Albert Kalthoff

Albert Kalthoff (5 March 1850 in Barmen – 11 May 1906 in Bremen) was a German Protestant theologian, who along with Emil Felden (1874-1959), Oscar Mauritz (1867-1958), Moritz Schwalb (1833-1916) and Friedrich Steudel (1866-1939) formed a group in Bremen, named the Deutscher Monistenbund (German Monists League), who no longer believed in Jesus as a historical figure.

Kalthoff criticized what he regarded as the romanticist and sentimental image of Jesus as a "great personality" of history developed by German liberal theologians, including Albert Schweitzer who noted Kalthoff in his work The Quest of the Historical Jesus.[1][2] In Kalthoff's views, it was the early church that created the New Testament, not the reverse; the early Jesus movement was socialist, expecting a social reform and a better world, which was combined with the Jewish apocalyptic belief in a Messiah. Kalthoff saw Christianity as a social psychosis.[3] (Per Arthur Drews, The Denial of the Historicity of Jesus in Past and Present - see the section on Kalthoff)[4] Arthur Drews was influenced by Kalthoff.

Bruno Bauer

Bruno Bauer (1809–1882) was the first academic theologian to affirm the non-historicity of Jesus. However his scholarship was buried by German academia, and he remained a pariah, until Albert Kalthoff rescued his works from neglect and obscurity. Kalthoff revived Bruno Bauer's Christ Myth thesis in his Das Christus-Problem. Grundlinien zu einer Sozialtheologie (The Problem of Christ: Principles of a Social Theology) and Die Entstehung des Christentums, Neue Beiträge zum Christusproblem (The Rise of Christianity).

Quotes

The rise of Christianity
Author Albert Kalthoff
Original title Die Entstehung des Christentums. Neue Beiträge zum Christus-problem. (How Christianity arose. New contributions to the Christ-problem.)
Translator Joseph McCabe
Published London: Watts & CO.
Publication date
1904
Published in English
1907
Text The rise of Christianity at HathiTrust

Works

External links

References

  1. Albert Schweitzer; William MONTGOMERY (B.D.) (1911). "Albert Kalthoff". The Quest of the Historical Jesus ... Translated by W. Montgomery ... With a Preface by F. C. Burkitt ... Second English Edition (2 ed.). Adam & Charles Black. pp. 293, 313–318. Kalthoff, Albert. Das Christus-Problem. Grundlinien zu einer Sozialtheologie (Leipzig, 1902); Die Entstehung des Christentums. Neue Beitrage zum Christus-Problem (Leipzig, 1904) (English translation, The Rise of Christianity, by Joseph M'Cabe, London, 1907); Das Leben Jesu. Reden gehalten im prot. Reformverein zu Berlin (1880); Was wissen wir von Jesus? Eine Abrechnung mit Professor Bousset in Gottingen (Berlin, 1904), 293. 313-318
  2. Albert Schweitzer (1911), Von Reimarus zu Wrede (The quest of the historical Jesus ed.), London: A. and C. Black
  3. Enfant Terrible im Talar - Albert Kalthoff (1850-1906) Johannes Abresch - German text
  4. Arthur Drews, The Denial of the Historicity of Jesus in Past and Present 1926 - See chapter on Kalthoff
  5. Kalthoff, Albert (1907). "Was There An Historical Jesus?". The Rise of Christianity. Watts. p. 28. A Son of God, Lord of the World, born of a virgin, and rising again after death, and the son of a small builder with revolutionary notions, are two totally different beings. If one was the historical Jesus, the other certainly was not. The real question of the historicity of Jesus is not merely whether there ever was a Jesus among the numerous claimants of a Messiahship in Judea, but whether we are to recognise the historical character of this Jesus in the Gospels, and whether he is to be regarded as the founder of Christianity. (Image of p. 28 at Google Books)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.