826 the author was called to Tübingen as professor of theology. It is with Tübingen that his greatest literary achievements are associated. His earlier publications here treated of mythology and the history of dogma. Das manichäische Religionssystem ("The Manichaean religious system") appeared in 1831, Apollonius von Tyana in 1832, Die christliche Gnosis ("Christian Gnosis") in 1835, and Über das Christliche im Platonismus oder Socrates und Christus ("On Christianity in Platonism: Socrates and Christ") in 1837. As Otto Pfleiderer (Pflederer 1890 p. 285) observes, "the choice not less than the treatment of these subjects is indicative of the large breadth of view and the insight of the historian into the comparative history of religion."[4]

Simon Magus and Paul edit

 
Ferdinand Christian Baur

Baur rested his ideas about the New Testament on the Clementines, and his ideas about the Clementines on St. Epiphanius, who found the writings used by an Ebionite sect in the 4th century. This Judeo-Christian sect at that date rejected St. Paul as an apostate. It was assumed that this 4th century opinion represented the Christianity of the Twelve Apostles; Paulinism was originally a heresy, and a schism from the Jewish Christianity of James and Peter and the rest; Marcion was a leader of the Pauline sect in its survival in the 2nd century, using only the Pauline Gospel, St. Luke (in its original form), and the Epistles of St. Paul (without the Pastoral Epistles). The Clementine literature had its first origin in the Apostolic Age, and belonged to the original Jewish, Petrine, legal Church. It is directed wholly against St. Paul and his sect. Simon Magus never existed; it is a nickname for St. Paul. The Acts of the Apostles, compiled in the 2nd century, have borrowed their mention of Simon from the earliest form of the Clementines. Catholicism under the presidency of Rome was the result of the adjustment between the Petrine and Pauline sections of the Church in the second half of the 2nd century. The Fourth Gospel is a monument of this reconciliation, in which Rome took a leading part, having invented the fiction that both Peter and Paul were the founders of her Church, both having been martyred at Rome, and on the same day, in perfect union.

Throughout the middle of the 19th century this theory, in many forms, was dominant in Germany. The demonstration, mainly by English scholars, of the impossibility of the late dates ascribed to the New Testament documents (four Epistles of St. Paul and the Apocalypse were the only documents generally admitted as being of early date), and the proofs of the authenticity of the Apostolic Fathers and of the use of St. John's Gospel by Justin, Papias, and Ignatius, gradually brought Baur's theories into discredit.[citation needed] Of the original school, Adolf Hilgenfeld may be considered the last survivor (died 1907). He was induced to admit that Simon Magus was a real personage, though he persisted that in the Clementines he is meant for St. Paul. In 1847 Hilgenfeld dated the original nucleus of the Clementine literature (Kerygmata Petrou) soon after the Jewish war of 70; successive revisions of it were anti-Basilidian, anti-Valentinian, and anti-Marcionite respectively. Baur placed the completed form, ‘‘H’’, soon after the middle of the 2nd century, and Schliemann (1844) agreed, placing ‘‘R’’, as a revision, between 211 and 230. Other writers dated both ‘‘H’’ and ‘‘R’’ to between the 2nd and 4th centuries:

Hegel's influence edit

Meantime Baur had exchanged one master in philosophy for another, Schleiermacher for Hegel. In doing so, he had adopted completely the Hegelian philosophy of history. "Without philosophy," he has said, "history is always for me dead and dumb." The change of view is illustrated clearly in the essay, published in the Tübinger Zeitschrift for 1831, on the Christ-party in the Corinthian Church, Die Christuspartei in der korinthischen Gemeinde, der Gegensatz des paulinischen und petrinischen Christentums in der ältesten Kirche, der Apostel Petrus in Rom, the trend of which is suggested by the title (in English, 'The Christ Party in the Corinthian Community, the Opposition of Pauline and Petrine Christianity in the earliest Church, the apostle Peter in Rome'). Baur contends that the apostle Paul was opposed in Corinth by a Jewish Christian party that wished to set up its own form of Christian religion instead of his universal Christianity.[4] He found traces of a keen conflict of parties in the post-apostolic age, which have passed into the mainstream of Early Christian historiography.

