Reclaiming the Red Pastor: A Review of Chris Boesel’s Reading Karl Barth

When, in my mid-twenties, I first had my religious reawakening, and started developing an interest in Christian theology and the church, I remember being presented with an “either-or” choice. Now, this choice may not have been stated explicitly in this way, but I know it was shown to me at least implicitly by those who I was first learning from. This was the choice: if I wanted to get into academic theology, as someone who was (and is) more progressive, then I should lean towards studying Paul Tillich and the theology that came after him in the 20th century, and should avoid Karl Barth and those that came after him. This was presented as a choice between progressive theology and conservative theology; between a non-ideological or pluralistic school of thought and hard-core TULIP Calvinism; between an emphasis on love and acceptance on one hand, and exclusion and fundamentalism on the other.

And so, for a long time, I stuck to this understanding. I read a lot of Tillich, and a lot of theologians who could be said to descend from him, if not literally then at least spiritually. And I avoided anything associated with Barth and Reformed theology. I became especially enamored with Jugen Moltmann and his liberal theology; I am in fact still quite indebted to him, and find his work quite useful and beautiful.

But, as I’ve documented before in my writing, in seminary I was introduced to the work of Stanley Hauerwas, and through him, John Howard Yoder, and their brand of non-apologetic, highly critical post-liberal Anabaptist theology. From there, I have dipped my toes into George Lindbeck’s post-liberalism, Wittgenstenian language games, and Alasdair MacIntyre’s virtue ethics. I still consider Hauerwas the number one influence on my theological life, and Yoder is in the top five as well. But, through them, I started to become acquainted with that name I was warned against, and who influenced almost all of these thinkers and schools: Karl Barth. It was hard not to: Yoder studied directly under Barth at the University of Basel in the forties and fifties. Although Yoder was not a pure proponent of Barth’s thought, and had quite a bit of criticism of Barth in his own work, he was also clearly in Barth’s school of thought, and especially in the work of Hauerwas on Yoder, it becomes clear how much Barth influenced Yoder.

And so, over the last couple of years, my interest in Barth has grown and grown. However, a little of that old aversion is hardwired into me, despite the fact that I now largely reject a lot of the theology of Tillich, and so I have never quite dove into reading Barth for myself (other than a quick read of his Church Dogmatics in Outline as part of an online reading group Hauerwas and Will Willimon lead during the summer of 2020.) But, that has changed this year, and one of the leading motivators of it was receiving Chris Boesel’s new work, Reading Karl Barth: Theology That Cuts Both Ways to review. Boesel, an associate professor of Christian Theology at Drew Theological School, is a progressive thinker, aims to make Barth accessible for those he identifies as “socio-politically progressive” but who still want “a life of faith that is theologically traditional.” Consider my box checked. This book was really written for me.

For that reason, I want to do more than just write a simple book review. I will do that, here in this essay, but I want to expand this a bit. And the reason I want to do this is because I, like Boesel, have found that Barth has a lot to offer progressive Christians, those of us who consider ourselves left politically but want to reclaim the idea that Christianity is only for conservative evangelicals and fundamentalists. Barth offers a powerful traditional Christian theology; one that preserves the orthodox beliefs important to the life and tradition of the church throughout history and doesn’t jettison them in order to conform to the idea that progressives can’t believe those kinds of things. Boesel shows that Barth can be an important voice for those who believe the words found in the Bible and the Creeds – and who think those words call us to care for the poor, preserve the environment, fight injustice, and preserve pluralism and liberalism.

So, over the course of a few essays, I want to offer a review of Boesel’s book (which I will do in this first essay), and then, I want to use his work to break down, in a few digestible pieces, how Karl Barth can speak to progressive Christians today. I’m doing this because I have found, contrary to what I was originally warned about, I have found Barth’s theology to be, in large part, an amazing resource for thinking about the role of the church in the world, without that church being stripped of its moral authority or folded anonymously into leftist or progressive social justice movements. In line with Boesel, I want to “reclaim Barth” from the most conservative theological voices, because I don’t think his theology, when followed through all its richness, upholds a faith that justifies insularity, exclusion, and exclusivity, nor does it lend itself to a theology that advocates for socially conservative policies (there is a reason Barth was nicknamed “The Red Pastor from Safenwil” after all.)

