Wolfhart Pannenberg in 1983 |
Wolfhart Pannenberg (1928-2014)
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/tonyjones/2014/09/07/wolfhart-pannenberg-1928-2014/
by Tony Jones
September 7, 2014
Wolfhart Pannenberg—In Memoriam
by Philip Clayton
Wolfhart Pannenberg has often been called the greatest theologians of the second half of the 20th century. With his death Friday, September 5, 2014, the world has lost a brilliant interpreter of Christianity, and I have lost the mentor who molded me as a scholar, theologian, and person.
In the 1950s, when Pannenberg was a doctoral student in Heidelberg, Karl Barth dominated the theological stage. In order to counteract Barth’s overemphasis on salvation history (Heilsgeschichte), Pannenberg redefined revelation as “universal history” (Universalgeschichte). A few years later he published a major Christology (Jesus—God and Man) that established him as the world’s leading defender of “theology from below.”
Over the next 30 years, Pannenberg extended this program to philosophy, the religion/science debate, the dialogue across the world religions, and to every corner of theology. He had the most encyclopedic mind I have ever encountered. You need only to read around a bit in his multi-volume Basic Questions in Theology to be stunned by the range and depth of his scholarship. John Cobb once quipped,
“I saw that Pannenberg was able to encompass the entire range of knowledge within
his own mind. Realizing that I could never match this achievement, I decided it would
take a lifetime of working with my doctoral students to cover as many topics.”
Pannenberg’s staunch defense of the historicity of the resurrection made him a champion among American evangelicals. His extensive involvement in the ecumenical movement and his unsurpassed knowledge of the history of theology were crucial to the most important ecumenical breakthroughs in the World Council of Churches. Taken together, Pannenberg’s extensive writings, including his three-volume systematic theology, offer a theological program unrivaled its comprehensiveness, depth, and rigor.
Yet Pannenberg’s influence extended far beyond the evangelical and ecumenical worlds. His early statement that “in a restricted but important sense, God does not yet exist”caught the attention of process theologians and involved him in a multi-year dialogue with John Cobb (who studied with Pannenberg in Mainz in 1963), Lewis Ford, and others. He met regularly with scientists, stressing contingency and natural law as openings for constructive engagement between science and theology. Pannenberg traveled widely around the world, was a guest professor at Harvard and Claremont, and hosted many professors and doctoral students from the United States and elsewhere during his decades of teaching at the University of Munich.
I was one of those students. While still at Fuller Seminary, I met Pannenberg (at Claremont, ironically) and asked him for his permission to begin my doctorate work under his guidance. A two-year scholarship from DAAD funded [my] stay in Munich, and I wrote the first 200 pages of [my] dissertation under his direction. Although I completed my doctoral studies at Yale, I always considered Pannenberg the true mentor of the dissertation. From him I learned the importance of Gründlichkeit, rigorousness — a virtue that I have sought to impart to my classes and doctoral students throughout my career.
Thanks to Fulbright and Humboldt professorships, I returned for two further years of study under him; our relationship, and his influence on me, deepened in those years. I remember, for example, a birthday celebration at our small apartment that lasted (in good old-German fashion) for five hours of eating and conversation. As all who knew him will attest, Pannenberg’s success had much to do with his indomitable wife, who guided his days and decisions better than any executive coach you’ve ever met. I have watched her disperse a group of intensely debating professors as if they were bowling pins: “Excuse me, you must all go home now. My husband needs some rest; he has a busy day tomorrow.”
Pannenberg set unimaginable standards for himself and others. Each workday he would write from 5-10 am. On Tuesdays and Fridays he would catch the commuter train to the University of Munich and present the new material in that day’s lecture. If you asked him a question on virtually any theological topic, you would be treated to an extemporaneous five-minute answer, running from biblical texts to biblical theology to Patristics, Scholastics, Reformation thinkers, and modern theology, with detailed treatments of what secular philosophers, historians, and scientists had written on the subject. Once, when he was writing his anthropology, I asked him why he looked so tired. “Herr Clayton,” he said, “the literature on this topic is uferlos, unbounded. I have been reading 500 pages-a-day, now I have switched to reading 1000 pages-a-day in order to master all of it.”
What many people don’t realize is that Pannenberg modified his “theology from below” stance early in his career. By the time of the “Afterword” to Jesus—God and Man (1970), he had already developed a method that combined theology from below and theology from above. The brilliant debates on the nature of the Trinity in the 1970s—especially the back-and-forths with Jürgen Moltmann—show this method in action. Miroslav Volf and I were both studying in Germany in the 1980s, he under Moltmann in Tübingen and I under Pannenberg in München. We and our wives would meet multiple times each year, taking long walks in the forest and debating the merits of our respective Doktorväter until late into the night. (It is no coincidence that in the German system your dissertation advisor is your “doctor-father”; the relationship is close, life-long, and affects every fiber of your being.)
Pannenberg’s conservativism on political and social issues—for example, on feminism and gay rights—set him at odds with many theologians. He wrote a demanding and uncompromising form of theology in the very years when pastors and the public began to prefer more informal, journalistic, and experience-based theologies.Pannenberg was no popularist.