Pauline epistles edit

The theory is further developed in a later work (1835, the year in which David Strauss' Leben Jesu was published), Über die sogenannten Pastoralbriefe. In this Baur attempts to prove that the false teachers mentioned in the Second Epistle to Timothy and Epistle to Titus are the Gnostics, particularly the Marcionites, of the 2nd century, and consequently that the Pastoral Epistles were produced in the middle of the 2nd century in opposition to Gnosticism.[4]

He next proceeded to investigate other Pauline epistles and the Acts of the Apostles in the same manner, publishing his results in 1845 under the title Paulus, der Apostel Jesu Christi, sein Leben und Wirken, seine Briefe und seine Lehre. In this he contends that only the Epistle to the Galatians, First and Second Epistle to the Corinthians and Epistle to the Romans are genuinely Pauline, and that the Paul of the Acts of the Apostles is a different person from the Paul of these genuine Epistles, the author being a Paulinist who, with an eye to the different parties in the Church, is at pains to represent Peter as far as possible as a Paulinist and Paul as far as possible as a Petrinist.[4]

Early Christian conflicts edit

We are rich in our Christian faith, we become poor if we enter into a compromise with anti-Trinitarianism in any form. F. C. Baur, the father of the Tubingen School, who cannot be accused of being a friend of traditional orthodoxy, was correct in his statement that Christianity would have lost its character as the universal religion of mankind if Arianism had been triumphant at Nicea.

— Modern Anti-Trinitarianism and Islam, 1912

Baur was prepared to apply his theory to the whole of the New Testament; in the words of H. S. Nash, "he carried a sweeping hypothesis into the examination of the New Testament." He considers those writings alone genuine in which the conflict between Jewish-Christians and Gentile-Christians is clearly marked. In his Kritische Untersuchungen über die kanonischen Evangelien, ihr Verhältniss zu einander, ihren Charakter und Ursprung (1847) he turns his attention to the Gospels, and here again finds that the authors were conscious of the conflict of parties; the Gospels reveal a mediating or conciliatory tendency (Tendenz) on the part of the writers or redactors. The Gospels, in fact, are adaptations or redactions of an older Gospel, such as the Gospel of the Hebrews, of Peter, of the Egyptians, or of the Ebionites. The Petrine Matthew bears the closest relationship to this original Gospel (Urevangelium); the Pauline Luke is later and arose independently; Mark represents a still later development according to Baur; the account in John is idealistic: it "does not possess historical truth, and cannot and does not really lay claim to it."[5]

Baur's theory starts with the supposition that Christianity was gradually developed out of Judaism, see also List of events in early Christianity. Before it could become a universal religion, it had to struggle with Jewish limitations and to overcome them. The early Christians were Jewish-Christians, to whom Jesus was the Messiah. Paul, on the other hand, represented a breach with Judaism, the Temple, and the Law. Thus there was some antagonism between the Jewish apostles Peter, James and John, and Paul the "Apostle to the Gentiles", and this struggle continued down to the middle of the 2nd century. In short, the conflict between Petrinism and Paulinism is, as Karl Schwarz puts it, the key to the literature of the 1st and 2nd centuries.[6]

Theology edit

Baur was a theologian and historian as well as a Biblical critic. As early as 1834 he published a strictly theological work, Gegensatz des Katholicismus und Protestantismus nach den Prinzipien und Hauptdogmen der beiden Lehrbegriffe, a strong defence of Protestantism on the lines of Schleiermacher's Glaubenslehre, and a vigorous reply to J. Möhler's Symbolik (1833). This was followed by his larger histories of dogma, Die christliche Lehre von der Versöhnung in ihrer geschichtlichen Entwicklung bis auf die neueste Zeit (1838), Die christliche Lehre von der Dreieinigkeit und Menschwerdung Gottes in ihrer geschichtlichen Entwicklung (3 vols., 1841–1843), and the Lehrbuch der christlichen Dogmengeschichte (1847). The value of these works is impaired somewhat by Baur's habit of making the history of dogma conform to the formulae of Hegel's philosophy, a procedure "which only served to obscure the truth and profundity of his conception of history as a true development of the human mind" (Pfleiderer). Baur, however, soon came to attach more importance to personality, and to distinguish more carefully between religion and philosophy. The change is noticeable in his Epochen der kirchlichen Geschichtschreibung (1852), Das Christenthum und die christliche Kirche der drei ersten Jahrhunderte (1853), and Die christliche Kirche von Anfang des vierten bis zum Ende das sechsten Jahrhunderts (1859), works preparatory to his Kirchengeschichte, in which the change of view is specially pronounced.[6]

