Keith L. Johnson

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Keith L. Johnson



Keith L. Johnson (PhD, Princeton Theological Seminary) is Associate Professor of Theology at Wheaton College, IL.

Average rating: 4.13 · 340 ratings · 83 reviews · 16 distinct worksSimilar authors
Theology as Discipleship

4.18 avg rating — 172 ratings — published 2015 — 5 editions
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Balm in Gilead: A Theologic...

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4.09 avg rating — 46 ratings2 editions
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The Essential Karl Barth: A...

4.38 avg rating — 39 ratings3 editions
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Bonhoeffer, Christ and Cult...

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4.16 avg rating — 19 ratings — published 2012 — 5 editions
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Karl Barth and the Analogia...

4.25 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 2010 — 4 editions
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T&T Clark Companion to the ...

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3.25 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2016 — 6 editions
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Analogia entis: A reconside...

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Butte County Historical Soc...

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Karl Barth and the Analogia...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings3 editions
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Site Lan-2: A Late Manifest...

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“While sin is sometimes thought of today as the breaking of a rule, these metaphors emphasize that it is the breaking of a relationship, an act of treachery against the Lord, the faithful covenant king and father and husband.”
Keith L. Johnson, T&T Clark Companion to the Doctrine of Sin

“Sin is a master that we empower by obeying and it will not be satisfied until we are completely enslaved (‘it desires to have you’).”
Keith L. Johnson, T&T Clark Companion to the Doctrine of Sin

“Note that Christ does not elevate or fulfill our preexisting capacities but completely resets them. We are dissolved and then established; we are stopped and then set in motion; we wait and then hurry. Throughout the book, Barth relates this sense of movement to our justification: to be justified is to break with the known realm of creation and to move into that which is unknown and not yet realized. His point is that Christ’s resurrection does not reveal the end of created history as much as it inaugurates the beginning of its future. And it is this future in Christ that determines the shape of our lives in the present.”
Keith L. Johnson, The Essential Karl Barth: A Reader and Commentary



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