On 19th October 1512, Martin Luther received his doctorate of theology under the chairmanship of Andreas Bodenstein of Karlstadt. Throughout his life, Luther remained tied to the Universityof Wittemberg. The Reformation movement was initially driven by and through his concern with academic issues, which also from the outset pertained to the relationship between theology and the other sciences.The contributors to this volume describe the relationship between faith and reason – or ratio and pietas – which was assessed in different ways in the Reformation, described by some as oppositional and by others as harmonious. Moreover, reformers referred back to medieval philosophical and theological points of view to relate reason with belief. The way in which this was done was definitive, for example for the establishment of universities, relations between science and the Church and in matters concerning the Bible and preaching. The lectures printed in this volume address the question of the relationship between the Reformation and reason before a European, interdenominational horizon.
Melanchthon und die Reformierte Tradition
bookThe Myth of the Reformation
bookCalvin and Luther: The Continuing Relationship
bookReformation und Rationalität
bookLaw and Religion : The Legal Teachings of the Protestant and Catholic Reformations
bookDie Präsenz Christi im Amt : Am Beispiel ausgewählter Predigten Martin Luthers, 1535–1546
Jonathan Mumme
bookPreparing for Death, Remembering the Dead
bookReformed Majorities in Early Modern Europe
bookThe Spirituality of the Heidelberg Catechism : Papers of the International Conference on the Heidelberg Catechism Held in Apeldoorn 2013
bookLatomus and Luther : The Debate: Is every Good Deed a Sin?
Anna Vind
bookUnderground Protestantism in Sixteenth Century Spain : A Much Ignored Side of Spanish History
Frances Luttikhuizen
bookLutheran Theology and the shaping of society: The Danish Monarchy as Example : The Danish Monarchy as Example
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