Death and posthumous publication edit

Baur died, aged 68, in Tübingen. The Kirchengeschichte was published in five volumes during the years 1853-1863, partly by Baur himself, partly by his son, Ferdinand Baur, and his son-in-law, Eduard Zeller, from notes and lectures which the author left behind him. Pfleiderer describes this work, especially the first volume, as a classic for all time. "Taken as a whole, it is the first thorough and satisfactory attempt to explain the rise of Christianity and the Church on strictly historical lines, i.e. as a natural development of the religious spirit of our race under the combined operation of various human causes" (Development of Theology, p. 288). Baur's lectures on the history of dogma, Ausführlichere Vorlesungen uber die christliche Dogmengeschichte, were published later by his son (1865–1868).[6]

Tübingen School edit

The Tübingen School was at the height of its influence in the 1840s, but lost ground to later historical analysis.[3] Since Adolf von Harnack proposed very early dates for the synoptics and Acts (c. 1910), the Tübingen School has been generally abandoned.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ "Hilgenfeld, Adolf" and "Tübingen School." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
  2. ^ "Schwegler, Albert" and "Tübingen School." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
  3. ^ a b "Tübingen School." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
  4. ^ a b c d e Canney 1911, p. 540.
  5. ^ Canney 1911, pp. 540–541.
  6. ^ a b c Canney 1911, p. 541.
  7. ^ "Harnack, Adolf" and "Tübingen School." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005

Sources edit

  • Otto Pfleiderer (1890). Development of Theology
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainCanney, Maurice Arthur (1911). "Baur, Ferdinand Christian". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 540–541.

Further reading edit

  • Harris, H. (1975). The Tübingen School. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0198266421.
  • Hodgson, P. C. (1966). The Formation of Historical Theology: A Study of Ferdinand Christian Baur. New York: Harper & Row.

External links edit

  • Paul, the apostle of Jesus Christ, his life and work, his Epistles and his Doctrine translated by Eduard Zeller
  • Church History of the First Three Centuries Vol 1 1878 English translation
  • Church History of the First Three Centuries Vol 2 English
  • A Philological introduction to Greek and Latin for students translated by Paul Kegen 1879
  • F.C. Baur on the Higher Criticism; a brief quote
  • Tubingen School 26 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine, summary