Establishing an ideological distinction between the Church and the world of American politics has been a consistent point of priority for me as well as a driving motivation for what makes me want to embark on this project. As I’ve written before, 2016 played a big role in shaking a lot of assumptions I carried about the viability of politics as a way of really advancing a vision of justice or a better world, and I have especially become convinced that the progressive church in America should not aim to become a “Christian Left” a la the Christian Right – identified with and subservient to the needs of a secular political movement and providing ideological and metaphysical cover to the needs of those seeking power. Instead, progressive churches should aim to just be the Church – feeding the hungry, loving our neighbor, welcoming the stranger and comforting the oppressed – regardless of whether or not that serves the interests of the American political left perfectly or not. We as the Church have a commission, and an allegiance, and those should not be subsumed under the banner of the Democratic Party or the DSA or any other secular political organization. This doesn’t mean we don’t care about injustice, or public policy, or elections; it means we don’t confuse effectiveness in getting the right person elected with what it means to be a Christian.

For anyone who shares these kinds of priorities, Karl Barth becomes a powerful ally. As Boesel lays out in his brief biographical sketch, Barth too confronted a church that had become an apologist for state power and national ambitions. In his case, this was pre-WWI Germany, and then later, pre-WWII Nazi Germany as well. He first came to prominence when he pushed backed hard against liberal theology1 – the 19th century movement pioneered by such thinkers as Schleimacher and Von Harnack, and taken up in the 20th century by the aforementioned Paul Tillich, that embraced enlightenment values and methods emphasizing reason and experience over tradition, and which introduced historical criticism and other modes of skepticism to Scripture, tradition, and the long-held orthodoxies of Protestantism. Barth was trained in liberal theology under Von Harnack and Hermann, and while he strove to take the good of liberal theology with him, his experiences around World War I drove him to largely reject the movement.

The impetus of this rejection for Barth was, as Boesel describes, “the endorsement of the Kaiser’s war declaration by virtually the entire theology establishment in Germany,” which Barth understood as a theological failure by the church. Continuing on, Boesel describes this theological failure:

“There was no distance between the Christian faith and theology of the liberal church and the spirit of the people, the nation, the Volk, as expressed in cultural institutions and traditions and the various national and cultural corridors of power. Perhaps without intending to, liberal theology appeared to be uniquely suited for creating what in the narratives of the Hebrew Bible are called “court prophets” – “yes men”… to the principalities and powers, to the prevailing winds, be they the whims of the crown or the spirit of the age and its cultural achievements.”

In his commentary on the book of Romans, Karl Barth established himself as the leading voice standing against this dominant liberal tradition at the heart of Protestant Christianity, and in the process, became a well-known figure. His turn was a major inflection point in 20th century Christian thought, and defined the arguments theologians would have for at least the next half century. Contributing to this growing fame was his role as an outspoken German national and intellectual against the war, in a milieu where very few were taking such a position.

Barth did not rest on this notoriety, however. Following on the defeat of Germany in the war, and the subsequent rise of Hitler’s National Socialism in the following decades, Barth once again staked out a theologically-principled position against his homeland and fellow Germans. As the German church came increasingly under the sway of Nazism, Barth spearheaded the writing of the Barmen Declaration, a remarkable and timeless statement of Christian belief in the face of nationalism and war. For the second time in the first half of the 21st century, Barth had established himself as an important prophetic voice in the face of political currents that most people found difficult to resist or step out of. 

It is this continued act of standing against the sublimation of the Church under the desires of national power that makes Barth such a powerful voice for Christians today who too want to stand against the desire by some to appropriate the Christian witness in justification of decidedly non-Christian ends. But, his power as a theologian shouldn’t end there; there are plenty of good theological voices, but today and throughout history, who can be said to play a similar role. The strength of Barth’s theology runs deeper than as a consequentialist appropriation for a positive end, but instead is found in Barth’s ability to make such a principled argument against nationalism in a way that does not sideline or make excuses for the orthodox declarations of the faith. How he does so is what I want to spend this series exploring. 

