Ibid., 45.
27. Welch, Protestant Thought, 2:45.
28. Barth, “Principles of Dogmatics according to Wilhelm Herrmann,” 267.
29. Herrmann, “Warum bedarf unser Glaube geschichtlicher Tatsachen?” 214–38.
30. Busch, Karl Barth: His Life, 44.
31. Barth, “Principles of Dogmatics according to Wilhelm Herrmann,” 245.
32. Quoted in Welch, Protestant Thought, 2:45.
33. Barth, “Principles of Dogmatics according to Wilhelm Herrmann,” 248.
34. Herrmann, Systematic Theology, 20.
35. Quoted in Barth, “Principles of Dogmatics according to Wilhelm Herrmann,” 243.
36. Ibid., 248.
37. Herrmann, Ethik, 107.
38. Herrmann, Communion of the Christian with God, 9.
39. Barth, “Principles of Dogmatics according to Wilhelm Herrmann,” 249.
40. Ibid., 250.
41. Barth, “Moderne Theologie und Reichgottesarbeit,” 317–21.
42. Achelis, “Noch einmal: Moderne Theologie und Reichgottesarbeit,” 406–10; Drews, “Zum dritten Mal: Moderne Theologie und Reichgottesarbeit,” 475–79.
43. Barth, “Moderne Theologie und Reichgottesarbeit,” 317–18.
44. Barth, “Moderne Theologie und Reichgottesarbeit,” 319–21.
45. Dannemann, Theologie und Politik, 28–29.
46. Barth, “Antwort an D. Achelis und P. Drews,” 484; cf. McCormack, Critically Realistic, 72.
47. Busch, Karl Barth: His Life, 57.
48. Barth, “Der christliche Glaube und die Geschichte,” in Vorträge und kleinere Arbeiten, 2:149–212. This essay was later revised in light of Ernst Troeltsch’s famous lecture, “The Significance of the Historicity of Jesus for Our Faith” and published in the Schweizerische Theologische Zeitschrift (1912).
49. Husinger, Karl Barth and Radical Politics, 193.
50. McCormack, Critically Realistic, 74.
51. Barth, “Der christliche Glaube und die Geschichte,” in Vorträge und kleinere Arbeiten, 2:161; cf. Gorringe, Karl Barth: Against Hegemony, 27.
52. McCormack, Critically Realistic, 75.
53. Ibid.
54. Marquardt, “Socialism in the Theology of Karl Barth,” 71.
55. Barth, “Der christliche Glaube und die Geschichte,” in Vorträge und kleinere Arbeiten, 2:163.
56. Ibid., 186.
57. Busch, Karl Barth: His Life, 57.
58. Barth, “Evangelium und Sozialismus,” in Vorträge und kleinere Arbeiten 2:730.
59. Barth, Theology of Schleiermacher, 264.
60. Ibid., 263.
61. Cf. Vorwort to Barth, Vorträge und kleinere Arbeiten, 1:viii. Andreas Pangritz reports that F.-W. Marquardt deciphered and edited Barth’s “Socialist Speeches” from 1911 to 1919. Cf. Pangritz, Friedrich-Wilhelm Marquardt, 29.
62. Barth’s minutes from July 1911 until February 20, 1919, remain from when Barth served as secretary on the church board. Marquardt reconstructs Barth’s political activity as a pastor at this time in the analysis of these church minutes. See Marquradt, “Aktuar,” 93–139.
63. Marquardt, “Erster Bericht über Karl Barths ‘Sozialistisches Reden,’” 473.
64. McCormack, Critically Realistic, 80. McCormack says that “Barth’s personal copy of Sombart was not printed until 1908.” “It is most likely that Barth only read Sombart after his arrival in Safenwil.” With this statement, McCormack critiques Marquardt’s conviction that “Barth had already read Sombart during his semester in Berlin in 1906.” It appears that McCormack is unaware of Sombart’s powerful influence as a professor of economics in Berlin when Barth was a student there.
65. Barth, Vorträge und kleinere Arbeiten, 1909–1914, 380–409, 573–689.
66. Marquardt, “Aktuar,” 93.
67. Busch, Karl Barth: His Life, 61,
68. Ibid., 76.