ferdinand, christian, baur, tübingen, school, redirects, here, influential, group, modern, plato, scholars, plato, unwritten, doctrines, june, 1792, december, 1860, german, protestant, theologian, founder, leader, tübingen, school, theology, named, university,. Tubingen School redirects here For the influential group of modern Plato scholars see Plato s unwritten doctrines Ferdinand Christian Baur 21 June 1792 2 December 1860 was a German Protestant theologian and founder and leader of the new Tubingen School of theology named for the University of Tubingen where Baur studied and taught Following Hegel s theory of dialectic Baur argued that second century Christianity represented the synthesis of two opposing theses Jewish Christianity Petrine Christianity and Gentile Christianity Pauline Christianity This and the rest of Baur s work had a profound impact upon higher criticism of biblical and related texts Ferdinand Christian BaurDr F C von Baur Steel engraving by Christoph Friedrich Dorr 1830s Born 1792 06 21 21 June 1792Schmiden Duchy of WurttembergDied2 December 1860 1860 12 02 aged 68 Tubingen Kingdom of WurttembergNationalityGermanAcademic backgroundAlma materUniversity of TubingenAcademic workDisciplineTheologyNew TestamentSchool or traditionTubingen School Adolf Hilgenfeld followed Baur s lead and edited the Tubingen School s journal though he was less radical than Baur 1 A patristic scholar and philosopher at Tubingen Albert Schwegler gave the School s theories their most vigorous expression 2 The School s influence peaked in the 1840s but was waning by the early twentieth century 3 Baur s views were radical but one thing is certain New Testament study since his time has had a different colour H S Nash He had a number of followers who in many cases modified his positions and the groundwork laid by Baur continues to be built upon in the twenty first century Contents 1 Early years 2 Early works 3 Simon Magus and Paul 4 Hegel s influence 5 Pauline epistles 6 Early Christian conflicts 7 Theology 8 Death and posthumous publication 9 Tubingen School 10 References 11 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly years editBaur was born at Schmiden near Cannstatt After training at the theological seminary of Blaubeuren he went in 1809 to the University of Tubingen Here he studied for a time under Ernst Bengel grandson of the eminent New Testament critic Johann Albrecht Bengel and at this early stage in his career he seems to have been under the influence of the old Tubingen School But at the same time the philosophers Johann Gottlieb Fichte and Friedrich Schelling were creating a wide and deep impression In 1817 Baur returned to the theological seminary at Blaubeuren as professor This move marked a turning point in his life for he now set to work on the investigations on which his reputation rests He had already in 1817 written a review of G Kaiser s Biblische Theologie for Bengel s Archiv fur Theologie ii 656 its tone was moderate and conservative 4 Early works editWhen a few years after his appointment at Blaubeuren he published his first important work Symbolik und Mythologie oder die Naturreligion des Altertums Symbol and mythology the natural religion of Antiquity 1824 1825 it became evident that he had made a deeper study of philosophy and had come under the influence of Schelling and more particularly of Friedrich Schleiermacher The learning of the work was fully recognized and in 1826 the author was called to Tubingen as professor of theology It is with Tubingen that his greatest literary achievements are associated His earlier publications here treated of mythology and the history of dogma Das manichaische Religionssystem The Manichaean religious system appeared in 1831 Apollonius von Tyana in 1832 Die christliche Gnosis Christian Gnosis in 1835 and Uber das Christliche im Platonismus oder Socrates und Christus On Christianity in Platonism Socrates and Christ in 1837 As Otto Pfleiderer Pflederer 1890 p 285 observes the choice not less than the treatment of these subjects is indicative of the large breadth of view and the insight of the historian into the comparative history of religion 4 Simon Magus and Paul edit nbsp Ferdinand Christian Baur Baur rested his ideas about the New Testament on the Clementines and his ideas about the Clementines on St Epiphanius who found the writings used by an Ebionite sect in the 4th century This Judeo Christian sect at that date rejected St Paul as an apostate It was assumed that this 4th century opinion represented the Christianity of the Twelve Apostles Paulinism was originally a heresy and a schism from the Jewish Christianity of James and Peter and the rest Marcion was a leader of the Pauline sect in its survival in the 2nd century using only the Pauline Gospel St Luke in its original form and the Epistles of St Paul without the Pastoral Epistles The Clementine literature had its first origin in the Apostolic Age and belonged to the original Jewish Petrine legal Church It is directed wholly against St Paul and his sect Simon Magus never existed it is a nickname for St Paul The Acts of the Apostles compiled in the 2nd century have borrowed their mention of Simon from the earliest form of the Clementines Catholicism under the presidency of Rome was the result of the adjustment between the Petrine and Pauline sections of the Church in the second half of the 2nd century The Fourth Gospel is a monument of this reconciliation in which Rome took a leading part having invented the fiction that both Peter and Paul were the founders of her Church both having been martyred at Rome and on the same day