Before we get to that, however, let me spare a few more words for Chris Boesel’s book. Boesel manages to take a notoriously difficult theologian to read and understand, and makes his thought digestible for the general reader. As noted earlier, Boesel wants to not just explain the theology of Karl Barth, but also to show how it can be read as relevant for those in progressive churches today, and he largely succeeds in this task. He does this by following the priorities and emphases in Barth’s own work, rather than re-classifying what we should think important in Barth. Boesel begins with a discussion of Barth’s purposes and theological method, before digging into the content of Barth’s theology, making the same move that Barth spent his whole life extolling: from God first, through Jesus, to us, and finally through our action in response to God. In doing so, Boesel does a masterful job of explaining Barth’s theology, and in the end, shows how it can speak to the priorities of progressive Christians in today’s world. This work is one that any seminary professor today can turn to for a course on Barth; it serves both a general and academic audience in its clarity and its fidelity to its subject.

And so, because of this clarity and fidelity, I want to spend the next five essays going through the high points of Barth’s theology as Boesel describes them, in order to present him to my progressive readers as someone they should know and be familiar with, if we want our faith to do more than justify our politics or serve as a form of Moral Therapeutic Deism. Barth is hailed as the greatest theologian of the 20th century for a reason, and it would be a shame if we forgot him today, or even worse, ceded the power of his work to those who would twist it to justify the very kind of theological nationalism he abhorred and worked against throughout his life.


Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from the author and/or publisher through the Speakeasy blogging book review network. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255


1  I want to be clear here: the “liberal theology” I am describing and that prevailed in Western Christianity in the 19th and 20th centuries should not be somehow confused with liberal politics in America in the late 20th and 21st century. Lest any of my more conservative readers want to make such a connection, be assured, liberal theology does not refer to American political liberalism, but instead to the liberal tradition arising from the enlightenment, of which we all partake today, which centers individuality and human rights alongside empiricism and self-determination. We are all, in many ways, liberals in this sense, and the American dichotomy of liberal-conservative does not apply here and would be unknown to Barth.

The Bookshelf: Believe Me

Of all the confounding and frustrating things that the Donald Trump era has brought us, one of the most perplexing to me has been the embrace of a shallow, insecure, and immoral businessman from New York City by white American Christians. Donald Trump, to the eyes of this aspiring theologian, is the antithesis of everything I know Christianity to be: cruel rather than compassionate, brash rather than reserved, egocentric rather than humble, incapable of introspection, or forgiveness, or self-restraint.

35224850_10216116132396646_2037149979729985536_oThis isn’t arm chair psychology, either; one merely has to watch him for five or ten minutes in almost any setting (or, even, just peruse his Twitter feed) to see that this is a person who is pure, undiluted Id, who rarely looks inward or even takes time to think things through, and who certainly rarely, if ever, thinks of others first.

Most frustrating of all to me, is that I have family members, people who are good, Christian people, full of love and grace and compassion and intelligence, who are ardent Trump supporters, or at the least, defenders of him, the party he leads, and the conservative movement that birthed him. It baffles me, how God-fearing men and women, who were so offended by the Clinton scandals, who have for so long fought so hard for family values and public decency, could make such a hard turn and support Donald J. Trump to lead our country, and, even more shockingly, to praise him as some kind of exemplar of everything they believe.

John Fea, professor of history of Messiah College, has been grappling with this same conundrum at his blog, The Way of Improvement Leads Homesince Trump burst onto the national political scene several years ago. Fea himself is a self-described evangelical Christian. Having read his blog daily for almost three years now, I can safely say he is a true moderate in every sense of the word, someone who never seems, in writing at least, to swing too far left or right from his center, but who doggedly sticks to his moral foundation that is rooted in Christianity. On his blog, you will find posts praising Barack Obama for showcasing a singularly Christian attitude during his presidency, side by side with posts condemning abortion in unequivocal terms and pushing back against the kind of secularism embodied by Bernie Sanders and the progressive movement. He always approaches these issues from the dual lenses of his evangelical beliefs, and his knowledge of American history. If you aren’t a regular reader of his blog, well, you should be.

All of that is to say, Fea is uniquely placed to think and write about the phenomena that is American evangelicalism’s rabid support for Donald Trump. And, he has done just that, in his newest book, Believe Me: The Evangelical Road to Donald Trump. In this book, Fea traces the history of American evangelicalism, and the apocalyptic fear it has always carried around, to the current situation it finds itself in, where its numbers are rapidly shrinking and its influence on the cultural conversation has diminished to the point that the need is felt to throw the weight of the movement behind a thrice-married, openly admitted adulterer and reality TV star. Its the kind of move that reeks of death throes and desperation, and that becomes clear in the pages of Believe Me.