Yet without question he has had a profound influence on some of the greatest theological minds of our generation: John Cobb and Carl Braaten and Robert Jenson in the early years, the famous fiery debates with Moltmann and Jüngel, the religion-and-science discussions with John Polkinghorne and Arthur Peacocke and others, and my fellow students in Munich, such as Stan Grenz and Roger Olson and E. Frank Tupper and TedPeters. In the dozens and dozens of lectures in the United States over some 40 years, Pannenberg engaged in intense exchanges with virtually every great intellectual personality of our age. In this fiery furnace— or in direct opposition to it!—many of the greatest theological breakthroughs of the last decades were forged.
Two hundred years from now, historians of theology will describe the work of Karl Barth and Wolfhart Pannenberg as the two theological giants of the mid-20thcentury. But I want to make sure that the record also includes Pannenberg’s warmth as a person—his quick smile, the way his eyes sparkled when he told a joke, his enduring friendships, and his deep commitment to mentoring and supporting his students.
Pannenberg has been called a rationalist. Before you accept this epitaph, you should read his theological autobiography in the American Festschrift that Carl Braaten and I co-edited,The Theology of Wolfhart Pannenberg: Twelve American Critiques. In fact, his theology grew out of a dramatic conversion experience and a continual sense of the real presence of God’s Spirit.
For all his wrestling with philosophy and science, Pannenberg was in the end a man of deep, abiding faith. He believed that the richness and immensity of God call for the most profound study and reflection that our minds are capable of
…that theology should meet and exceed the highest standards that philosophers set for themselves
…and that we never need to compromise as we wrestle to understand as much of the divine nature as we can grasp through every source available to us.
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Philip Clayton studied under Wolfhart Pannenberg for four years and continued to work with him for most of his career. Clayton is Ingraham Professor at Claremont School of Theology. He has held visiting professorships at Harvard, the University of Cambridge, and the University of Munich, and has written or edited 25 books and some 250 articles in theology, philosophy, religion-and-science, and comparative religious thought.
Here also is a new Homebrewed Christianity episode in which Philip talks about Pannenberg with Tripp Fuller.
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Wolfhart Pannenberg, 1928-2014 |
Remembering Wolfhart Pannenberg
(A Roundup of Reflections and Articles)
http://moltmanniac.com/remembering-wolfhart-pannenberg/
by Ben
September 9, 2014
Wolfhart Pannenberg has died. He truly was one of the greatest theological minds of his generation, and has been fast becoming one of my favorite theologians.
A number of people who know a thing or two about him (or even knew him personally!) have shared some excellent reflections in the days since his passing. Here is a roundup of articles and media on Pannenberg in remembrance. I’ll try to add more to this post as I become aware of them:
- Patrick Oden: Pannenberg (1928-2014)
- Fred Sanders: Wolfhart Pannenberg (1928-2014), Theological Outflanker
- Philip Clayton (via Tony Jones): Wolfhart Pannenberg – In Memoriam (Also posted over at Homebrewed Christianity with additional comments from Tripp Fuller)
- Roger Olson: Wolfhart Pannenberg R.I.P. (Olson also shared some other stories about Pannenberg in a post earlier this year)
- Craig Adams: R.I.P. Wolfhart Pannenberg (1928-2014)
- Thomas Jay Oord: Pannenberg Dies; An Interview
- Derek Maris: On Remembering Wolfhart Pannenberg and the Future of His Theology
- Derrick Peterson: The Maranatha Coastline: My Tribute to Wolfhart Pannenberg (1928-2014)
- John McClean: Wolfhart Pannenberg and What It Means to Tell the Truth About God
- Leona Foxx: Pannenberg’s Passing
- Homebrewed Christianity: The Theology of Wolfhart Pannenberg with Philip Clayton (Podcast)
- Dan Brockway: The Truth About Wolfhart Pannenberg
Here are some other older articles / blog posts that have been shared in the last few days:
- Michael Root: The Achievement of Wolfhart Pannenberg
- Stanley Grenz: Pannenberg’s Quest for Ultimate Truth (Excellent introduction!)
- Darren Sumner: A Preliminary Response to the Christology of Wolfhart Pannenberg
- An interview with Wolfhart Pannenberg from when he visited Calvin College in 2001.
- The PostBarthian: Wolfhart Pannenberg on rejecting the Virgin Birth and affirming the Apostles Creed (Moltmann has some very similar things to say on this topic)
- The PostBarthian: Wolfhart Pannenberg on the History of Christology
- Tim Hull: Pannenberg Part 1 (theology of revelation as history), and Pannenberg Part 2 (christology)
There have also been a few Pannenberg-related posts here on the Moltmanniac in the last few months:
- Karl Barth’s Letter to Wolfhart Pannenberg
- Pannenberg on Why Christology “From Above” Is Not Feasible for Us
- Wolfhart Pannenberg Audio Lectures
- Pannenberg Responds to Moltmann’s Critique of Christology “From Below”
- Can E.T. Be Saved? (Pannenberg, Redemption…and Aliens)
- Jürgen Moltmann on Wolfhart Pannenberg, his “dear friend and opponent”
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