Please get some works of German Lutheran theologian Helmut Thielicke!

Rosie Perera
Rosie Perera Member Posts: 26,202 ✭✭✭✭✭
edited November 20 in Resources Forum

[Reposting from here now that there's a dedicated Lutheran Products forum]

My pastor put me onto Helmut Thielicke (1908-1986), and I have three of his books in print format. Would love to read more of his works and have access to them in Logos. That such a major 20th century evangelical theologian has nothing available in Logos yet is pretty surprising. [Still now, almost a year after I originally posted this in the general Suggestions forum.]

Here’s a brief bio of him from Handbook of Evangelical Theologians:

Helmut Thielicke was one of the giants of German theology in the twentieth century. Called the Lutheran Karl Barth and the German Athanasius, Thielicke has also been compared to such major preachers as W. M. Macgregor, Theodore Zahn, A. E. Garvie, A. J. Gossip, James Moffatt, and James S. Stewart. Anglican divine Geoffrey Bromiley views Thielicke as an exponent of “a basic orthodoxy” who, amid a secular generation, engaged “in lively and thoughtful interaction with contemporary theological discussion.” As a minister whose career came to fruition during and after World War II, Thielicke has been hailed as a preacher for apocalyptic times whose teaching had a sense of eschatological urgency. Many have been attracted to his passion for social justice, labeling Thielicke the German Reinhold Niebuhr. Still others, impressed by his deeply felt compassion, have regarded him as a Johannine theologian whose preaching was rich in gospel proclamation, ethics, and apocalyptic vision. Rooted within the churchly tradition of German Lutheranism, Thielicke nevertheless took as a model the Baptist minister Charles Haddon Spurgeon, causing some to interpret his style as a synthesis of the State Church and the Free. For others, Thielicke’s principal contribution was a free and creative theology of the Holy Spirit.

A Renaissance man of catholic interests, Thielicke cannot easily be placed within any of the usual divisions of theology. Ranging at will over the entire realm of religion, Thielicke was an exegete, church historian, ethicist, systematician, and pastoral theologian. For some this also means that Thielicke is impossible to label theologically. To that charge Thielicke himself replied, “My adversaries hung the title conservative around my neck in derision—I wear it with pride.” Perhaps it is safest to say that Helmut Thielicke was a universal man doing total theology from deeply held evangelical convictions, but addressing the ecumenical church. A memorial summation in Christianity Today stated, “Though Thielicke takes positions that put him at odds with American evangelicals at some points, his work in ethics and systematic theology has shown him to be an innovative interpreter well within the mainstream of historic Christian faith.”

Here is my favorite quote of his: “The doubters are always more blessed than the mere fellow travelers in faith. For they are the only ones who fully learn that their Lord is stronger than any doubt and any hell of despair.”

Some of these might be the same book translated into English under two different titles. I recognized one like that and removed it, but might have missed others.

Comments

  • Todd Frusti
    Todd Frusti Member Posts: 233

    Helmut Thielicke (1908-1986), and I have three of his books in print format. Would love to read more of his works and have access to them in Logos. That such a major 20th century evangelical theologian has nothing available in Logos yet is pretty surprising. [Still now, almost a year after I originally posted this in the general Suggestions forum.]

    I haven't read any of his works but would appreciate having access to them in my Logos library.  Thank you for sharing.  

  • TCBlack
    TCBlack Member Posts: 10,978

    I have spent many hours lingering over "The prayer that spans the world". I have a copy of "a little Exercise for Young Theologians" on my desk awaiting a few spare hours. 

    I concur.

    Hmm Sarcasm is my love language. Obviously I love you.