Fea unequivocally points to existential fear as the driving force behind American evangelicalism today. The opening sentence of a chapter entitled “A Short History of Evangelical Fear,” reads,

“Despite the biblical passages exhorting followers of Christ to ‘fear not,’ it is possible to write an entire history of American evangelicalism as the story of Christians who failed to overcome fear.”

Fea traces the history of evangelical fear all the way from Puritan fears of witches and Native Americans, to fears of deism and secularism in the earliest years of the republic, through 19th century fears of Catholics and southern and eastern European immigrants, to post-bellum fears of freed and empowered blacks, right up to today’s fears of immigrants who look different and speak different languages, incomprehensible terrorists who seem to want to burn everything down, and secular leftists who want to drive Christians from the political and social realm.

Of course, fear either leads to fight or flight in human beings, and Fea shows how evangelicals very quickly realized that fighting was the only way to combat what they saw as an increasingly terrifying world. Evangelical theology was subsequently built on top of this fear and the drive to fight back, rather than the other way around. In the process, evangelical ideals were sidelined and put to use to serve the needs of a conservative movement that was reeling in the Seventies in the wake of Watergate and Supreme Court rulings that took away prayer in schools, segregation, and religious iconography in public places. Fear is a powerful motivator in democratic politics, and the Republican Party has learned well over the last forty years how to exploit the existential fear, and the desperate fighting instinct of a cornered animal, to win elections.

Donald Trump is but the culmination of this decision, something that becomes clear through Fea’s book. This is perhaps the most important work Fea does here, showing that Trump is not a one-off phenomanah or abberation, but instead, is the logical conclusion of a conservative evangelicalism that is built on a foundation of sand. Donald Trump figured out to most potent way to harness the fear of evangelical voters, by promising to take them back to some mythical past, when all was right in the world and evangelicals ruled America. Fea exposes this nostalgia, exemplified by the Trump campaign slogan “Make America Great Again,” for the sham it is, in a powerful section where he runs through the eras evoked by Trump as times of American “greatness,” and reveals instead they were also times of upheaval, racism, genocide – in short, times in which, yes, a few white people may have been doing well, but times in which the great many, including people of color, were oppressed and injustice was done. As he writes,

“For too many who have been the objects of white evangelical fear, real American greatness is still something to be hoped for – not something to be recovered from an imagined past.”

Fea ends the book with a powerful call for a rethinking of American evangelicalism in its public engagement. Instead of fear, he calls readers back to the Christian value of hope; instead of the pursuit of worldly power, he prescribes the Christ-like attitude of humility; and instead of a nostalgic but ultimately false view of the past, he encourages an honest view of history, warts and all. Ultimately, he writes,

“Evangelicals can do better that Donald Trump…Too many of its leaders (and their followers have traded their Christian witness for a mess of political pottage and a few federal judges.”

Amen. Its amazing to realize how small and uninspired the worldview of so many evangelicals has become. Reading Fea’s book is to walk through the process of how we got here, to a place where so many Christians can imagine little more from their public witness than a few crumbs in the form of federal judges and harsh words about abortion, immigrants, and political correctness.

The last two years have been profoundly disorienting, for our nation, and for those who call themselves Christians. How did we get to this place, where so many millions of our brothers and sisters in Christ have spurred the values we thought they held so dear, and embraced a brand of politics so ultimately divisive and unChristian? If you, like me, have been struggling with this question, then I can’t recommend Dr. Fea’s book enough. The answers we need in the fight to reclaim a public Christianity that looks like the form of faith we see embodied in the example of Christ are rooted in understanding our past. Believe Me explains that past clearly, and in doing so, claims an important place in the conversation about the future of Christianity in America.

Believe Me comes out June 28. You can find more info and pre-order here.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Eerdmans Publishing Company. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commissions’ 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

The Bookshelf: The Last Christians

So much of American Christianity, especially of the Evangelical and Fundamentalist varieties, carries within it a striking ideological contradiction.

On one hand, Christians in America, even if they don’t embrace the theologies outright, carry the assumptions of the prosperity gospel, and of violent nationalism. That is to say, many American Christians would affirm that God does indeed heap blessings and riches on His (because in this view, it’s almost always a male God) believers, and one particular way He does this is through the power of American military and economic hegemony.