in perfect union Throughout the middle of the 19th century this theory in many forms was dominant in Germany The demonstration mainly by English scholars of the impossibility of the late dates ascribed to the New Testament documents four Epistles of St Paul and the Apocalypse were the only documents generally admitted as being of early date and the proofs of the authenticity of the Apostolic Fathers and of the use of St John s Gospel by Justin Papias and Ignatius gradually brought Baur s theories into discredit citation needed Of the original school Adolf Hilgenfeld may be considered the last survivor died 1907 He was induced to admit that Simon Magus was a real personage though he persisted that in the Clementines he is meant for St Paul In 1847 Hilgenfeld dated the original nucleus of the Clementine literature Kerygmata Petrou soon after the Jewish war of 70 successive revisions of it were anti Basilidian anti Valentinian and anti Marcionite respectively Baur placed the completed form H soon after the middle of the 2nd century and Schliemann 1844 agreed placing R as a revision between 211 and 230 Other writers dated both H and R to between the 2nd and 4th centuries R 2nd century Sixtus Senensis Sixtus of Siena 1520 1569 David Blondel David Blondellus Catalaunensis 1590 1655 Jean Baptiste Cotelier 1629 1686 William Cave 1637 1713 Casimir Oudin 1638 1717 Noel Alexandre Natalis Alexander 1639 1724 Denis Nicolas Le Nourry Nourri 1647 1724 Johann Georg Heinsius d 1733 Ernst Friedrich Karl Rosenmuller 1768 1835 Christian Wilhelm Flugge 1773 1828 Karl Gottlieb Bretschneider 1776 1848 Johann Georg Veit Engelhardt 1791 1855 Johann Karl Ludwig Gieseler 1792 1854 Friedrich August Gottreu Tholuck 1799 1877 and August Friedrich Gfrorer 1803 1861 R 2nd or 3rd century Schrock Stark Lumper Krabbe Locherer Gersdorf R 3rd century Strunzius on Bardesanes 1710 Weismann 17l8 Mosheim Kleuker Schmidt Kirchengesch R 4th century Corrodi Lentz Dogmengesch H 2nd century beginning Credner Bretschneider Kern Rothe H 2nd century Clericus Beausobre Flugge Munscher Hoffmann Dollinger Hilgers middle of 2nd Hase H end of 2nd century Schrock Colln Gieseler 3rd ed Schenkel Gfrorer Lucke H 3rd century Mill Mosheim Gallandi Gieseler 2nd ed H 2nd or 3rd century Neander Krabbe Baur Ritter Paniel Dahne H 4th century Lentz Hegel s influence editMeantime Baur had exchanged one master in philosophy for another Schleiermacher for Hegel In doing so he had adopted completely the Hegelian philosophy of history Without philosophy he has said history is always for me dead and dumb The change of view is illustrated clearly in the essay published in the Tubinger Zeitschrift for 1831 on the Christ party in the Corinthian Church Die Christuspartei in der korinthischen Gemeinde der Gegensatz des paulinischen und petrinischen Christentums in der altesten Kirche der Apostel Petrus in Rom the trend of which is suggested by the title in English The Christ Party in the Corinthian Community the Opposition of Pauline and Petrine Christianity in the earliest Church the apostle Peter in Rome Baur contends that the apostle Paul was opposed in Corinth by a Jewish Christian party that wished to set up its own form of Christian religion instead of his universal Christianity 4 He found traces of a keen conflict of parties in the post apostolic age which have passed into the mainstream of Early Christian historiography Pauline epistles editSee also Paul of Tarsus and Judaism The theory is further developed in a later work 1835 the year in which David Strauss Leben Jesu was published Uber die sogenannten Pastoralbriefe In this Baur attempts to prove that the false teachers mentioned in the Second Epistle to Timothy and Epistle to Titus are the Gnostics particularly the Marcionites of the 2nd century and consequently that the Pastoral Epistles were produced in the middle of the 2nd century in opposition to Gnosticism 4 He next proceeded to investigate other Pauline epistles and the Acts of the Apostles in the same manner publishing his results in 1845 under the title Paulus der Apostel Jesu Christi sein Leben und Wirken seine Briefe und seine Lehre In this he contends that only the Epistle to the Galatians First and Second Epistle to the Corinthians and Epistle to the Romans are genuinely Pauline and that the Paul of the Acts of the Apostles is a different person from the Paul of these genuine Epistles the author being a Paulinist who with an eye to the different parties in the Church is at pains to represent Peter as far as possible as a Paulinist and Paul as far as possible as a Petrinist 4 Early Christian conflicts editWe are rich in our Christian faith we become poor if we enter into a compromise with anti Trinitarianism in any form F C Baur the father of the Tubingen School who cannot be accused of being a friend of traditional orthodoxy was correct in his statement that Christianity would have lost its character as the universal religion of mankind if Arianism had been triumphant at Nicea Modern Anti Trinitarianism and Islam 1912 Baur was prepared to apply his theory to the whole of the New Testament in the words of H S Nash he carried a sweeping hypothesis into the examination of the New Testament He considers those writings alone genuine in which the conflict between Jewish Christians and Gentile Christians is clearly marked In his Kritische Untersuchungen uber die kanonischen Evangelien ihr Verhaltniss zu einander ihren Charakter und Ursprung 1847 he turns his attention to the Gospels and here again finds that the authors were conscious of the conflict of parties the Gospels reveal a mediating or conciliatory