History of St. Paul's English Lutheran Church
Author: Samuel Domer
Publisher:
Published: 1893
Total Pages: 300
ISBN-13:
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Author: Samuel Domer
Publisher:
Published: 1893
Total Pages: 300
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Martin Luther
Publisher: New Reformation Publications
Published: 2018-07-10
Total Pages: 587
ISBN-13: 1945978279
DOWNLOAD EBOOKMartin Luther's most comprehensive work on justification by faith, his commentary on St. Paul's Epistle to the Galatians is translated and edited from the Latin into a lively style, paralleling his spoken lectures. Combined with the passion and faith expressed in these lectures, the biblical foundation for the crucial doctrine of justification is underscored and expressed to a new audience. The commentary is also a historical document, a recording of a professor in a classroom in 1531 from July to December of that year, which expresses the Reformer's commitment to the good news of Jesus' death in the sinner's place, challenging the reader/hearer to compare St. Paul's theology with what he/she hears in the church today.
Author: Paul Hacker
Publisher: Emmaus Academic
Published: 2017-06-01
Total Pages: 184
ISBN-13: 1945125470
DOWNLOAD EBOOKTo mark the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation, Paul Hacker’s landmark study Faith in Luther: Martin Luther and the Origin of Anthropocentric Religion appears now in a new English edition. Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, in his final memoir in 2016, remembers Paul Hacker as “a great master, someone with an unbelievably broad education, someone who knew the Fathers, knew Luther, and had mastered the whole history of Indian religion from scratch. What he wrote always had something new about it, he always went right to the bottom of things.” No doubt one of the “things” he was referring to was Martin Luther’s view of faith, which Hacker explores in this text. A unique contribution to ecumenical studies, Faith in Luther engages the primary texts of Luther, assessing them for how they reveal Luther’s novel conception of faith and how the development of “reflexive faith” impacted Luther’s spirituality and theology—and the world.
Author: Mandell Creighton
Publisher:
Published: 1920
Total Pages: 660
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: H. Richard Niebuhr
Publisher: Harper Collins
Published: 1956-09-05
Total Pages: 324
ISBN-13: 0061300039
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis 50th-anniversary edition, with a new foreword by the distinguished historian Martin E. Marty, who regards this book as one of the most vital books of our time, as well as an introduction by the author never before included in the book, and a new preface by James Gustafson, the premier Christian ethicist who is considered Niebuhr’s contemporary successor, poses the challenge of being true to Christ in a materialistic age to an entirely new generation of Christian readers.
Author: Michael S. Whiting
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Published: 2010-06-01
Total Pages: 369
ISBN-13: 1498271863
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRecent studies have increasingly downplayed, and in a few cases even wholly denied, the influence of Martin Luther's theology of Law and Gospel on early English evangelicals such as William Tyndale. The impact of a late medieval Augustinian renaissance, Erasmian Humanism, the Reformed tradition, and Lollardy have all but eclipsed the more central role once attributed to Luther. Whiting reexamines these claims with a thorough reevaluation of Luther's theology of Law and Gospel in its historical context spanning twenty-five years, something entirely lacking in all previous studies. Based on extensive research in the primary sources, with acute attention to the larger historical narrative and in dialogue with secondary scholarship, Whiting argues that scholars have often oversimplified Luther's theology of Law and Gospel and have thus wrongly diminished his very significant, even principal, influence upon first-generation evangelicals William Tyndale, John Frith, and Robert Barnes during the English Reformation of the 1520s and 30s.
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1898
Total Pages: 1414
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Murray Steib
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2013-12-02
Total Pages: 928
ISBN-13: 1135942625
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Reader's Guide to Music is designed to provide a useful single-volume guide to the ever-increasing number of English language book-length studies in music. Each entry consists of a bibliography of some 3-20 titles and an essay in which these titles are evaluated, by an expert in the field, in light of the history of writing and scholarship on the given topic. The more than 500 entries include not just writings on major composers in music history but also the genres in which they worked (from early chant to rock and roll) and topics important to the various disciplines of music scholarship (from aesthetics to gay/lesbian musicology).
Author: John Richard Green
Publisher:
Published: 1879
Total Pages: 476
ISBN-13:
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