On the other hand, many American Christians seem to think they are part of a small, persecuted, and powerless minority, strangers in a strange land that they have no responsibility for. Rather, a powerful, secular, globalist elite runs things, and is doing everything it can to stamp out American Christianity, mostly through feminism, abortion, same-sex marriage, and public schools.

lastchristiansENThese two views stand in stark contrast to one another, and to reality. That reality shines forth in Father Andreas Knapp’s superb book, The Last ChristiansIn it, Andreas tells his own story, of meeting refugee Christians in his own hometown of Leipzig, Germany, and how that leads to a trip to Iraq, on the border of ISIS territory, and his own growing fascination with and passion for the Christian communities who live there.

These Christian communities, located now in refugee camps in Mosul and Erbil, but originally from Syria, Turkey, and Armenia, are the last remnants of the earliest Christians. Still speaking Aramaic, the language of Christ, they trace their lineage back to the early desert fathers, and even further, to the earliest churches planted by Paul and the Apostles.

Today, they are threatened by the rise of ISIS and other forms of militant Islam. Forced to flee their homes, their culture is in danger of disappearing, as families are split apart and their cultural and religious heritage is forgotten. Knapp recounts the stories of the refugees he meets in Leipzig, and on his trip to Iraq, painting beautiful and painful pictures of a people who are a global treasure, but who are forgotten by the so-called Christian West, despite politically-conveinant talking points otherwise.

At times, Father Knapp veers towards blanket condemnations of all Muslims, militant or not, in the plight of these Christians. At one point, he comes awfully close to declaring that the very nature of Islam is violence and intolerance. This kind of rhetoric can obscure the points he also makes about the millions of Muslims who have been victimized by ISIS as well.

More relevantly, he does point the finger for the rise of ISIS and hyper-militancy in the Middle East, and the destruction it has reaped for the Christians he cares about, at the truest cause: American and Western hegemony, colonialism and reckless petro-capitalism. He writes,

“I wonder what Arab countries would look like today had oil not been discovered: no interference from Western colonial powers; no billions upon billions of petrodollars for the Islamist arms build-up. What course would modern Islam have taken without the vast sums of money pumped into the construction of mosques and the recruitment of Salafist from around the world? Was the black gold really a blessing for the Gulf States and their inhabitants? How many battles have been fought in this region over access to the oil wells – in the two Worlds Wars, the Gulf Wars, and to this day?”

Father Knapp is absolutely correct in his diagnosis of the problems facing not just the Eastern Christians, but the entire Middle East today. Yet, despite our complicity in their problems, the West largely ignores the plight of Eastern Christians, to say nothing of the millions of others who face persecution. Instead, so many American Christians are narrowly focused on the so-called persecution of “Happy Holidays” and Starbucks cups and religious freedom issues. At the same time, many American Christians gleefully participate in rhetoric and military hegemony that leads to the deaths of Christians and Eastern Christian culture. Father Knapp relays one particularly relevant example:

“The lack of understanding sometimes shown by our media on this issue may have other causes too. For one thing, it is hard for us to imagine how radically the political environment inhabited  by Eastern Christians differs from our own, to the extent that they can be made to suffer as hostages for the freedoms of the West. This was brought home to me by the uproar in the Middle East over European political cartoons depicting Mohammed. Such cartoons are a normal phenomenon in free democratic societies but, thanks to our globalized world, can trigger violent reactions in other, undemocratic systems. Thus, when caricatures of Mohammed were published in Denmark in 2006, the terrorist Mujahideen Council announced that Christians in Iraq would pay the price – which they duly did.

This is what persecution and minority status looks like. Not cakes for LGBT people or state capitols free of religious imagery. It’s death and displacement. When American Christians insist on burning Korans to make a political statement, they don’t suffer consequences. Instead, Eastern Christians in Mosul and Raqqa become their scapegoats, carrying their sins into the desert.

Andreas Knapp’s book is eye-opening and heartbreaking, but should be required reading in churches across America, especially churches who feel they are being persecuted. There is a real cultural and historical tragedy occurring in the Middle East, as the remnants of the oldest Christian communities are being wiped out due to the decisions American and European leaders have made. It’s time for all of us – myself included – to wake up and realize what is happening. The Last Christians is a good place to start.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Plough Publishers. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commissions’ 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”