Erich Schaeder
Erich Schaeder (22 December 1861, in Clausthal – 18 February 1936, in Berlin) was a German Protestant theologian.
Erich Schaeder | |
---|---|
Born | 22 December 1861 Clausthal, Nether saxony, Germany |
Died | 18 February 1936 Berlin, Germany |
Nationality | German |
Occupation | Protestant theologian |
He studied theology at the universities of Berlin and Greifswald, where in 1891 he qualified as a lecturer. In 1894 he became an associate professor of theology at the University of Königsberg, and later on, served as a full professor at the universities of Kiel (from 1899) and Breslau (from 1918).[1]
Schaeder was a leading advocate of theocentric theology. Through his criticism of 19th-century theological anthropocentrism, he was one of the founders of dialectical theology.[1]
Selected works
- Die Bedeutung des lebendigen Christus fur die Rechtfertigung nach Paulus, 1891 – The importance of the living Christ for justification to Paul the Apostle.
- Die Christologie der Bekenntnisse und die moderne Theologie : zwei Vorträge (with Adolf Schlatter; 1905) – The Christology of confessions and modern theology: two lectures.
- Das Evangelium Jesu und das Evangelium von Jesus, 1906 – Jesus the Evangelist and the Gospel of Jesus.
- Der Moderne Mensch und die Kirche, 1907 – Modern man and the church.
- Natur und Christentum : vier Vorträge (with Karl Bornhäuser, Wilhelm Lütgert and Georg Lasson; 1907) – Nature and Christianity: four lectures.
- Schriftglaube und Heilsgewissheit : Vorlesungen, 1908 – Scripture faith and assurance of salvation: lectures.
- Theologie und geschichte, 1909 – Theology and history.
- Theozentrische Theologie : eine Untersuchung zur dogmatische Prinzipienlehre (2 volumes, 1909–14) – Theocentric theology: an investigation into the dogmatic doctrine of principles.[2]
gollark: Unfortunately, apparently no mainstream language is remotely aware of most useful language features which aren't just mildly extended C or OOP.
gollark: It has nice pattern matching syntax.
gollark: In Haskell you can actually do `let 2 + 2 = 5 in 2 + 2`.
gollark: They're near-identical languages, and in any case most of the computer-science concepts underlying them are the same.
gollark: I mean, Java is *basically* C#.
References
- Plett - Schmidseder / edited by Walther Killy Dictionary of German Biography
- Erich Schaeder The Online Books Page
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