This collection of essays examines important twentieth-century Lutheran theologians, including European and North American voices. Each essay provides an overview of the life and thought of important confessional Lutherans who shaped theology with an ecumenical, world-wide impact. The focus here is not on later twentieth-century figures but earlier ones, selected similar to the spirit manifest in Karl Barth's contention »lest we forget where contemporary theology came from« (Protestant Theology From Rousseau to Ritschl). The essays composed over the last five years were initiated by Lutheran Quarterly in order to assess our recent past as we move into a new millennium. The goal of each author, each a leading theologian, has been to describe each thinker's life and vocation and how each thinker's work continues to impact theology today.
The Myth of the Reformation
bookCalvin and Luther: The Continuing Relationship
bookLaw and Religion : The Legal Teachings of the Protestant and Catholic Reformations
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
bookAfter Merit : John Calvin's Theology of Works and Rewards
Charles Raith
bookArts, Portraits and Representation in the Reformation Era : Proceedings of the Fourth Reformation Research Consortium Conference
bookThe Controversy over the Lord's Supper in Danzig 1561–1567 : Presence and Practice – Theology and Confessional Policy
Bjørn Ole Hovda
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