Willibald Beyschlag


Johann Heinrich Christoph Willibald Beyschlag was a German theologian from Frankfurt am Main.

Biography

He studied theology at the Universities of Bonn and Berlin, afterwards serving as an assistant pastor in Koblenz, then as a pastor in Trier. During the following year, Beyschlag began working as a religious instructor in Mainz. In 1856 he became a court preacher in Karlsruhe, and four years later, he was appointed a professor of practical theology and New Testament exegesis at the University of Halle.
Beyschlag was the leader of the Kirchenpartei called Mittelpartei, and in 1876, with Albrecht Wolters, founded the Deutsch-evangelische Blätter. Because of the combative nature of the magazine, he was once sued for libel. Also, he was a primary catalyst in the founding of the — he believed that only in unity could German Protestantism find strength.
He was a leading supporter of the Vermittlungstheologie and was opposed to Chalcedonian Christology. Also, he stood for the rights of the laity, and believed in the autonomy of the church, leading him to be in favor of separation of church and state. Beyschlag was viewed as an antagonist of the Roman Catholic Church and a sharp critic of Ultramontanism.

Selected works

In 1891 he published Neutestamentliche Theologie, oder, geschichtliche Darstellung der lehren Jesu und des Urchristenthums nach den neutestamentlichen Quellen, a book that was later translated into English and published as "New Testament theology; or, Historical account of the teaching of Jesus and of primitive Christianity according to the New Testament sources". The following are a few of his many other writings: