'David Clough describes and evaluates the ethical thought of Karl Barth clearly, knowledgeably, and originally. He makes a formidable case that the concepts of crisis and dialectic Barth offered in the 1922 version of his Epistle to the Romans remain critical for interpreting the later Church Dogmatics, and for engaging a twenty-first century crisis in theological ethics. Clough's book displays both painstaking scholarship and constructive power. I recommend it heartily.' Gene Outka, Dwight Professor of Philosophy and Christian Ethics, Yale University 'In this book David Clough gives us both a fresh reading of the development of Barth's ethical thought from the second edition of the Römerbrief to the Church Dogmatics, and an original demonstration of the continuity between them. Against those who hanker after human self-sufficiency in ethics - whether by way of postmodernist relativism or rationalist system - Clough re-presents Barth's constant assertion of a salutary, if uncomfortable dialectic: because God does command, there is something that we may hear (and reason from); but because it is God who commands, we should never cease to listen, and to listen again. Clearly and sometimes vividly written, Ethics in Crisis will reward not only the student of Barthiana but anyone who yearns for a theological ethic that takes God seriously.' Nigel Biggar, Professor of Theology, Trinity College Dublin '... this is an excellent book that will quickly become a definite and reliable guide to Karl Barth's ethics. Not only that, it is a fine piece of constructive theology. Clough's work is no mere explication of Barth. It moves beyond Barth and does not simply offer corrections to Barth's work.' Princeton Theological Seminary '... recent addition to Ashgate's excellent Barth Studies series... David Clough's Ethics in Crisis offers both significant contribution to the interpretation of Barth's development, and a sharp and suggestive proposal for our contemporary