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book deals with a neglected subject in Torrance’s theology. I have chosen eschatology, though, not just because it has been neglected but because it is a prominent subject both in Torrance’s theology and in modern theology in general. In 1901 James Orr rightly predicted that the twentieth century would be the age of eschatology.3 Unlike preceding centuries, this century is one where eschatology is a central theme for theologians. Near the end of it, the Lutheran theologian Carl Braaten spoke about the “eschatological renaissance in Christian theology.”4 Jürgen Moltmann (1926– ) surely represents the high point of this renaissance. He has insisted that eschatology is not “one element of Christianity” but “the medium of Christian faith.”5 It is, he adds, “characteristic of all Christian proclamation, of every Christian existence and of the whole church.”

      It is recognized that the renaissance began with Karl Barth, Moltmann’s teacher at one time. In his Epistle to the Romans (1922) Barth asserted that “Christianity that is not entirely and altogether eschatology has entirely nothing to do with Christ.” Torrance was not only a student of Karl Barth but a close disciple. Eschatology, then, should have been important to him as well.

      While it became clear, after Schweitzer and Weiss, that Jesus could no longer be understood apart from his apocalyptic eschatology, the modern view of the world made this eschatology look untenable. Schweitzer himself became a mystic, for Jesus was deluded: the kingdom did not break in as he had expected; nor could it. Jesus was just another tragic hero, crushed by the “wheel of the world” which continued to run its course as it always has.

      World War I brought an end (in Europe at least) to the “age of optimism.” Not only was the “consistent eschatology” of Jesus untenable now, so was faith in the natural upward ascent of humankind. Under the leadership of Karl Barth, the “theology of crisis” promised a solution to the crisis in eschatology. Eschatology is central here. However, it is an eschatology shorn of temporality. It does not have much to do with apocalyptic, with history or the future. It is about “Eternity,” as the judgment of God, breaking into time. Contrary to Schweitzer, there is no problem of the delay of the parousia. That is because the kingdom of God presses down from above onto every moment of our existence. After all, Eternity surrounds time.

      From Torrance’s own soil came an alternative to Schweitzer’s “consistent” or “futurist” eschatology. This was C. H. Dodd’s “realized eschatology,” which, like Bultmann’s eschatology, seeks to emancipate eschatology from future historical events. In The Parables of the Kingdom (1936) Dodd contends that the kingdom of God, the Day of the Lord, arrived fully in the person and ministry of Jesus. Jesus’ miracle-working power, his judgment and overthrow of evil forces, and finally his resurrection all attest to the presence of this kingdom. There is no need to look for a second coming of Christ on horizontal plane of history. This is not to say there is no eschatological reserve, but what remains will be realized in the “world beyond” this one.

      This is, in a nutshell, the historical and eschatological background of Torrance’s early career. This book uncovers Torrance’s eschatology and examines its origin and development against this background. It begins (chapter 1) with Torrance’s lectures at Auburn Seminary in 1938/39, for this is where his eschatology begins to take shape. Owing to the strong influence of Barth’s Church Dogmatics, these lectures leave us with a strong sense that the kingdom has come in the “Person” and “Work” of Christ. Eschatology is determined by the incarnation, the cross, and resurrection. Yet on the basis of Christ’s ascension and second advent we are given an equally strong sense that the kingdom is still to be consummated and that Christ is still carrying on his redeeming work.

      We then (chapters 2 and 3) trace the development of his eschatology through his sermons at Alyth and Beechgrove. Grounded on the resurrection and ascension of Christ, this eschatology is practical and apocalyptic as well as personal and historical. Yet we find that same tension between the present realization of the kingdom and its future consummation, between the revelation of the new creation and the hiddeness of it. This tension is established by the actualization of the kingdom through the cross of Christ, which, in Torrance’s words, is “still in the field.”

      Next, we examine Torrance’s eschatology in the context of the ecumenical movement (chapters 4 and 5), as it takes shape through

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