Abstract
Biblical ABCs is a theological resistance primer. Its author, Kornelis Heiko Miskotte, was a Dutch pastor, theologian, and antifascist who lived and worked under the Nazi occupation of his country. Miskotte’s family hid Jews inside their home, and Miskotte facilitated underground Christian discussion groups. In 1941, he published an illegal pamphlet as a study guide for these groups. In an atmosphere saturated with propaganda and lies, Miskotte felt that Christians needed a refresher course in the basics of biblical language—an anti-Nazi catechism, as it were. Miskotte presents this instruction in twelve brief, poetic meditations on important terms drawn from the Bible. Like his teacher Karl Barth, Miskotte insists on the primacy of the Word, and like his imprisoned colleague Dietrich Bonhoeffer, he emphasizes the this-worldliness of the Old Testament. Miskotte also shows his deep debt to the Jewish theologian, Franz Rosenzweig. He begins his primer with the A of the biblical ABCs: the Name of God, the Tetragrammaton, which Miskotte sees as the cornerstone of all resistance to authoritarianism and truth decay.
Schlagworte
christian-jewish relations dialectical theology the name of god post-supersessionist theology resistance theology- 17–26 Chapter 3: Name 17–26
- 67–76 Chapter 8: Word 67–76
- 77–86 Chapter 9: Way 77–86
- 109–132 Chapter 11: Expectation 109–132
- 151–154 Appendix 151–154
- 155–158 Bibliography 155–158
- 159–168 Scripture Index 159–168
- 169–170 Author Index 169–170