Erich Schaeder

Erich Schaeder (22 December 1861, in Clausthal 18 February 1936, in Berlin) was a German Protestant theologian.

Erich Schaeder
Born22 December 1861
Clausthal, Nether saxony, Germany
Died18 February 1936
Berlin, Germany
NationalityGerman
OccupationProtestant 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

  1. Plett - Schmidseder / edited by Walther Killy Dictionary of German Biography
  2. Erich Schaeder The Online Books Page
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