Ebeling was born on 6 July 1912 in
Steglitz,
Berlin, where he attended the gymnasium and began his university study. Ebeling was later a student of
Rudolf Bultmann and
Wilhelm Maurer in Marburg and of
Emil Brunner at the
University of Zürich, Switzerland. The years of his study in Berlin, Marburg, and Zürich fell in the period of
Nazism in Germany, and his contact with
Dietrich Bonhoeffer as well as his work in the
Confessing Church had an enduring influence on his thought. He completed his
Doctor of Theology degree in 1938 at the University of Zürich under the supervision of
Fritz Blanke; his dissertation was entitled ''Evangelical Interpretation of the Gospels: An Investigation of Luther's Hermeneutic''. Already in this early work, Ebeling's interest in systematic as well as historical questions was very apparent. At the end of the Second World War, he completed in 1947 his
habilitation at the University of Tübingen, Germany, and assumed the chair for
ecclesiastical history in Tübingen. In 1954 Ebeling changed his focus of study from ecclesiastical history to
systematic theology and became Professor of Systematic Theology in Tübingen. Two years later, he was called to the University of Zürich in systematic. With the exception of the period from 1965 to 1968, when he was once again in Tübingen, Ebeling remained in Zürich, where he was the founder and, until his retirement in 1979, the director of the Institute for Hermeneutics. From 1950 Ebeling was the chief editor of the publication '''', and for several decades he presided over the Commission for the Publication of the Works of Martin Luther. Gerhard Ebeling held honorary doctorates from the universities of Bonn (1952), Uppsala (1970), St. Louis (1971), Edinburgh (1981), Neuchâtel (1993), and Tübingen (1997). Ebeling's primary academic interests lay in the area of hermeneutics and the
theology of Martin Luther, and both of these areas were combined in his focus on the proclamation of the gospel in the
Christian Church. In connection with hermeneutics and the
New Testament, he came in close contact with
Ernst Fuchs, with whom he shared his interest in proclamation; in the early 1960s, Ebeling and Fuchs were guest lecturers at Claremont in Southern California where they presented their vision of a
new hermeneutic (see James M. Robinson and John B. Cobb, Jr., eds., The New Hermeneutic, 1964). Both Ebeling and Fuchs stressed the character and power of language, the role of the Bible in the pulpit (Wesley O. Allen, Determining the Form, Structures for Preaching, 2008). From a systematic perspective, Ebeling's thought focused on the relationship between
law and gospel, and one of his most original contributions was to interpret this relationship within the context of a relational ontology based on the situation of human beings and . In researching
Luther's interpretation of the
Psalms, Ebeling discovered the central role of the and developed the idea in the context of an ontology. He died on 30 September 2001. ==Works==