dc.description.abstract |
Debates in South Africa over Biblical scholarship have often been a subject of historical inquiry.
John Colenso’s challenges to the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch are well known, and in the
Dutch Reformed tradition significant work has been done on such topics as the controversial
Stellenbosch theologian Johannes du Plessis. The present article deals with central themes in the
New Testament scholarship of a very liberal, Oxford-educated transplant, Ramsden Balmforth,
who served as minister of the Unitarian Church in Cape Town from 1897 until 1937 and wrote
several books about the Bible. The focus is on his advocacy of higher criticism (or historical
criticism) of the New Testament and, within this, his emphasis on agapeist ethics of Jesus as the
essential core of Christianity. This is historically contextualised by, inter alia, considerations of
his reactions to the “fundamentalism” of the 1920s and the heresy trial of the said Dutch
Reformed theologian, Johannes du Plessis |
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