tendency Tendenz on the part of the writers or redactors The Gospels in fact are adaptations or redactions of an older Gospel such as the Gospel of the Hebrews of Peter of the Egyptians or of the Ebionites The Petrine Matthew bears the closest relationship to this original Gospel Urevangelium the Pauline Luke is later and arose independently Mark represents a still later development according to Baur the account in John is idealistic it does not possess historical truth and cannot and does not really lay claim to it 5 Baur s theory starts with the supposition that Christianity was gradually developed out of Judaism see also List of events in early Christianity Before it could become a universal religion it had to struggle with Jewish limitations and to overcome them The early Christians were Jewish Christians to whom Jesus was the Messiah Paul on the other hand represented a breach with Judaism the Temple and the Law Thus there was some antagonism between the Jewish apostles Peter James and John and Paul the Apostle to the Gentiles and this struggle continued down to the middle of the 2nd century In short the conflict between Petrinism and Paulinism is as Karl Schwarz puts it the key to the literature of the 1st and 2nd centuries 6 Theology editBaur was a theologian and historian as well as a Biblical critic As early as 1834 he published a strictly theological work Gegensatz des Katholicismus und Protestantismus nach den Prinzipien und Hauptdogmen der beiden Lehrbegriffe a strong defence of Protestantism on the lines of Schleiermacher s Glaubenslehre and a vigorous reply to J Mohler s Symbolik 1833 This was followed by his larger histories of dogma Die christliche Lehre von der Versohnung in ihrer geschichtlichen Entwicklung bis auf die neueste Zeit 1838 Die christliche Lehre von der Dreieinigkeit und Menschwerdung Gottes in ihrer geschichtlichen Entwicklung 3 vols 1841 1843 and the Lehrbuch der christlichen Dogmengeschichte 1847 The value of these works is impaired somewhat by Baur s habit of making the history of dogma conform to the formulae of Hegel s philosophy a procedure which only served to obscure the truth and profundity of his conception of history as a true development of the human mind Pfleiderer Baur however soon came to attach more importance to personality and to distinguish more carefully between religion and philosophy The change is noticeable in his Epochen der kirchlichen Geschichtschreibung 1852 Das Christenthum und die christliche Kirche der drei ersten Jahrhunderte 1853 and Die christliche Kirche von Anfang des vierten bis zum Ende das sechsten Jahrhunderts 1859 works preparatory to his Kirchengeschichte in which the change of view is specially pronounced 6 Death and posthumous publication editBaur died aged 68 in Tubingen The Kirchengeschichte was published in five volumes during the years 1853 1863 partly by Baur himself partly by his son Ferdinand Baur and his son in law Eduard Zeller from notes and lectures which the author left behind him Pfleiderer describes this work especially the first volume as a classic for all time Taken as a whole it is the first thorough and satisfactory attempt to explain the rise of Christianity and the Church on strictly historical lines i e as a natural development of the religious spirit of our race under the combined operation of various human causes Development of Theology p 288 Baur s lectures on the history of dogma Ausfuhrlichere Vorlesungen uber die christliche Dogmengeschichte were published later by his son 1865 1868 6 Tubingen School editThe Tubingen School was at the height of its influence in the 1840s but lost ground to later historical analysis 3 Since Adolf von Harnack proposed very early dates for the synoptics and Acts c 1910 the Tubingen School has been generally abandoned 7 References edit Hilgenfeld Adolf and Tubingen School Cross F L ed The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church New York Oxford University Press 2005 Schwegler Albert and Tubingen School Cross F L ed The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church New York Oxford University Press 2005 a b Tubingen School Cross F L ed The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church New York Oxford University Press 2005 a b c d e Canney 1911 p 540 Canney 1911 pp 540 541 a b c Canney 1911 p 541 Harnack Adolf and Tubingen School Cross F L ed The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church New York Oxford University Press 2005Sources editOtto Pfleiderer 1890 Development of Theology nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Canney Maurice Arthur 1911 Baur Ferdinand Christian In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 540 541 Further reading editHarris H 1975 The Tubingen School Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0198266421 Hodgson P C 1966 The Formation of Historical Theology A Study of Ferdinand Christian Baur New York Harper amp Row External links editPaul the apostle of Jesus Christ his life and work his Epistles and his Doctrine translated by Eduard Zeller Church History of the First Three Centuries Vol 1 1878 English translation Church History of the First Three Centuries Vol 2 English A Philological introduction to Greek and Latin for students translated by Paul Kegen 1879 F C Baur on the Higher Criticism a brief quote Tubingen School Archived 26 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine summary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ferdinand Christian Baur amp oldid 1188892325, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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